The biggest misconception about small business growth? That it’s a solo sport. The small business owners who navigate complexity and capture opportunity are rarely doing it alone. They’re learning from peers by leaning into community and investing in their own growth.
Running a business today means extraordinary opportunity as well as real complexity. The demands have never been greater, but neither have the tools, communities, and resources available to help you rise to them.
Today’s small business owners are expected to be operators, marketers, analysts, and customer service reps, all while delivering the craft and expertise that makes their business so special. The good news: AI is handling work that used to take hours, trusted platforms provide direct customer connections at scale, and the resources to learn and upskill have never been more within reach. But tools alone are not enough.
Within the wedding industry, more than 50% of businesses have fewer than 10 employees. Yet, what makes them so successful is their ability to collaborate and build community—and not just with their own staff.
The average couple hires 13 vendors to bring their wedding day to life, and those professionals are constantly recommending, referring, and vouching for each other. Your venue owner recommends your DJ. Your planner champions your florist. Your photographer tags your hair and makeup artist. This referral ecosystem is critical in an industry made up of entrepreneurs, where community trumps competition.
4 STRATEGIES FOR BUILDING COMMUNITY
This is not just specific to weddings; it applies across many industries. Here’s where to start:
1. Let AI handle busy work so you can build relationships that drive revenue. With so much to take care of as a small business owner, it can be difficult to find time for networking, learning, and community building. This is where AI can truly transform your schedule. Free up hours of your time by automating repetitive tasks and tapping into built-in capabilities on the platforms you already use. For example, The Knot Worldwide’s WeddingPro app provides customized auto replies for small business owners, so they can respond to initial customer inquiries in seconds.
2. Find your people—including those you might consider competition. In a recent vendor survey by The Knot Worldwide, respondents who actively expanded their professional networks reported a 48% increase in revenue as a direct result. Don’t underestimate the power of human connection. Reaching out to someone you admire for a 20-minute coffee conversation can open doors you didn’t know existed. Introduce yourself after a virtual seminar, ask existing contacts for intros, engage on LinkedIn, or join an industry Slack group to gain proximity. The person who says yes to coffee might introduce you to your next client, collaborator, or mentor—even if it’s several months from now. You won’t know until you ask.
3. Make time to invest in education that fits your life. Today, some of the most valuable business education happens in a podcast during a commute, a peer-led roundtable on a Tuesday night, or a short-form video from someone who built what you’re trying to build. The key is being intentional about seeking it out rather than waiting for it to come to you. I live by my calendar—if I don’t schedule it, it won’t happen. Treat your own learning and community time the same way you’d treat a client meeting.
4. When the transaction ends, the relationship doesn’t have to. Every interaction is an opportunity—a relationship worth tending to, a potential referral or review waiting to happen. Stay in touch by showing genuine interest in people’s work and/or personal lives. Whether it’s congratulating them on a win or sending a connection their way, stay in touch. Better yet, look for ways to add value before you need something in return. Word of mouth, referrals, and reviews don’t come from transactions; they come from relationships. Small, consistent gestures go a long way.
FINAL THOUGHTS
In weddings, no single vendor creates the day alone. It takes a network of people who show up for each other, and the same is true for building a business in any industry. While the complexity of running a small business isn’t going away. There has never been a better time to be a small business owner. And the ones who lean into community and invest in their own growth are those who find clarity in the noise and turn this moment into momentum. In today’s economy, your network isn’t a support system—it’s your growth strategy.
Raina Moskowitz is the CEO at The Knot Worldwide.
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