By: Fred Elliott The collaboration behind this article began when Victor Migalchan was contacted by a representative of University of Bern in Switzerland. The researcherBy: Fred Elliott The collaboration behind this article began when Victor Migalchan was contacted by a representative of University of Bern in Switzerland. The researcher

Unique Collaboration between California LIVE Podcast and Bern University on: Local Businesses, AI Discovery, and the Future of Urban Economies

2026/02/10 15:20
7 min read
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By: Fred Elliott

The collaboration behind this article began when Victor Migalchan was contacted by a representative of University of Bern in Switzerland. The researcher, Alex, and his team were in the final stages of an academic study focused on small businesses and their role in modern urban economies.

Unique Collaboration between California LIVE Podcast and Bern University on: Local Businesses, AI Discovery, and the Future of Urban Economies

As part of that research, the team used publicly available data and  interviews from California LIVE Podcast. In addition, they conducted direct exclusive interviews with Dr. Marwan Chahayed, Small Business Administration District Director Heather Luzzi, Producer Colleen Saftler and Victor Migalchan, bringing together perspectives from small businesses, media, healthcare, public institutions, and entrepreneurship.

This connection, facilitated by Victor Migalchan, resulted in a first-of-its-kind collaboration between an independent media platform and an individual contributor working alongside one of Europe’s leading universities. The partnership positioned California LIVE Podcast and its contributors not only as interview subjects, but as part of the research framework itself.

Small Businesses are the core of the Economy.

Local businesses shape the daily rhythm of cities. Independent cafés, repair workshops, boutiques, and family-owned restaurants give neighborhoods their identity and continuity. These businesses are not only cultural anchors but also a core component of local economies. Data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that around 20 percent of small businesses close within two years, and about half do not reach their fifth year. Comparable patterns exist in Switzerland and other European markets, particularly in hospitality and retail. These closures are rarely caused by poor quality or lack of effort. Small business owners invest long hours, care deeply about their craft, and build strong relationships with customers. Yet many still struggle. As one widely quoted line captures this reality: “It is possible to make no mistakes and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life.”
– Captain Jean-Luc Picard

The deeper challenge lies in visibility and access. While global platforms benefit from scale, centralized data, and powerful algorithms, small businesses operate largely in isolation, competing for attention in systems not designed for them.

Why Traditional Marketing Tools Miss the Reality of Small Businesses

Interviews with small business owners reveal a strong interest in collaboration, yet existing marketing tools often work against that goal. Discount-driven loyalty programs and coupons are common examples. These tools can be effective for large corporations with extensive product ranges, but they frequently conflict with how small businesses create and protect value.

Many owners express active resistance to discounting. To them, price reductions feel less like support and more like erosion. One business owner summarized this clearly:
“I rely on word-of-mouth referrals. If you have a clean name, I think the word spreads much faster.”

When customers are drawn mainly by deals, repeat visits are rare, and trust remains shallow. Coalition loyalty programs modeled after large corporate systems often amplify a “rich get richer” effect, leaving smaller participants with limited benefit. As a result, independent businesses struggle to compete collectively with platforms that dominate discovery through advertising budgets and algorithmic placement.

Trust, Identity, and Changing Consumer Expectations

Consumer behavior has shifted, particularly among younger generations. Gen Z increasingly treats purchasing as a form of self-expression rather than simple consumption. Research into buying habits shows a growing interest in origins, values, and personal relevance. Customers want to know who made a product, how it was produced, and why it exists.

Customers want stories. As one interview participant explained:
“I like stories a lot… when I buy something, I would like to have some trust in the story of the product.”

Small businesses are rich in these stories. They know where materials come from, who makes the product, and why it exists. Yet many customers still struggle to act on their intention to shop locally. As one customer put it plainly:
“I want to buy local, but it’s not always easy or obvious how.”

At the same time, trust has shifted away from traditional advertising. Consumers report fatigue with polished claims and paid promotions, especially around sustainability. Instead, they rely on reputation, real people, and increasingly on AI-based tools perceived as neutral advisors.

AI as a Discovery Layer for Local Economies

AI assistants such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity are now part of everyday decision-making. Their limitation is not capability but access to structured local data. When reliable information is missing, these systems default to generic answers or large platforms.

The opportunity lies in creating a shared digital knowledge space for local businesses. Each business contributes clear information about what it offers, where it operates, and which problems it solves. Together, these contributions form a trusted reference layer that AI systems can consult.

Instead of choosing a single “winner,” the AI filters relevant local options and presents a small shortlist. This supports informed decision-making, a priority repeatedly expressed by customers during research.

As one guiding principle puts it:
“Make everything available and help customers to find it.” – Chris Anderson

The Long Tail Effect in Local Markets

This collaborative discovery model aligns with the long tail theory introduced by Chris Anderson. The theory shows how many niche products with limited individual demand can collectively match or exceed the impact of a few mass-market offerings.

Platforms such as Spotify and Netflix demonstrate that even items deep in a catalog have an audience when discovery works well. Anderson notes that “many of our assumptions about popular taste are actually artifacts of poor supply-and-demand matching.”

Local economies operate in the same way. One workshop or café serves a narrow audience, but hundreds together offer more variety than any single large retailer. For customers seeking authenticity and differentiation, this becomes a compelling place to search.

Collaboration, Risk Reduction, and Economic Stability

Branding expert Victor Migalchan emphasizes that many small businesses exhaust themselves by trying to manage every aspect alone. Technology adoption, marketing, and visibility require skills and time that individual owners often lack.

From an institutional perspective, collaboration also reduces risk. Heather Luzzi, Director at the U.S. Small Business Administration, has highlighted that businesses embedded in strong local networks tend to be more resilient. Regional banks observe similar patterns. Businesses that collaborate recover faster from disruptions and show greater long-term stability, which directly affects lending decisions.

AI systems can support this collaboration by translating between different professional languages. They can identify complementary opportunities that traditional keyword searches overlook, enabling partnerships that create value across sectors.

Cities, Change, and Opportunity

Rapid technological change reshapes both markets and cities. Small businesses often feel pressure to keep up, yet these shifts also create openings. As customers grow skeptical of paid advertising, alternative paths to visibility emerge.

As Seth Godin has noted:
“Change is not a threat, it’s an opportunity. Survival is not the goal, transformative success is.”

Cities that rely on diversity and collaboration are more resilient than those dependent on a single industry or dominant players. Shared digital infrastructure that improves discovery strengthens local ecosystems without sacrificing independence.

Acknowledgements

This research was shaped by the insights and experiences of practitioners and experts who work closely with small businesses every day.

Sincere appreciation goes to Colleen Saftler and Dr. Marwan Chahayed for sharing detailed perspectives on service quality, pricing integrity, and long-term customer trust. Their input highlighted why many small business owners are unwilling to trade value for short-term visibility.

Special thanks are extended to Heather Luzzi from the U.S. Small Business Administration for providing a broad, practical view of the small business ecosystem. Her experience across public institutions and the banking sector helped clarify how collaboration strengthens resilience and reduces systemic risk.

Gratitude is also due to Victor Migalchan for facilitating research connections in California. His expertise in small business branding and systems thinking played a significant role in connecting practitioners, institutions, and ideas that informed this work.

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