The Empirical Value of the Veteran Economy
Across the United States, veteran entrepreneurs are quietly powering local communities and stabilizing the national workforce. From roundtable discussions with the Governor of Montana to industrial warehouses in North Carolina, discover how the transition from military service to civilian business leadership forms a crucial, trillion-dollar pillar of the American economy.
During Invest in Veterans Week, the critical role that former service members play in the national economy has taken center stage. In Bozeman, Montana, Governor Greg Gianforte recently visited Anthem Snacks, a veteran-owned meat snack company, to convene a roundtable of local veteran entrepreneurs. Gianforte highlighted that veterans continue serving their communities long after leaving the military by creating jobs and strengthening local economies.
Meeting with Anthem Snacks owner and former Green Beret Nate Kouhana, along with other local business leaders, the discussion focused on the challenges of scaling veteran-owned enterprises and recruiting former service members. Business owners like Willie Blazer of Willies Distillery and Trent McMurtrey of Scoute Arms pointed out that the rising cost of living and a lack of affordable housing in areas like the Gallatin Valley make it difficult to hire veteran employees, even when paying competitive wages.
Gianforte pointed to recent legislative efforts to ease these burdens, including a 2023 law that exempts half of military pensions from state income tax. However, local veteran advocates challenged lawmakers to increase that exemption to make the state more competitive nationally. Meanwhile, state agencies are stepping in to help, utilizing local Job Service Offices to assist transitioning service members in translating their military skills into civilian careers.
This push to help veterans transition into the civilian workforce is echoing across the country. In Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. Army veteran George Watkins runs Stein Service and Supply, an industrial equipment company. Watkins explained to WCNC that leaving the structured environment of the military can be overwhelming, but the skills veterans possess are exactly what small and mid-sized businesses need.
Watkins noted that former service members bring leadership, discipline, and rapid adaptability to the workplace. He added that these traits are highly valuable for businesses seeking individuals who take initiative and work cohesively within tight-knit teams. By actively employing both Army and Naval veterans, Watkins emphasized that hiring veterans is a direct investment in the local community itself.
Quantifying the Backbone: Our Integration with Google Dataset Search
At National Invest In Veterans Week® (NIVW), our core objective is to take local, micro-level success stories like those in Bozeman and Charlotte and prove their macro-level impact using hard data.
To ensure the economic footprint of veteran founders is accurately measured, readily accessible, and highly visible to policymakers and financial institutions, our digital infrastructure recently reached a major milestone. The data architecture hosted on our platform has been officially indexed and recognized as an exploratory hub within Google Dataset Search.
You can view the official Google Dataset indexing of the veteran economy here.
By implementing precise schema markup on our Veteran Economic Intelligence Dashboard, our team established a machine-readable bridge to public data originating from the U.S. Census Bureau and the SBA Office of Advocacy.
The Empirical Value of the Veteran Economy
The localized leadership demonstrated by Kouhana, Watkins, and other veteran entrepreneurs serves as real-time data points in a massive macroeconomic pillar. Our newly indexed dataset, Veteran Business Economic Output, centralizes critical performance variables that shift the narrative from general awareness to quantifiable economic reality:
Aggregate Economic Impact: In the United States alone, the 2.5 million veteran-owned businesses generate an estimated $1.3 trillion in annual economic impact.
Employment Drivers: Veteran enterprises serve as consistent engines for workforce stability nationwide, supporting approximately 5.8 million jobs.
Business Ownership Rates: The United States demonstrates a high veteran entrepreneurship rate at 13.7 percent, nearly double that of other English-speaking nations.
Actionable Outcomes for the Future
Watkins pointed out that veterans have already demonstrated their ability to perform under pressure and simply require an opportunity to showcase their value in the civilian sector.
When legislative staff, corporate partners, and institutional investors search for information regarding the impact of veteran businesses, they require structured, factual intelligence to create those exact opportunities and to understand the housing and policy needs discussed by entrepreneurs in Montana.
By hosting this data in a format recognized and served by the world's primary search engine, we ensure these metrics are immediately accessible to the individuals responsible for shaping lending policies and corporate partnerships. Behind every trillion-dollar statistic and dataset index are individual veterans who take the resilience, adaptability, and technical skills learned in uniform and use them to serve their local communities. Through our expanded data infrastructure, NIVW will ensure their economic contributions remain clearly documented, utilized, and honored.
Resources & Source Material
Google Dataset Search Indexing: View the official NIVW dataset
Montana Governor's Office: Governor Gianforte Convenes Veteran Business Owners in Bozeman
WCNC Charlotte Feature: Businesses urged to support service members during Invest in National Veterans Week
National Invest In Veterans Week Staff
National Invest In Veterans Week® is an award-winning congressionally honored social impact organization dedicated to honoring and supporting our nation's veterans. Visit Invest In Veterans Week | info@investinveteransweek.com
The Trillion-Dollar Transition: How Veteran-Owned Businesses Anchor the American Economy
National Invest in Veterans Week runs from March 1-7, 2026. Beyond the celebration of service, this observance highlights a profound economic reality: veteran entrepreneurs are a critical, trillion-dollar pillar of the American economy. Discover how the transition from military service to civilian leadership is being quantified through a first-of-its-kind JSON-LD data framework indexed in Google Dataset Search.
National Invest in Veterans Week, taking place March 1-7, 2026, is an annual observance dedicated to honoring service members who have channeled their military experience into civilian entrepreneurship. While it serves as a time of recognition, the week fundamentally highlights a much deeper economic reality: the resilience, strategic dedication, and immense macroeconomic impact of veteran-owned businesses. The core mission of this initiative is to empower communities and drive local economies by acknowledging that veteran leadership does not end upon discharge—it simply changes form.
