Square views its role as taking complex technology, from financial tools to AI, that is usually only accessible to large corporations and making it simple and available to small businesses. The ultimate goal is to improve their survival rate and help revitalize local economies.
To avoid AI hallucinations, Square's AI tools translate merchant queries into deterministic actions. For example, a query about sales on rainy days prompts the AI to write and execute real SQL code against a data warehouse, ensuring grounded, accurate results.
Most companies are not Vanguard tech firms. Rather than pursuing speculative, high-failure-rate AI projects, small and medium-sized businesses will see a faster and more reliable ROI by using existing AI tools to automate tedious, routine internal processes.
Square's product development is guided by the principle that "a seller should never outgrow Square." This forces them to build a platform that serves businesses from their first sale at a farmer's market all the way to operating in a large stadium, continuously adding capabilities to manage growing complexity.
Square strategically shifted its core customer definition from the generic 'small business' to the more specific 'local business.' This subtle change allows the brand to anchor its identity in the community fabric its customers create, moving beyond simple company size to a shared ethos.
The democratization of technology via AI shifts the entrepreneurial goalpost. Instead of focusing on creating a handful of billion-dollar "unicorns," the more impactful ambition is to empower millions of people to each build a million-dollar "donkey corn" business, truly broadening economic opportunity.
AI will fundamentally change user interfaces. Instead of designers pre-building UIs, AI will generate the necessary "forms and lists" on the fly based on a user's natural language request. This means for the first time, the user, not the developer, will be the one creating the interface.
To serve its largest customers, Square's open platform is crucial. It allows enterprises to integrate their preferred third-party tools with Square's core services. This flexibility prevents churn by allowing customers to customize their tech stack instead of being locked into a closed ecosystem.
While competitors focus on software, Square believes designing hardware "from the chip up" is a key advantage. This control allows for a superior, integrated experience for both customers and staff at the physical counter, making the technology feel seamless and delightful.
For the first time, a disruptive technology's most advanced capabilities are available to the public from day one via consumer apps. An individual with a smartphone has access to the same state-of-the-art AI as a top VC or Fortune 500 CEO, making it the most democratic technology in history.
The barrier to entry for entrepreneurship has collapsed. Anyone, regardless of technical skill or capital, can now use tools like ChatGPT and Replit to create a formal business plan and a functional app, effectively democratizing innovation.