Coverage for Untapped Unicorns

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The Entrepreneurs Network’s report on the Untapped Unicorns – the underfunded female entrepreneurs – has received widespread media coverage.

In summary the report showed that there is an evident gender bias against female entrepreneurs receiving funding from capital providers; despite the fact that female-led businesses are less likely to fail. The Entrepreneurs Network’s Annabel Denham comments that this data is frustrating and recommends a change in education, culture and data collecting to combat the evident bias.

Sexism in start-up investment leaves UK businesses male-dominated, The Telegraph

We need to stop sexism in start-up investment, The Guardian

Eight Stats That Show How Britain Fails Its Female Entrepreneurs, Forbes

Unitapped unicorns: It’s time to close the scale-up investment gender gap, City AM

Pelvic floor exercise device maker Elvie receives £6m funding to launch more products, The Telegraph

Mind the funding-gap: Why we need more female founded scale-ups, Forbes

Greater efforts required to fund female-led firms, The Scotsman

The Big Interview: Jackie Waring, founder and chief of Investing Women, The Scotsman

How to tap into government funding for female entrepreneurs, SmallBusiness.co.uk

Call to ‘untap funding’ for female entrepreneurs, BusinessCloud.co.uk

Female entrepreneurs need more access to funding, according to report, WeAreTheCity.com

Lack of investment opportunities sees female startup founders lose out, BusinessAdvice.co.uk

How Britain can drive the growth of female entrepreneurship, Startups.co.uk

Untapped Unicorns: scaling up female entrepreneurship, Barclays

Untapped unicorns in North East England (and how we are helping Shorthand Social

Investment culture remains very much male-dominated The National

Plugging the Gender Funding Gap, The Huffington Post

Local councils fail to support business growth

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A report by the Business Census 2017 showed that most businesses feel local council support is getting worse, with 7 out of 10 of businesses feeling let down. The areas that were most unhappy were the East of England and Northern Ireland, whereas London and Scotland were most content with support. Philip Salter, founder of The Entrepreneurs Network, advised that although “this isn’t the time to shake things up, it should be a prod to government at every level that many Local Enterprise Partnerships (LEPs) and Growth Hubs aren’t yet firing on all cylinders.” To boost support from local councils, we should put more money into LEPs and increase Metro Mayors.

Read the full LocalGov article here.

Local government business support has dwindled

The support that local governments give to businesses has weakened this past year, according to a survey by Business Census 2017 Report, with now 70% of businesses unhappy with the help. The survey also found that increasingly businesses are concerned about the global state of politics, although the majority surveyed have not been affected by Brexit so far.

As Philip buy ativan online india Salter of the Entrepreneurs Network put it, “2016 delivered uncertainty by the bucket load. Whatever the medium to long-term impact of Brexit, there can few who doubt that in the short run there will be a bumpy ride. 2017 may be a little more interesting than many would want.”

Read the full article here.

How the landlords aren’t moving fast enough

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The latest Proptech roundtable on the transformation of the property market stressed the importance of landlords keeping up with increasingly fast-moving tech companies. Co-working could be one solution, but the roundtable also showed that it’s not just the landlords that are holding businesses back. Internet connectivity, insurance buy ativan online overnightproblems and exorbitant taxes on property development all were raised. Overall, businesses need to work alongside the government and the property market to make the UK an even more attractive setting for new tech companies.

To read the full Tech City News article, clickhere.

We can’t afford to lose the Enterprise Investment Scheme

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Lord Howard Flight recently wrote an article for Conservative Home, stressing the importance of continuing the Enterprise Investment Scheme. The EIS offers tax incentives for high risk equity investment in SMEs, and has been crucial to the success of entrepreneurship in Britain over the last decade. Flight references the Entrepreneurs Network’s study – which found that only 25% of MPs knew about EIS – to call on a greater awareness of MPs about the scheme.

To read the full Conservative Home article, click here.

Women are leaders, not female leaders

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“In the future, there will be no female leaders. There will just be leaders.”

