Each spring, communities across the nation turn their attention to the engines of local prosperity: America’s small businesses. This is National Small Business Week, observed this year from May 3 to 9, spotlighting the entrepreneurs, family-owned shops, freelance professionals, and small professional firms that form the backbone of the U.S. economy. It’s a week to celebrate achievements, share resources, and help small business owners build resilience and growth strategies for the year ahead.
National Small Business Week began in 1963 when President John F. Kennedy proclaimed it to recognize the contributions of small businesses to America’s economic success. Today, the observance is coordinated by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) and supported by a wide network of partners, statewide small business development centers (SBDCs), SCORE chapters, Women’s Business Centers (WBCs), local chambers of commerce, Fortune 500 companies, and nonprofit organizations. The week includes national SBA awards, webinars, panel discussions, business networking events, and promotional campaigns that highlight products and services for small business owners and community development driven by small firms.
Small businesses matter to the American economy for reasons that extend beyond basic commerce. Their significance can be seen in several concrete ways:
Small businesses occupy a central role in employment, innovation, and community life. National Small Business Week is a chance for us to be acknowledged for our contributions and provide tools for continued growth.
The Week events often focus on practical priorities for small business owners:
These workshops and sessions highlight low-cost or no-cost resources available through federal and nonprofit partners, helping entrepreneurs translate ideas into sustainable operations.

Boss Tip: Follow up with speakers and presenters after their sessions on LinkedIn.
Commit to applying at least three of these actionable takeaways.
Many organizations host free online events during National Small Business Week. Below are a few reliable types of events and recurring hosts to check for free sessions and resources. Because specific event schedules vary year to year, visit the linked organizations’ event pages during the week for up-to-date schedules and registration.
U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) — National Small Business Week main events webpage sba.gov/nsbw for the official event calendar.
SCORE webinars: SCORE provides practical, veteran-led advice and often runs workshops tailored to startups and small operators. score.org/events
Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) are hosting regional workshops on financing, sales strategies, government contracting, and digital marketing; they also offer free counseling appointments. Check americassbdc.org to find your local SBDC’s office.
Check local banks or industry-specific webinars from platforms like Shopify, PayPal, and Square for events. Check: Shopify Learn, PayPal’s event pages, or Square’s event sections on their websites.
Don’t forget the local nonprofit organizations (e.g., Women’s Business Centers, World Trade Centers, Veteran Business Outreach, Minority business associations, CDFIs for local events this month.)
Register early: Free events can fill quickly; register to secure a spot and receive follow-up materials.
Prepare questions: Draft specific questions about your business to ask during Q&A or mentor sessions.
Bring marketing materials: have a simple one-pager and/or a capability statement about your business ready to hand out.
Follow-up: Connect with presenters, mentors, and other attendees via LinkedIn or email, and set clear next steps.
Apply and iterate: Implement one small change immediately (e.g., update your bio or social media profiles online, or set up a basic CRM template) and measure the results.
National Small Business Week is a chance to celebrate your small business and how you contribute to making your community unique. Share your stories on social media, host a customer appreciation event, or participate in local promotions. These actions help sustain momentum and demonstrate how shopping small supports the broader economic health of the entire economy. Whether you’re launching a new venture or scaling an established business, use this week to gather resources, ask for help, and convert what you learn into concrete, achievable goals. As a small business owner, you are vital to America’s economy, and this week is dedicated to helping you thrive. Take full advantage of it.
The post National Small Business Week: Celebrating the Heart of America appeared first on Succeed As Your Own Boss.
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