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NewslettersCEO Daily

The pandemic ingenuity of small businesses

By
Michal Lev-Ram
Michal Lev-Ram
and
Phil Wahba
Phil Wahba
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By
Michal Lev-Ram
Michal Lev-Ram
and
Phil Wahba
Phil Wahba
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 1, 2021, 10:16 PM ET
Small business funds Commentary
Texas, Galveston, Post Office Street, galleries and shops. Located near The Strand Historic District GettyImages-872624980Lonely Plant/Getty Images

This is the web version of CEO Daily, a daily newsletter of must-read insights from Fortune CEO Alan Murray. Sign up to get it delivered free to your inbox.

Happy Friday! Michal Lev-Ram here in the sunny Bay Area, filling in for Alan.

One of my favorite pandemic-era moments—for all of the horrible lows, there have also been some highs—was purchasing toilet paper from the sports bar down the street. I live in Palo Alto’s downtown area, and this was early on, when securing enough TP was a major headache. There were lines at our local Costco and every major grocery store. Meanwhile, the owner of our go-to for beer and basketball had a huge inventory of rolls on hand, and no customers allowed to sit inside or outside for drinks, let alone use the bathroom. So she got creative: At the height of the initial lockdown, she constructed several impressive pyramids made from toilet paper rolls, and displayed them in her windows. I bought three, and yes, a to-go drink too.

Why am I telling you this? We focus a lot on the leaders of large corporations and well-capitalized startups in this newsletter, and the ways in which they have responded to the pandemic. But the ingenuity, and the hardships, of the leaders of small businesses are just as notable. Perhaps even more so, because they have even fewer resources to draw from. Prior to the pandemic, many of them weren’t even digitized in any meaningful way, making it hard to pivot to e-commerce, or just to accept credit card payments.

And here’s the other reason I’m telling you this: Our latest Fortune Brainstorm podcast episode is dedicated to this topic. (It’s Alan’s second-favorite podcast, after Leadership Next.)

For the episode, I got to talk to April Underwood, a long-time product exec in Silicon Valley who has come up with a creative way to help some of these small businesses. It’s called Nearby, and it’s basically an online marketplace, but just for local businesses. Instead of standing up their own online shop, smaller stores can aggregate their products on one, hyperlocal storefront. Nearby currently has a pilot running in Oakland, where you can buy local spice mixes or graphic T-shirts or, yes, toilet paper (it’s recycled, sold by a zero-waste café and store called MudLab).

The health of these local businesses can actually help big businesses too. For the same episode, I also talked to Mary Kay Bowman, head of global seller product and solutions for Visa. She shared that, globally, 82% small businesses have made some kind of shift to modernize their operations during the pandemic. Obviously, the more these local businesses accept credit cards to process their transactions, the more Visa benefits.

Many small businesses are still in a world of hurt. In my area, there are more empty storefronts that I can remember seeing anytime over the last few decades. Indeed, a recent survey from the Federal Reserve Bank shows that about a third of small businesses in the U.S. say they won’t survive 2021 without additional government assistance.

But we can all do our part. So this weekend, walk down the street. Look in some store windows. You might find something you really need.

Michal Lev-Ram
@mlevram
michal.levram@fortune.com

TOP NEWS

Georgia blowback
 
Corporate America continued to find itself engulfed in the Georgia voting law controversy. The day after the CEOs of Delta Air Lines and Coca-Cola slammed a law that critics say amounts to voter suppression, Georgia Republicans expressed their anger at the CEOs, with some even calling to make Delta pay higher taxes. The contretemps has served as a reminder of the perils facing corporations getting drawn into hot national debates. Still, a number of Big Tech companies including Salesforce and Apple waded in on Thursday, joining the growing chorus of corporations opposing the law and similar ones being proposed in other states.  
 
Biden's $2.3 trillion infrastructure faces tough slog
 
Americans have been promised for years that updating the country's aging infrastructure would be a priority for the federal government. But now that an actual plan, a massive one at that, has been proposed at last, it is already facing stiff opposition from Republicans opposed to the higher corporate taxes the bill calls for. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said Thursday, "I’m going to fight them every step of the way." 

AROUND THE WATER COOLER

Pennsylvania's vaccine woes
 
The Keystone state's vaccine rollout, initially one of the slowest in the country, is finally picking up the pace after starting out as a debacle. While other states also stumbled, Pennsylvania was hurt by some unforced errors. As Fortune's Maria Aspan reports, the state declined to create a centralized vaccination system, putting the burden on individual residents to navigate the appointment maze. There were other bureaucratic snafus, distribution failures, and conflicts between state and local leaders that led to a painfully lethargic process for getting vaccines into Pennsylvanian arms.
 
Augmented reality is back in vogue again
Just as it is the case in clothing, tech fashion runs in cycles. Tech giants are renewing their push into augmented reality now that the tech has matured to the point it can fetch big money. A case in point: the U.S. Army's announcement this week it would buy 120,000 AR headsets for "situational awareness, target engagement and informed decision-making" from Microsoft in a deal that could be worth up to $22 billion over a decade. 

The news in this edition of CEO Daily was curated and written by Phil Wahba. The newsletter was edited by Karen Yuan.

About the Authors
Michal Lev-Ram
By Michal Lev-RamSpecial Correspondent
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Michal Lev-Ram is a special correspondent covering the technology and entertainment sectors for Fortune, writing analysis and longform reporting.

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Phil Wahba
By Phil WahbaSenior Writer
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Phil Wahba is a senior writer at Fortune primarily focused on leadership coverage, with a prior focus on retail.

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