Ottawa’s business community is navigating a period of rapid change and growing complexity. The Ottawa Board of Trade (OBOT) hosted a series of roundtables with small and medium sized enterprises across sectors. Through these discussions, OBOT identified the challenges and opportunities that matter most to businesses in the National Capital Regions.
Local leaders consistently highlighted that Ottawa businesses are navigating a period defined by rapid technological change, workforce disruption, economic uncertainty, and regulatory friction.
Technology and AI Adoption:
AI is no longer theoretical. Businesses are using it for admin support, content generation, energy optimization, fleet tracking, document review, and meeting transcription. But across the board, change management and lack of know-how, not cost, are the main barriers. Resource-constrained businesses especially struggle because owners simply don’t have the bandwidth to evaluate tools or train their teams.
Key findings:
Despite these barriers, early adopters are gaining tangible efficiency and cost advantages, and SMEs can move faster than large institutions if supported properly.
Succession Planning and Transition Risk:
Every roundtable flagged succession as both an urgent risk and a generational opportunity. A wave of retirement is coming, but most businesses are unprepared.
Key findings:
Economic Uncertainty, Elections, and Market Hesitation
Businesses throughout our region are approaching the current economy with caution as confidence takes precedence over raw data. Members across sectors tell us they are contending with policy shifts, cost pressures, and tighter financial conditions that complicate day-to-day decision making. Many are prioritizing stability as they navigate a business environment that feels increasingly unpredictable.
Key findings:
Across sizes and sectors, leaders feel this economic cycle is more uncertain than the pandemic.
Procurement Barriers and Regulatory Friction
Ottawa businesses continue to highlight how policy constraints are limiting their ability to grow and compete. Many of our members describe a landscape where government initiatives are not matched by practical implementation, increasing red-tape and leaving them uncertain about how to participate in public procurement or expand into new markets.
Key findings:
Downtown Ottawa Revitalization
Ottawa’s business community continues to express deep concern about the pace of downtown recovery and the need for stronger, more coordinated action from all levels of government.
Key findings:
Opportunities: Northern Markets, AI Infrastructure, and SME Agility
What Businesses Want from OBOT
Businesses were very clear: they need OBOT to lead with clarity, practical tools, and advocacy that cut through the noise.
Ottawa’s business community is navigating a pivotal moment. Across every roundtable, leaders made it clear that while the pressures are real, the opportunities are just as significant. Businesses are ready to modernize, but they need support to adopt new technologies. They want stronger pathways for succession and talent development. They need a more predictable regulatory environment, a revitalized downtown, and clearer access to procurement and trade opportunities. They’re calling for leadership that brings coherence to a fragmented landscape.
This series confirms that the Ottawa Board of Trade is uniquely positioned to drive the next stage of economic progress. By advancing practical tools, championing policy reform, strengthening regional partnerships, and connecting businesses with the resources they need, OBOT can help guide businesses through this period of uncertainty into a catalyst for long-term growth. The insights gathered here will help shape OBOT’s 2026 strategy and serve as a foundation for coordinated action across sectors.