Small business spending continues to underpin broad economic activity, but the systems that support that spending have room for improvement.
Many owners launch with urgency, using whatever tools are immediately available, and only later confront the operational consequences. Those consequences tend to appear not in the moment of purchase, but in the accumulated burden of tracking, reconciling and managing expenses across an expanding set of transactions.
That pattern begins at business formation. As Nat Hewett, senior director and head of credit and product strategy for small business cards at Capital One, said in an interview with PYMNTS, “for many business owners, the line between having an idea and having a business is blurry at the start. And it’s hard to know the exact moment that you’re going from one side of that line to the other.”
Once that transition occurs, the pace of operations leaves little room for process. Owners deploy personal capital and personal tools simultaneously, often without drawing a clear boundary between the two.
Structural Friction
Capital One research indicates that roughly 1 in 5 small businesses still rely on personal cards for business purchases, a statistic that reflects both convenience and constraint.
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That reliance, however, becomes a structural weakness as businesses scale. Hewett pointed to two recurring triggers that push owners toward dedicated solutions: the need for credit and the need for financial clarity.
“For some, the first real bottleneck will be needing access to more credit to run their day to day. And for others, they’re just looking for a clearer line of separation between their personal finances and their business finances,” he told PYMNTS.
The absence of that separation forces owners into manual work that grows with transaction volume.
Hewett described the issue in direct terms. “Having a dedicated business card means that you’re not sorting through a credit card statement trying to separate your Amazon grocery bill from your Amazon Web Services invoice,” he said, adding that the lack of separation “creates a lot of work when you don’t have that separation in place.”
Those gaps are often subtle. Hewett emphasized that the most common surprises are not large invoices but incremental losses that accumulate over time.
“There are a lot of ‘death by a thousand cuts’ type of transactions that are either being paid twice or not getting paid at all,” he said.
Centralization Changes the Equation
The introduction of a dedicated business credit card shifts that dynamic by consolidating transactions into a single system. That consolidation reduces the need for reconstruction and enables more consistent financial management.
“When entrepreneurs go to close their books and realize that all of their business expenses are in one place, that is hugely helpful,” he said. “It takes away a Sunday night every quarter of going through your credit card statements and really makes your life a heck of a lot easier.”
Beyond organization, business cards like those issued by Capital One introduce capabilities that personal cards are not designed to support. These include issuing employee cards, integrating with accounting systems and managing payments across multiple rails.
Delegation Requires Structure and Guardrails
Modern business card platforms address the need for delegation of spending through configurable controls. Owners can set spending limits, define transaction alerts and assign account managers who oversee activity across employees and vendors.
Virtual cards add a further layer of discipline. Hewett explained that assigning dedicated virtual cards to specific merchants or recurring transactions allows businesses to “protect both sides of the equation.”
If one card is compromised, the rest of the system remains unaffected, and recurring payments can continue without disruption.
For many small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs), the initial value of a business credit card is not found in rewards but in operational consistency.
At the same time, visibility into spending patterns provides insight into cash flow.
“It is a great way to be able to see all of your outflows in one place,” Hewett said, reinforcing the role of centralized data in decision making.
Balancing Speed and Control
The evolution of business credit cards reflects a broader objective. Owners require systems that move quickly but remain disciplined.
“If you have speed without control or control without speed, things are not that simple,” Hewett said, emphasizing that the goal is to align both elements within a single platform.
As Hewett put it, the objective is to create tools that are “intuitive, customizable, at your fingertips and ready when you need them,” while removing the friction that accompanies expanding spend.

