Deeper Bank Relationships Can Elevate Small Businesses

In This Article:

By Mike Walters, KeyBank Executive Vice President, President of Business Banking

CLEVELAND, OH / ACCESS Newswire / May 27, 2025 / Most small business owners are chief everything officers. Even when outsourcing or hiring to fill needs, their hands run deep in operations, finance, marketing, technology, and sales. Consequently, some meaningful relationships go underdeveloped-including the important relationship between small business owner and bank.

It's not that small business owners don't value their bank. Most do. Rather, for time-crunched owner-operators, the relationship is transactional. The bank is home to their accounts and the place to deposit and withdraw money. It's where they turn to access capital and loans. For some, the bank is even a resource for managing cash flow. Yet for many, the bank-and by extension their banker-is not a trusted business advisor. It should be.

Conversations lead to more targeted solutions

At the close of 2024, there were nearly 4,000 FDIC-insured banks in the U.S. Most offer a range of similar solutions. Even rates and terms tend not to vary dramatically.

So, what differentiates one bank from another? What makes a bank feel more than simply a checking or savings account?

The answer is simple. It is the relationship. It is a banker understanding the specific demands of a business and being able to provide much-needed advice and a tailored solution to a unique problem to achieve a specific outcome to help the business run better.

In addition to being the wearer of many hats, business owners are experts in their trade. Often times, that expertise is not financial.

But that's where business bankers come in. Their knowledge equips them to address a range of complex scenarios. From a knowledge of products that may improve efficiency and profitability to experience helping address a host of financial challenges, business bankers can offer advice and expertise that small business owners neither have themselves nor can easily access.

Examples include payments and receivables, invoicing, liquidity management, process automation, and fraud protection. Business bankers are also well versed in cash flow management-the lifeline of every successful enterprise.

The challenge is that financial operations is a bridge typically not crossed together. And this is a mistake, for the business…and the bank. In fact, the shift to a more consultative approach to business banking falls more on the bank than the business. Banks thrive when their clients thrive. Helping business owners understand how the money flows through their operation and where there may be opportunities to benefit from managing their collection and payable processes differently creates opportunities for all.