
Guest post by Ciarán Quilty, Senior Vice-President for International at Intuit
Digital transformation has flooded business leaders with tools but what it hasn’t delivered, consistently, is confidence.
That is the gap that matters more than ever now in the rising AI economy. Above adoption and access is confidence. Despite clear evidence that digitally connected businesses are 2.4x more likely to report higher productivity and 2.3x more likely to see increased revenue, more than 25% of UK small businesses still don’t use basic digital tools
Because leaders aren’t struggling with information, the real challenge is noise. This includes data points with no priority, dashboards without context and ultimately, insights that land too late or vaguely to guide real decisions.
The result is something quieter than failure: hesitation.
More tools, less certainty
Small and medium-sized businesses are making decisions under pressure, with fewer resources and thinner margins than their larger peers. They don’t have the luxury of testing every new platform or hiring teams to interpret dashboards. They need to know what matters now.
Yet too often, that’s not what tech delivers. The reasons aren’t surprising: cost, complexity, and a growing sense that many systems overpromise and underguide.
If digital tools don’t help leaders make faster, more confident decisions, they add friction rather than value. Instead of helping leaders move faster, the wrong tools add layers of prep: comparing dashboards, cross-checking systems, chasing consistency. Insight becomes one more thing to manage, not a source of direction.
What confidence actually looks like
It’s easy to treat confidence like a personal trait. But in business, it’s a system-level outcome that comes from seeing what’s changed, knowing what matters, and acting early before issues pile up.
This is where AI shows real promise. Not in automation at scale, that’s a given, but today it’s about surfacing signals leaders didn’t know to look for.
We’ve seen this already. One SMB leader sends out an invoice. Before hitting send, an AI agent flags the customer’s consistent late payments and suggests a late fee. The change takes seconds but improves the chance of on-time payment tenfold.
More than a clever feature this is something designed to be relevant to the needs of the business and this is what builds confidence. Because it shows up at the right moment, with a specific, financially relevant prompt, the system provides support, while earning trust while turning technology into partnership.
The stack that works: AI and human expertise
Technology doesn’t build trust alone. Data from the Institute of Coding reveals that just 12% of SMEs have invested in AI training, even though 52% cite lack of skills as a major adoption barrier. The best results come when AI and human advice work in tandem, spotting patterns, prompting better decisions, and giving leaders space to think.
Decision-support agents are already shifting what’s possible. They flag anomalies, suggest actions, and scale insight without adding weight. But they still leave room for human instinct and judgment. The point isn’t to replace the leader but support them in the moments that matter.
Done right, this is how technology fades into the background, and true leadership moves forward.
Focus over function
When leaders are overwhelmed, it doesn’t mean they stop caring, they just stop trusting. Second-guessing the data and delaying action, as they wait for certainty that rarely comes.
And over time, that doubt creates drag: Momentum slows, decisions stack up and strategy recedes into the background.
If we want to rebuild that momentum, we need to stop layering on features and start designing for focus. Because clarity, not complexity, is what turns information into action. Think of a cash flow dashboard that shows declining revenue vs. an alert that tells you: ‘Revenue has dipped 12% this month due to two major late payers, would you like to send a reminder or adjust terms?’ One shows you the issue. The other helps you solve it
Reframing the question
The real question isn’t: how advanced is the tool but does it help the leader feel confident in what to do next?
If the answer’s no, the tech doesn’t need more features, just a sharper point-of-view. In practice, this means the system knows what decision the user is trying to make, and presents only what’s relevant to that moment. It doesn’t just offer tools. It offers orientation.
That’s where the next evolution of digital support should land. Yes it’s expanding what AI can do, but important this means narrowing what leaders have to think about. Instead of flooding leaders with trend graphs and market predictions, a focused system might say: ‘You’re 15% below target for the quarter. Based on past patterns, reaching out to these five customers could close the gap.’ That’s AI narrowing the decision field instead of expanding it.
Confidence is structural
We often treat confidence like an intangible benefit, something secondary to efficiency or speed. But for SMBs, it’s central to progress. It’s what allows investment, growth, and bold decision-making when margins are tight.
And right now, this is the real threat. Not from competitors but distraction, uncertainty and the steady erosion of focus. One recent poll from the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) found that 27% of UK SMB leaders expect their business to shrink, close, or be sold in the next year, the lowest sentiment recorded since 2018
If we want to equip leaders for what’s next, we need to design for confidence. That means building systems that strip away noise, surface what matters, and let leaders lead.
No more dashboards, just more clarity.
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