For Business Growth
RISE Commercial District was recently highlighted in a USA Today Contributor Content article titled “The Missing Middle: How RISE Commercial District Is Addressing the Business Space Gap Small Operators Have Faced for Decades.” Published on April 17, 2026, the piece focuses on the gap many small business owners face when they outgrow working from home but are not yet ready for a traditional long-term commercial lease.
The article positions RISE as a solution for that “missing middle” stage of growth, where operators need practical, flexible space that supports the next step without forcing an oversized commitment too early. It is a strong example of the broader conversation happening around how commercial real estate can better serve small and growing businesses.
Why the Story Matters
The USA Today article captures a challenge we see every day: business owners reaching a point where their garage, spare room, or makeshift workspace can no longer support real growth. According to the article, that transition has historically come with limited options, often requiring businesses to take on too much space, too much cost, and too much long-term risk all at once.
That is exactly the problem RISE was built to address. The piece highlights how our model is centered around helping small operators move into professional space in a way that is practical, predictable, and aligned with how businesses actually grow.
What USA Today Highlighted About RISE
The article outlines several aspects of the RISE model, including small warehouse, office, and flex spaces ranging from 200 to 3,000 square feet across Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Missouri. It also notes bundled features such as utilities, business Wi-Fi, forklift access, security, on-site management, shared conference rooms, and dumpster access within one monthly rate.
The piece also shares the company’s origin story through founder and CEO Jim Sapp, whose own experience with space constraints helped shape the concept behind RISE. It further points to examples of tenant growth, including NEAT Audio, as evidence of the kind of business transition RISE is designed to support.
This kind of visibility:
- Helps more local businesses find the spaces that they need
- Brings to light the gap between self storage and commercial warehousing
- Encourages others to act on the business they once thought couldn’t keep moving forward
For us, the article serves as a reminder that the spaces we provide can become platforms for impact—not just for our members’ businesses, but for RISE as a whole.