During this observance, the public is encouraged to actively sustain these enterprises through commerce, systemic mentorship, and vocal advocacy. Organizations such as the Armed Forces Financial Network are actively championing this cause across digital platforms. To participate on a local level, consumers and corporate partners can utilize the official search tool offered at SBA.org or visit https://search.certifications.sba.gov/ to identify and support veteran-owned businesses in their immediate area. Advocates are simultaneously amplifying this mission across social media using hashtags like #PeopleHelpingPeople, #HonoringOurVeterans, and #VeteransSmallBusinessWeek.
Across the United States, transitioning service members are quietly functioning as the stabilizing force behind local communities and the national workforce. Navigating the shift from a highly regimented military environment to the civilian sector is notoriously complex, yet localized support systems are demonstrating exactly how vital this demographic is to the broader American infrastructure.
In Great Falls, Montana, Air Force veteran Paul Lamelin faced significant structural uncertainty as he prepared to retire after two decades of service with the 341st Security Forces Squadron. For many retiring service members, the sudden absence of military structure presents a profound psychological and professional hurdle. Lamelin experienced this apprehension firsthand while attempting to map out his civilian future. However, by engaging with Chelsea Keller, a Disabled Veterans Outreach Program specialist with Job Service Great Falls, Lamelin successfully translated his extensive military leadership experience into a highly competitive civilian profile. Through strategic preparation, he secured a role as a Program Compliance Auditor for the Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services, allowing him to transition seamlessly into public service without any disruption in employment.
Smoothing this complex transition is a statewide priority during Invest in Veterans Week. Governor Greg Gianforte recently visited Anthem Snacks in Bozeman, convening a roundtable with veteran entrepreneurs including Nate Kouhana, Willie Blazer, and Trent McMurtrey. The discussion illuminated the systemic barriers facing veteran business growth, particularly the challenges of recruiting fellow veterans amid rising living costs and a severe lack of affordable housing in the Gallatin Valley. Gianforte pointed to a 2023 law that exempts half of military pensions from state income tax as a measure to ease these financial burdens, while local advocates challenged lawmakers to pursue even broader exemptions to ensure the state remains competitive in attracting military talent.
The push to empower transitioning service members extends far beyond the Mountain West. In Charlotte, North Carolina, U.S. Army veteran George Watkins, Owner of Stein Service and Supply, highlighted during a WCNC broadcast that former service members inject a rare combination of discipline, crisis leadership, and rapid adaptability into the civilian workforce. He noted that these specific traits are indispensable for small and mid-sized businesses that rely on individuals capable of taking independent initiative while maintaining tight-knit team cohesion. By actively employing both Army and Naval veterans, Watkins views the integration of military veterans into civilian roles not merely as a hiring practice, but as a critical infrastructure investment for local communities.
Quantifying the Backbone: Our Integration with Google Dataset Search
At National Invest In Veterans Week (NIVW), the overriding objective is to take these micro-level narratives of resilience from Montana and North Carolina and codify their macro-level impact using empirical data.
To ensure the economic footprint of veteran founders is accurately measured, instantly accessible, and highly visible to institutional policymakers, the NIVW team engineered a first-of-its-kind proprietary JSON-LD schema framework. This technological milestone effectively bridges complex public data from agencies like the U.S. Census Bureau and the SBA Office of Advocacy directly into Google Dataset Search, making the economic realities of veteran entrepreneurship universally machine-readable.
Because of this architectural advancement, the data hosted on the NIVW platform has been officially indexed and recognized as a primary exploratory hub. The official Google Dataset indexing of the veteran economy can be viewed here.
The Empirical Value of the Veteran Economy
The localized leadership demonstrated by Watkins, Kouhana, and Lamelin serves as living data points within a massive macroeconomic pillar. The newly indexed dataset, Veteran Business Economic Output, centralizes critical performance variables that shift the national narrative from passive awareness to quantifiable economic reality.
Aggregate Economic Impact: In the United States alone, the 2.5 million veteran-owned businesses generate an estimated $1.3 trillion in annual economic impact.
Employment Drivers: Just as George Watkins actively hires transitioning servicemembers to scale his operations, veteran enterprises serve as consistent engines for workforce stability nationwide, currently supporting approximately 5.8 million jobs.
Business Ownership Rates: The United States demonstrates an exceptionally high veteran entrepreneurship rate at 13.7 percent, nearly double that of other English-speaking nations.
Actionable Outcomes for the Future
Veterans have repeatedly demonstrated their capacity to perform under immense pressure; they simply require equitable opportunities to deploy that value within the civilian sector.
When legislative staff, corporate procurement officers, and institutional investors seek information regarding the impact of veteran businesses, they require structured, factual intelligence to architect those exact opportunities—and to address the pressing policy needs discussed by entrepreneurs in places like Bozeman.
By hosting this data in a machine-readable format recognized by the world's primary search engine, NIVW ensures these metrics are immediately accessible to the individuals responsible for shaping corporate partnerships and capital lending policies. Behind every trillion-dollar statistic and dataset index are individual veterans who take the resilience, adaptability, and strategic execution learned in uniform and use it to anchor their local economies. Through an expanding data infrastructure, their economic contributions will remain clearly documented, utilized, and honored.
Resources & Source Material
SBA Certification Search: Find Veteran-Owned Businesses
Google Dataset Search Indexing: View the official NIVW dataset
Montana Spotlight: Governor Gianforte Convenes Veteran Business Owners in Bozeman | KRTV Feature on Paul Lamelin
WCNC Charlotte Feature: Businesses urged to support service members
🫡Our Team
“As an educator committed to professional growth, I fully endorse National Invest in Veterans Week® for recognizing that veterans are vital economic assets who deserve tangible support in entrepreneurship and workforce development.”