Given the wave of growth in of women entrepreneurs over the past few years, it seems that Sheryl Sandberg is right. As Annabel Denham shows in a Huffington Post article, the future looks bright for businesswomen, with women-led companies growing at explosive rates as Founders4Schools’s studies show. With the gap narrowing between female and male led companies, female-focused investment platforms such as AllBright are sprouting up and creating new networks and crowdfunding opportunities.

To read the full article, click here.

Barclays report shines the spotlight on British start-ups

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A new Barclays report has showed that the UK had a better environment for growth in the months leading up to the referendum than at any other time since 2011, due to access to finance, improved regulation and increased research and innovation. However, as Annabel Denham writes in Huffpost Politics, the environment for British entrepreneurship is still far from perfect.

While skills shortages are holding businesses back, low corporation tax and better regulatory conditions have helped improve conditions for the entrepreneur. Similarly, although the budget could have done more to lift the burden on businesses, pledges to invest in infrastructure and innovation will be a boost. Overall, the report suggests that “the wider picture is mixed” and we must hope that the Spring budget will make this country even more entrepreneur-friendly.

To read the full article, click here.

£400m venture capital boost will help, but we need to support growing firms even more

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Chancellor Philip Hammond announced in the Autumn statement his plan to pump £400m of venture capital funds into the British Business Bank, unlocking £1bn of new finance for growing firms. Philip Salter responded in an article for Real Business:

Philip Salter, director of The Entrepreneurs Network, said:
“£400m into venture capital funds through the British Business Bank makes sense in the context of Brexit, given the expected need to transition from the European Investment Fund (EIF) after we leave the European Union.

“But the Spring Budget should be an opportunity to grasp the nettle: unburdening enterprise through cuts to the most destructive taxes and simplifying incentives – like the Enterprise Investment Schemes and Employees Share Schemes – while avoiding the excesses of previous Chancellors.”

To read the full article, click here.

Small Business Taskforce have no easy task

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The Telegraph has reported on the creation of the Small Business Taskforce – a group of organisations, including The Entrepreneurs Network, who have come together to champion SMEs in the UK. The Taskforce is key to protecting British businesses as it offers ministers a “sounding board” so they may understand how new regulations will effect businesses before they come into place. The Taskforce was created at a time of great change as Britain gradually prepares to leave the EU and the new government establishes itself, but it offers stability and a voice for millions of workers involved in SMEs around the UK.

The Taskforce’s open letter to ministers outlines the five central issues it wants to tackle:

  • A flexible workforce including ensuring EU workers already in the UK have long-term resident rights
  • A workable tax regime with small businesses consulted about any proposed changes
  • Accessible business support
  • International trade for all
  • Consultation with small business

Read the full Telegraph article here.

Roundtable: Transformation of the commercial property market

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Philip Salter attended the a roundtable on the transformation of the property market, which was written up by Yessi Bello Perez of Tech City News:

“Philip Salter, director of The Entrepreneurs Network – a think tank for growing businesses and entrepreneurs – said there is a shortage of office space in cities such as London.

“The cost of renting is significant and is largely dependant on the current state of supply and demand. Price is also influenced by bad planning policies,” he explained.”

Read the full article here on page 29 of the Tech City News digital edition.

Huffington Post article: Small Business Taskforce is a big force for good

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The Huffington Post has reported on the Small Business Taskforce – a group of 14 business bodies (including The Entrepreneurs Network) who have come together to ensure Britain remains a start-up friendly country after Brexit. The Small Business Taskforce is calling on the new government to work out trade buy ativan from canada deals, budgets and immigration policies that help small companies as well as more established ones. Together, they represent over 1,000,000 businesses and the Taskforce includes Coadec, Social Enterprise UK and Forum of Private Business.

Read the full article here.

