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Twenty Years of Small Biz Survival

By Becky McCray

Twenty years ago today, I hit “publish” on the first post here at SmallBizSurvival.com.

I was sitting in the backroom of my liquor store in Alva, Oklahoma, population at the time of just under 5,000 and dropping.

That very first post asked: ‘Can you build a growing small business in a declining small town?’ I’ve spent twenty years proving the answer is yes.

Screenshot of the first post at this blog, Small Biz Survival

I started this blog because I’m a small town entrepreneur, and I believed then (still do) that small town entrepreneurs have a lot to teach other businesses. When local entrepreneurs prosper, they help their small town prosper, too.

That was January 14, 2006. A lot has changed since then. A lot of other blogs have come and gone. But we’re still here.

The People Who Made This Possible

I can’t talk about twenty years without talking about the people who’ve contributed their knowledge, their stories, and their time to this rural corner of the internet.

My mom, Glenna Mae Hendricks (Maesz), shared tax tips and accounting wisdom that helped so many small business owners sleep better at night. She’s since passed on, leaving a real legacy.

Jeanne Cole was one of our earliest contributors, a friend from long before I started the blog who showed up when it mattered.

Glenn Muske brought decades of Extension service experience and true expertise on micro-businesses.

Deb Brown, my co-founder at SaveYour.Town, has contributed her retail knowledge and real-world small town business experience.

And there have been so many guest contributors over the years: Jon Swanson, H.E. James, Zane Safrit, Barry Moltz, Sheila Scarborough, Marci Penner, John Warrillow, Shannon Ehlers and Scott Meyer.

What Blogging Brought Me

Here’s what I didn’t expect when I started: blogging was the step that made everything on my career goal list possible. (Of course I had a career goal list! If you know me, then you know.)

Chris Brogan was my first blog friend. He got me involved in his early podcasting projects starting with Grasshopper New Media in 2006. Then other media ventures like Owner Magazine. He’s the one who convinced me to join Twitter in 2006 when it was brand new (my user number was 10,318), back before hashtags or even @ names existed. Chris is really the biggest reason blogging turned into more for me over the years. In 2020, he came back to guest post here. Thanks, Chris!

Then there was Liz Strauss of Successful-Blog.com. She handed out Successful Outstanding Blogger awards and called us SOBs, which was hilarious. Liz connected me with so many other people. At her SOBCon event, I met Barry Moltz, who became my co-author for our award-winning book Small Town Rules. Liz got me early speaking roles at BlogWorld Expo in 2008 and ’09. We spoke together as a duo at SXSW in 2010. Rest in peace, Liz.

Those connections led to more connections. Speaking opportunities. My work with Sheila Scarborough creating Tourism Currents. Eventually, the work Deb Brown and I do at SaveYour.Town. The Survey of Rural Challenges that started as a topic survey for this blog and has now reached over 2,200 rural folks. My second book The Idea Friendly Guide. Speaking engagements from local community centers to Harvard Kennedy School and international stages.

None of that would have happened without me hitting publish on January 14, 2006.

What We’ve Built Together

The recognition has been humbling. Top 10 Best Small Business Blogs by Feedly and FeedSpot, as of today. Top 25 by Technorati for a brief moment during the height of the blog competition. Selected for syndication through LexisNexis, Thomson Business Intelligence, MyVenturePad. Named a Small Business Influencer multiple years running and a Power Player in Technology Business Media.

Look how SmallBizSurvival had grown by 2008!

Our long-running Brag Basket, where people shared their own successes. The podcasts, video streams and experiments. The thousands of posts from the practical to the fun.

Guest columns at US News and World Report, SmallBusiness.com and SmallBizTrends.com. (SmallBizTrends also still plugging along after 20 years!) Getting to judge small business grant entries for Intuit. Attending conferences like the National Association of Seed and Venture Funds on a media pass.

The emails from business owners who tried something they read here and it worked. The small town entrepreneurs who found practical advice they could actually use. The rural communities that discovered they weren’t alone.

Still Here, Still Rural

A lot has changed in twenty years of blogging and twenty years of rural entrepreneurship. But the core truth remains: small towns can thrive when their local businesses prosper.

Alva’s population made a resurgence in the mid 2010s (just one more oil boom), before dropping back below 5,000. I don’t have the liquor store anymore, but I’m still writing from real experience, my own successes and failures as a lifelong entrepreneur. Still focused on practical steps you can put into action right away. Still believing that when you take care of your business, you’re taking care of your community.

Here’s to the next twenty years of small biz survival.

Thanks for being part of this journey.

  • About the Author
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Becky McCray

Becky started Small Biz Survival in 2006 to share rural business and community building stories and ideas with other small town business people. She and her husband have a small cattle ranch and are lifelong entrepreneurs. Becky is an international speaker on small business and rural topics.

www.beckymccray.com
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January 14, 2026 Filed Under: announcement, brag basket, rural, tech Tagged With: anniversary, blogging, rural

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  1. Sheila Scarborough says

    January 26, 2026 at 5:45 pm

    “Blogging was the step that made everything on my career goal list possible.” YES. And it’s still a thrill to hit Publish, isn’t it? So proud of you and everything you’ve built and achieved! ♥️

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    • Small Biz Survival says

      February 4, 2026 at 2:08 pm

      Thank you so much, Sheila! You’ve seen a similar return on your early investment in sharing your thoughts with the world. Cheers!

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