June SBR Featured Member: National Small Business Association
The National Small Business Association is the nation’s oldest small business advocacy organization, celebrating more than 80 years. NSBA is a uniquely member-driven organization which operates on a staunchly nonpartisan basis with members in every state and every industry throughout the nation.
Small-business advocacy is the driving force behind NSBA, and they know that the best advocates for small business are the owners themselves, who devote their lives to making their businesses, their employees, their communities and their nation a better place. Their more than 65,000 members are
as diverse as the economy they fuel, and their political beliefs are widely diverse, yet we all come to the table with one priority: promoting small-business ownership, growth and sustainability.
NSBA’s members also include their state and regional small-business affiliates, some of which are more broad business groups such as Chambers of Commerce, and some of which are more specific to small business.
A few weeks back, NSBA held their annual fly-in event called the Washington Presentation where their small-business leadership converged on Washington, D.C. for two days. In addition to specific panel discussions on topics ranging from cybersecurity to procurement, and lobbying 101 to free trade, the delegation attended a White House Briefing, a Congressional Breakfast at the Capitol and took to the Hill to lobby their own Members of Congress.
A key component of this event is recognizing their Lew Shattuck Small Business Advocate of the Year Awardees. This award is given to small-business owners to go above and beyond in advocating for policies that improve the small-business climate beyond just their own business and industry.
In addition to recognizing outstanding small-business advocates, NSBA has focused considerable resources on building up their Leadership Council – a group of small-business leaders with representation in nearly every state and district with a goal of enhancing their grassroots operations. Nearly 100 members of this group were part of a dinner during the Washington Presentation where they heard from the FixUS campaign, led by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) and discussed the need for political reform in order to address the major issues our country faces. NSBA has been an active partner of the CRFB and many of its campaigns, including the Fix the Debt campaign and the FixUS campaign.
Prior to the NSBA delegation taking to Capitol Hill, NSBA President and CEO Todd McCracken—a founding board member of the Small Business Roundtable—provided insight into NSBA’s top issues and the key lobbing topics.
One thing that makes NSBA very unique is that every two years, at the beginning of a new Congress, NSBA holds their Small Business Congress where small-business owners discuss, debate and the vote on the organization’s Priority Issues for the upcoming session of Congress. Then, throughout the year, NSBA’s four policy committees discuss these priorities as well as any new issues that come up and warrant NSBA’s focus. These committees are open to any NSBA member, giving their members a great deal of influence on how NSBA lobbies Capitol Hill.
The leadership at NSBA has cultivated an association dedicated to and driven by their small-business members. The current staff at NSBA has more than100 years of collective experience on small-business advocacy – their longevity illustrates the importance of their mission and cements NSBA’s role as a small-business leader in Washington, D.C.