Immigrants are one of our greatest strengths – and the government needs to recognise that

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Many people can’t help but feel that the new government has somewhat turned its back on immigrants and entrepreneurs. Although Home Secretary Amber Rudd quickly backtracked on her plans to force firms to disclose their number of foreign workers, business-owners and workers alike remain concerned about can i buy ativan online the future of British enterprise.

This is why Philip Salter caught up with four entrepreneurs of four different nationalities (Romanian, Italian, American and British) to hear about their worries and why immigration is vital for the UK’s economy and society.

Read the full Forbes article here.

Fighting to make enterprise a priority again

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The Economist’s article included The Entrepreneur’s Network as a key group campaigning for a business-friendly Britain. There are fears that the UK has become less attractive to entrepreneurs following the Brexit vote, with the number of new business registrations slowing down as of June. However, the article suggests that policies such as cutting corporation tax, handing out city visas and giving guarantees for long-term EU residents could combat this uncertainty and help Britain keep its reputation as a top place for start-ups in Europe.

Read the full Economist article here.

Why letting go matters: Philip Salter’s interview with entrepreneur Charlie Mowat

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Around the Leap 100 roundtable, most people would admit to being control freaks. However, as Charlie Mowat points out, there comes a time when your start-up is simply too big to micromanage and, as a founder, you need to hand over responsibility. For Mowat, this meant hiring heads of department, focusing on strategy rather than day-to-day affairs and letting other make mistakes. As he puts it himself: “I had to learn how to exert that control in a way that’s healthy for the business but satisfied my needs.”

Read the full City AM article here.

An interview with three Sirius businesswomen

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The Sirius Programme helps high growth business ideas from international students to start-up in the UK, and it it thanks to them that we can tap into so much global entrepreneurial spirit to boost our own economy. The Brexit vote has raised many questions about the future of business in the UK but it is clear that we should do everything we can to keep harnessing the potential of these young entrepreneurs.

Philip Salter talks to three of the most successful female Sirius alumni here in Forbes.

Business groups join forces to reassure Britain’s smallest firms over Brexit

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A cohort of small business representative groups have joined forces to offer a consistent line of support to Britain’s smallest firms and the self-employed following the EU referendum.

The nine organisations agreed in a meeting on Tuesday/June 28 to coordinate their efforts in the interests of offering positive reassurance to small businesses.

The representatives from the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB), Enterprise Nation, National Enterprise Network, Open to Export, IPSE, The Entrepreneurs Network (TEN), the Institute of Chartered Accountants, England and Wales (ICAEW), British Library Business and IP Centre, and Coadec, will work together to offer ideas around what businesses should be doing now to shore up their firm for the future.

Emma Jones, founder of small business support group Enterprise Nation, said: “It’s more important now than ever before for entrepreneurs to maintain optimism and look forwards, not backwards.

“The worst thing we can do is talk ourselves into a recession when formal negotiations leading to exit will take at least two years.

“Inevitably there will be new opportunities – and there are things businesses can do to protect themselves from changes that might affect them in short term and in the future. We have come together to make sure small businesses can easily get hold of the information and advice they need during the current period of uncertainty.”

Romilly Dennys, founder of Coadec said: “We are focused on supercharging our efforts to champion UK startups and the digital economy. We will work closely with tech founders across the UK to deliver a strong policy voice to Government, and ensure digital startups play a leading role in shaping our future.”

Mike Cherry, FSB national chairman said: “FSB will work with Government and other partners to ensure the UK’s 5.4 million smaller firms get the best deal for them to do business. At this week’s business summit chaired by Business Secretary Sajid Javid, I stressed the need for immediate action to ensure economic stability, to ensure small businesses can continue to trade and do business. Smaller firms need simple access to the single market, the ability to hire the right people, continued EU funding for key schemes and clarity on the future regulatory framework.

“When the negotiations start, FSB will be a constructive partner and a strong voice, working with other entrepreneur groups and pushing for swift clarity on these crucial points.”

