The line between “experimenting with AI” and “being disrupted by it” is narrowing rapidly, and for Spartanburg’s business community, the data from the first quarter of 2026 makes the urgency impossible to ignore. A record $297 billion in AI investment flooded the sector in Q1, agentic AI systems are operating in 79 percent of organizations globally, and a PwC study found that three-quarters of AI economic gains are flowing to a concentrated group of companies that moved early and moved decisively.
The implications for Spartanburg small and medium businesses are direct. The 40 percent of enterprise applications projected to have embedded AI agents by the end of 2026 are not just large company systems — they are the software platforms that local businesses use for accounting, customer relationship management, marketing automation, inventory management, and operations. AI is being built into the tools, whether or not the businesses using them have consciously adopted it. (Kersai Q1 2026 AI Report)
What Agentic AI Actually Means
The term that has emerged most frequently in the 2026 AI conversation is “agentic AI” — a category that goes beyond simple question-answering chatbots to AI systems that can plan and execute multi-step tasks autonomously. An agentic AI system can, for example, monitor a business’s customer reviews, identify patterns, draft response templates, schedule social media posts, update product descriptions, and flag operational issues — all without requiring human direction at each step.
For small businesses, the practical effect is that AI agents are beginning to function as a force multiplier for lean teams. A two-person marketing operation with the right AI stack can produce content volume and analytical capability previously requiring a staff of five or six. A sole-proprietor retailer can automate customer follow-up, inventory reorder triggers, and basic analytics in ways that were impossible without dedicated staff two years ago.
The Performance Gap
The PwC finding that most AI gains are captured by a small group of top performers is the most consequential piece of data for Spartanburg businesses. The study defines “AI performance leaders” as organizations that have moved from pilots to embedded deployment, integrated AI across multiple business functions, and developed internal capability to evaluate and adopt new tools as they emerge. (PwC 2026 AI Performance Study)
In the small business context, that distinction often comes down to whether an owner has spent time learning to use AI tools actively, or has simply heard about them and deferred engagement. The gap between those two positions is widening each quarter as AI capabilities advance and competitors who have learned the tools move faster, serve customers better, and operate more efficiently.
Starting Points for Spartanburg Businesses
The OneSpartanburg Small Business Summit on May 7, 2026, will feature practical AI adoption sessions designed for businesses with fewer than 50 employees. The sessions are built around the tools and workflows most relevant to Spartanburg’s business mix — retail, professional services, healthcare support, manufacturing supply chain, and food and beverage.
Additional resources include the Spartanburg Area Chamber of Commerce’s technology programming, Spartanburg Community College’s continuing education offerings, and the SCORE mentorship program, which has expanded its AI and technology mentoring capacity in response to demand.
The record $297 billion investment quarter in AI is a measure of where the technology industry is placing its bets. The practical question for every Spartanburg business owner is simpler: what tool can I learn this month that will make my business measurably more competitive? The answer is available, accessible, and — increasingly — affordable.
What’s Happening: Q&A
Q: What is agentic AI and how does it differ from ChatGPT?
Agentic AI systems can plan and execute multi-step tasks autonomously — monitoring data, making decisions, triggering actions — without step-by-step human direction. ChatGPT and similar tools respond to single prompts. Agentic systems operate continuously in the background.
Q: How many organizations are using AI agents?
79 percent of organizations worldwide reported using AI agents as of Q1 2026, according to data from Kersai’s AI market report. The figure has doubled in approximately 18 months.
Q: What did the PwC study find about who benefits from AI?
PwC’s 2026 AI Performance Study found three-quarters of AI economic gains are captured by a small group of companies that have moved beyond pilots to embedded, multi-function deployment. The gap between AI leaders and laggards is accelerating.
Q: Where can Spartanburg small businesses learn about AI adoption?
The OneSpartanburg Small Business Summit on May 7 will include dedicated AI sessions. The Chamber, Spartanburg Community College, and SCORE all offer resources. Practical starting points include AI-embedded versions of tools businesses already use — accounting, CRM, email marketing.
Q: Is AI relevant to manufacturing businesses in the Upstate?
Yes. Predictive maintenance, visual quality inspection, generative design, and logistics optimization are all reaching mid-market price points. BMW and Michelin’s parent companies are actively deploying AI in European operations, creating performance benchmarks that Upstate facilities will need to meet.