Meta makes artificial intelligence play for small businesses
Meta is targeting Main Street with its latest initiative.
The tech giant, Meta, is launching Meta Small Business, an aggressive program that offers AI tools to the 250 million small and medium businesses on its platform. This move is in response to the increasing legal challenges faced by its core advertising business, with the company banking on smaller enterprises to drive its future growth.
Mark Zuckerberg stated in an internal post reviewed by NYNext, “Small businesses have always been the largest category of our business. In the AI era, it should be easier than ever for people to build new businesses. We want to build the services that enable this.”
Heading the initiative are Meta President and Vice Chairman Dina Powell McCormick and head of product Naomi Gleit, reporting directly to Zuckerberg. They will leverage the existing base of over 300 million small businesses already using Meta’s platforms – Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp.
“I’ve seen firsthand that small business owners don’t fear new challenges – they’re resourceful, creative, and relentlessly solution-oriented,” Powell McCormick told NYNext.
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The move comes at a time when the AI industry is heating up, with tech giants racing to establish their presence as consumer behavior evolves and products like Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s ChatGPT gain popularity.
Meta’s focus on SMBs taps into a lucrative market as these businesses spend billions annually on digital marketing and tools. While larger enterprises have embraced AI solutions, smaller businesses have been underserved despite being the majority of businesses globally.
With many small businesses already using Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp for advertising, Meta is well-positioned in this space.
Instead of introducing new AI platforms, Meta is integrating tools into existing platforms to automate tasks like generating personalized responses and creating social media content, making it easier for SMBs to utilize AI.
This initiative follows Meta Compute, a $600 billion investment in American infrastructure and jobs announced by Zuckerberg earlier this year. The company is actively shaping its AI infrastructure strategy to drive growth.
While facing competition from Google Business tools and Microsoft 365’s AI integration, Meta’s focus on customer-facing marketing tools gives it an edge where SMBs allocate most of their digital efforts and budget.
Despite regulatory challenges and legal issues, Meta remains committed to diversifying its revenue streams and expanding its offerings to adapt to the evolving landscape.
The emphasis on small businesses coincides with Meta’s restructuring efforts, including job cuts in the Metaverse division, indicating a strategic move towards AI applications with clear revenue potential.
“We are empowering the millions of entrepreneurs already using our platforms with product solutions and tools to help them grow,” Powell McCormick told NYNext.