Simon McVicker, director of policy and external affairs at IPSE said: “Now we are leaving the EU, IPSE believes the priorities should be new global trading arrangements, cutting burdensome regulation on small and micro businesses and ensuring that Britain has the most flexible and attractive economy in the world.”

Clive Lewis, head of enterprise at the ICAEW, said: “Whilst there have been no negotiations following the UK vote to leave the EU, the financial markets (currencies and stock exchanges) are already adjusting to the new situation. It is likely that foreign currency movements could affect small business trading position through either sales revenue or costs, so it is more important than ever to monitor financial performance.”

Dawn Whitely, chief executive of the National Enterprise Network said: “The members of National Enterprise Network have supported many hundreds of thousands of people thinking about or already running a business over the past 30 years, they’ve worked with their clients through good economic times and bad and whilst this is undoubtedly unchartered water for us all our membership is nonetheless looking to ensure all the clients they are working with have the best possible opportunity to survive and thrive no matter what! The key is to look for those opportunities wherever they may be, but support and advice will be key in ensuring small businesses can compete on home soil and abroad irrespective of any Brexit negotiation deals and we will be looking to Government to ensure that support is in place.”

Philip Salter, founder of The Entrepreneurs Network said: “In the short term, political uncertainty is a cost to British businesses and in the medium to long term reduced access to the Single Market could displace economic activity. This Referendum was a vote on whether we should stay in the European Union, not an election upon which we elect a Party based on manifesto policies. As such, The Entrepreneurs Network is calling on the current and next government to strike a deal that’s best for Britain, and that means causing as little damage as possible to the free movement of goods, capital and people, which means staying in the Single Market.”

Detailed advice will be shared by all parties to ensure consistent information is freely available in the public arena.

This was picked up by the Mail on Sunday.

The Challenges of Fast Growth

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There are aspects of running a business that you can’t really discuss with your employees. I’ve been in digital media for a decade, in startups for nearly eight years, each of which have grown from 2 or 3 people to 50 within 24 months. And that process has brought certain challenges around hiring, firing, building a team and redundancies.

If you’re growing, you have to hire, which is a time-consuming, exceptionally challenging process. We’re created a framework which allows us to on-board and hire what we feel are the right people, as quickly as possible, while minimising risk. This is the positive side of fast growth, and it’s a model that was put in front of me at a Balderton Capital event on hiring efficiently.

It’s based around competency interviewing – i.e. not asking open-ended questions and instead looking for specific examples of competencies one has shown in the past and making sure they match up to the skill set you need in your business. I’ve deployed this in both startups and applied it to sales and marketing, account management, and engineering roles.

Competency interviewing is great for hiring the guys who will operate the business on a day-to-day basis. But when it comes to the senior team, you will need to spend a longer time looking. The chairman, for example, is critical and will inevitably take longer to find.

When you think about your company, there are five or six behaviours that your top colleagues should have at least some of. In our business, for example, being analytical is the one behaviour we see across the board with our best staff. Once you have identified your management team, you’re able to ask and interview people around those behaviours, rather than asking: “Tell me about the areas where you’re weak,” which just gives them the opportunity to sell themselves. Having these five behaviours gives a company a structured way of establishing the right person for a job. Broadly, we’ve seen very good results with this method, but some things do fall through the cracks.

Which leads us to the crappier areas of dealing with fast growth which naturally occur in the business. One is redundancies – which are separate to making bad hiring decisions, and more about making bad strategic decisions and subsequently needing to streamline. Even if you’ve hired the right people, you may still face redundancies.

Last year we went from 65 to 50 people because we’d made some errors on the cost base. The first lesson I learnt was to cut much deeper than you want to and believe is adequate. You need to create a buffer. It was advice given to me by our VC, which I ignored, and six months later came to regret.

Once you’ve made the decision to reduce the head count, the management have to know straight away. Next, the individuals need to be informed. When delivering the news, you have to be very prepared on what exactly they’re going to get. The minute you tell them, they stop thinking about the business and start thinking about their own survival – their families or mortgages. They want to know when they’ll have to leave, about their package, and whether you’ll help them look for a new role. All this should be prepared – including thinking about moving them to another company within your VC firm’s portfolio.

