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United StatesEconomy4 days ago

Want to start a business? AI can help, business owners say

Artificial intelligence tools are helping entrepreneurs start and grow businesses by automating tasks such as writing business plans, conducting market research, generating marketing content, designing logos, and prototyping products. According to entrepreneur Chris Franco, these tools have removed barriers to entry for starting a business. The article also notes that new business formation in the U.S. has reached record levels, with solo founders playing a significant role in this growth. Economist Torsten Slok highlights that AI is reducing the costs associated with starting and managing a 

By

Megan Cerullo

Reporter, MoneyWatch

Megan Cerullo is a New York-based reporter for CBS MoneyWatch covering small business, workplace, health care, consumer spending and personal finance topics. She regularly appears on CBS News 24/7 to discuss her reporting.

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June 17, 2026 / 5:00 AM EDT

/ CBS News

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New artificial intelligence tools are making it easier to start a business, fueling entrepreneurship and potentially job growth.

AI can write a business plan, conduct in-depth industry research, generate marketing content , design logos, prototype new products, and otherwise help launch or scale up a new enterprise, said Chris Franco, an entrepreneur who has used AI extensively in growing his New York-based marketing and customer acquisition firm, Woodridge Growth.

"You can do anything you can imagine. There's nothing holding you back," he told CBS News. "There's no excuse not to start a business in this age."

In recent years, new business formation across the U.S. has surged to its highest level ever, according to Census Bureau data. Solo founders are driving much of that growth, according to an analysis of Census data from Stripe Economics.

AI is slashing the cost of starting and running a business, said Torsten Slok, chief economist at asset management firm Apollo Global Management.

"That's because you can more easily write a business plan with a large language model, use agents to do work, so that's likely the reason the economy is becoming more dynamic for entrepreneurs," he added. "It's becoming easier for experts in their respective fields, like consulting, finance or legal services, to break out and become entrepreneurs and compete with some of the incumbents."

Lower cost, higher speed

One way AI is lowering the barriers to creating a new business: reducing startup costs.

"Are founders able to hire leaner teams   and do more with less funding because of AI? One hundred percent," Angela Lee, a professor of entrepreneurship at Columbia Business School and herself a serial entrepreneur, told CBS News.

For example, Lee recounted spending $20,000 for coders to build a website for one of the first businesses she launched in the 1990s.

"Today, you can use Lovable to vibe code a website in 20 minutes with a free tool," Lee told CBS News, citing a popular AI coding app. "Everything has decreased in cost and increased in speed."

Ernie Tedeschi, chief economist at Stripe Economics, described how entrepreneurs are leveraging AI to launch new enterprises.

"It can help you come up with a business plan, or give you advice on supply chains. It can do what you need to make your vision a reality," he said. "It can help you identify what forms you need to fill out and help you complete them before you even get to the idea itself."

"It helps us understand"

Albert Feldman, owner of Boston-based candle company Sky Candle Co., started his business before the era of artificial intelligence. But he has since turned to AI to create marketing campaigns, for financial planning and to generate a range of vital analytics. That has helped Sky Candle operate efficiently and compete with much larger enterprises, he told CBS News.

"It helps us understand what products we should make more of and which we should move away from. We make the product ourselves — we hand-pour the candles — so it requires a lot of financial planning," Feldman said. "By leveraging historical sales data, it helps us know how many wax and scent vessels we need to buy, and helps us make heads and tails of everything."

Although the advent of AI has stoked concerns that the technology could displace millions of workers, Apollo's Slok expects it to fuel innovation and, in time, job creation.

"If a fraction of the new ideas people have end up being successful, they'll need employment," he said. "It suggests the economy is becoming more dynamic, and ultimately, AI is going to create more jobs."

Lee of Columbia Business School is less optimistic. "Founders are hiring less, and unfortunately, I think ultimately it will take away jobs."

Edited by

Alain Sherter

In:

Artificial Intelligence

Read the full article at CBS News (US)
Source document: Census Bureau data

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CBS News (US)IndependentCenter4 days ago
Want to start a business? AI can help, business owners say

Artificial intelligence tools are helping entrepreneurs start and grow businesses by automating tasks such as writing business plans, conducting market research, generating marketing content, designing logos, and prototyping products. According to entrepreneur Chris Franco, these tools have removed barriers to entry for starting a business. The article also notes that new business formation in the U.S. has reached record levels, with solo founders playing a significant role in this growth. Economist Torsten Slok highlights that AI is reducing the costs associated with starting and managing a 

Bias read (Center): The article presents information about the impact of AI on entrepreneurship without taking a clear stance or using biased language. It includes quotes from both an entrepreneur and an economist, providing balanced perspectives on the benefits of AI in business development.

Official sources cited

  • government Census Bureau data
  • organisation Stripe Economics analysis

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.

  • governmentCensus Bureau data
  • organisationStripe Economics analysis