An additional downside is that you’ll inevitably see additional churn. It’s natural that in making 10 per cent of your team redundant, 15 per cent will end up leaving in total. So when deciding who to make redundant, consider who will have the biggest impact on team left behind. Once you’ve made the tough decision, get the rest of the team together and explain to them what’s happened and why. The biggest challenge is on being transparent with the team on moving forward. Their natural question will be: “how bad is it?”

I was fully transparent with my entire team on one occasion, and it backfired because not everyone was senior or mature enough to be able to handle the move. I told them all would be fine, provided we hit a certain revenue per month for six months. But what happens when you’re 20 per cent down on that? Questions, murmurings, talk among the team. So I’ve learnt to hand pick the people who should know about cost bases and plans going forward. And after all is said and done, the team is so much stronger.

The second area is the early employees who don’t transition with the business, and this is often a lot harder, as you’ll likely be a lot closer to them. They probably have the best option and equity schemes in the business. I would highly recommend the book “The hard thing about hard things” by Ben Horowitz, which address the hard graft and tough decisions that come with running a startup. At one point the author had seven days to IPO as the business had run out of cash, and while doing that, he had to care for his critically ill wife.

I’ve yet to solve the problem of letting early staff go, though I’ve learnt something about handling it. In the current company, we had the same issue with early employees who are thrust into management positions. Each was phenomenal in their initial roles. The trouble comes when the company grows and they find themselves 10 to 15 people to manage.

We now do 360 reviews with the management team, which is run by our senior advisers. It avoids the constant one-on-one of my telling a team member that they’re failing in certain ways. The quarterly 360 review makes it obvious, quickly, which areas an individual needs to work on.

Then you have to make the decision. But rest assured, our VCs say every company in their portfolio has experienced this challenge at some point. Staff not growing with the business is a very common problem, but if you’ve given them a structured overview of where they’ve fallen short, it’s far easier because you have specific examples.

You need to remember that there’s a secondary impact of not letting underperforming staff go, and that’s on the rest of the team. Everyone will know that you’ve not made a decision quickly enough. That team will suffer from being poorly managed, and start to ask why management isn’t doing anything about it. It’s important to act fast.

The final challenge of growth is around time management. I’ve not always managed my time as efficiently as I could, but now I sit down at the start of ever month, identify the two or three things that drive my business forward, ask what items my to-do list impact those things, and give the rest to the financial director or another senior team member.

Glen Calvert founded advertising technology company Affectv in 2011. This article is a transcript of his speech at a Leap 100/The Entrepreneurs Network breakfast on 8 June 2016.

Why we became the Secretariat of APPG for Entrepreneurship

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When it comes to support, entrepreneurs have never had it so good. Successive governments are increasingly valuing their contribution to the economy and there are a growing number of organisations out there doing a brilliant job of supporting their growth.

These organisations include the well established FSB, CBI, BCC, IoD, but also Enterprise Nation, Prelude Group’s Supper Club, the British Library’s Business and IP Centre, and, dare I add, us at The Entrepreneurs Network. And this is just the tip of the iceberg when you start to add up all workspaces, incubators and accelerators up and down the country.

We set up The Entrepreneurs Network three years ago to help bridge the gap between entrepreneurs and policymakers. Through programmes of research, events and lobbying we have grown to fill the gap in the market for an organisation to act as a conduit between two very different constituents – both helping politicians and policymakers at large understand the priorities of entrepreneurs and helping entrepreneurs understand current, changing incoming policies. In essence, we exist to help provide feedback in the making and breaking of policies impacting entrepreneurs.

That’s why we jumped at the opportunity to become the Secretariat for the APPG for Entrepreneurship, which Business Secretary Sajid Javid will launch in the House of Commons today. Alongside the Chair Alan Mak MP, the MPs and Lords making up its Officers and Members, partner organisations and a network of thousands of entrepreneurs, we will work to make Britain the best place in Europe, nay, the world, to start and grow a business.

In the first 12 months we plan to focus on four areas of policy: tax reform, exporting, enterprise education and female founders.

There can be no doubting that the UK has some of the best tax regimes in the world. We lead much of the world with corporation tax rate at 20 per cent, SEIS and EIS, Venture Capital Trusts and Entrepreneurs’ Relief. But we shouldn’t rest on our laurels. For example, the seven-year rule for EIS investments is can put older companies at a disadvantage and HMRC is struggling to turn buy ativan from india around requests for Advance Assurance Requests for SEIS and EIS at the same speed as it used to.

On exporting we will survey entrepreneurs in our network for UKTI to see what’s holding back British exporters. On a per capita basis we export £4,773 – significantly less than comparable European countries like the Netherlands (£19,942), Germany (£11,059), France (£7,654) and even Italy (£5,087). UKTI has set up a real-time platform for exporting opportunities as part of its Exporting is GREAT strategy, but policymakers might need to dig a little deeper so that the strategy is a success.

According to data from Beauhurst, only 164 (12 per cent) of the 1,422 deals last year were from companies with at least one female founder, equating to £359m (8 per cent) of the £4.23bn total investment. At The Entrepreneurs Network we run a Female Founders Forum project with Barclays and a group of some of the UK’s most successful female entrepreneurs, looking at why so few women-led businesses scale up. We will increase the scope of this work through the APPG, collaborating with other groups with similar aims.

Over the next 12 months we will also delve into how enterprise is taught in schools. We are mindful of a lot of great work already being done in this space –for example, Founders4Schools, MyBnk Back My Business, Young Enterprise’s Fiver and Tenner Challenges, the Mosaic Challenge, the National Enterprise Challenge, Tycoon in Schools and the School Enterprise Challenge, to name just a few – so first we will call out for input from these organisations on where the gaps are and where the policy consensus is.

These four areas of focus are a roadmap for this APPG – but they’re not a blueprint. As the Secretariat, we will act as a conduit for all the great organisations that want to work through the APPG to improve entrepreneurship in the UK. Governments will come and go – but this APPG will be a strong voice for the long-term success of entrepreneurship in the UK.

The Entrepreneurs Network launches APPG for Entrepreneurship

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Today, the APPG for Entrepreneurship (of which The Entrepreneurs Network is Secretariat) was launched at a reception in the Houses of Parliament.

Entrepreneurs, journalists, politicians and key individuals from within the entrepreneurial ecosystem joined us to hear Business Secretary Sajid Javid extoll the virtues of entrepreneurship, outline how the government is supporting business owners, and discuss how his childhood gave him a unique understanding of the fashion world…

The group, which is chaired by Alan Mak MP, will focus on four key areas in its first 12 months: exporting, enterprise education, female founders and tax reform. Here’s why we became Secretariat. And below is all the press coverage the APPG’s launch received:

Sajid Javid launches All-Party Parliamentary Group for Entrepreneurship, The Guardian

The post-crash entrepreneurial revolution has changed www.health-canada-pharmacy.comBritain: I want MPs to spur it on further, City A.M.

Alan Mak: Boosting entrepreneurship is key to North’s prosperity, Yorkshire Post

The state of running a firm in Britain – and what role the All Party Parliamentary Group plays,Real Business

Why schools should encourage entrepreneurship, Huffington Post

Sajid Javid launches initiative to give business owners a voice in Parliament, startups.co.uk

Government launches Parliamentary group for entrepreneurship, Tech City News

Entrepreneurs call for less tax, less regulation and more skilled workers, Fresh Business Thinking

Alan Mak MP: Entrepreneurs will get Britain to the future first, Politics Home

New Parliamentary group to bridge gap between businesses and politicians, Bdaily

Lowering taxes tops “to-do” list for new Parliamentary business group, Is4Profit