Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Outset





HUNTINGDONSHIRE DISTRICT COUNCIL - OUTSET SCHEME

Huntingdonshire District Council is keen to encourage the growth of new businesses within Huntingdonshire and Outset Huntingdonshire is a dedicated business start-up support programme specifically targeted at residents interested in starting their own business.  The initiative will provide a flexible range of options including pre and post start-up support, one-to-one sessions, mentoring and e-learning. It is delivered by the award-winning enterprise provider YTKO and aimed at all sectors of society including unemployed, women, lone parents, under 25s,and  people at risk of redundancy. For further information about starting a new business with Outset Huntingdonshire call 0800 032 7851 or visit www.outsethuntingdonshire.co.uk

#Huntingdonshire
#business
#startup

Written by Richard Wishart


Wednesday, 11 December 2013

wired for success



WIRED FOR SUCCESS

Our region has just secured some major political objectives and is beginning to move forward.  The Cambridge City deal, planning permissions at Alconbury Weald and the decision not to toll the A14 are major political successes - but now under the new enlightened regime we must push forward with core digital connectivity.

We need to connect Cambridge with the Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone and Alconbury Weald with the Cloud.  The solution is really simple and straight forward.

We need 1 Gbps "fibre to the premises" (FTTP) broadband to every significant business within the "Cambridge City Deal" area and also to every business on the Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone (and adjacent business parks).  There are some major European switching nodes just outside the Alconbury Weald perimeter. We also need the highest capacity "fibre trunk" in the cable duct running alongside the guided bus-way route. This would link the Addenbrookes Biomedical Campus at one end with the Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone at the other end. En-route it passes through the Science Park, the Microsoft research facility at the station, the St John's Innovation Centre, the new  Cleantech Incubator, and both Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire Regional colleges.  We need Peter Cochrane the former CTO of BT and the countries foremost high speed broadband advocate to lead this initiative - and this is exactly what he did for the Financial Services industry in Jersey.

By implementing this plan we create a true "Cluster of Clusters" and then we need to connect this "Super Cluster" to the Cloud.

Both the Cambridge City Deal and the Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone should have a special technical status that allows for rapid deployment of the latest "Cloud of Things" communication technologies (most of which were developed in Cambridge but not deployed in Cambridge)

- LTE Advanced 
- Bluetooth LTE (with iBeacon technology)
- Zigbee IP
- Near Field Communication
- ISO 18000 Dash7  technology
- Next generation  ISO 18000 6c technology

Not only would this put our LEP region at the heart of the development of the "Cloud of Things" it would put Alconbury Weald at the heart of the "Cloud of Making Things"  It would also put the Cambridge Super-cluster forward as the only logical  place to develop the world's next 5th generation wireless technologies. 

This would be a massive attractor of really innovative technology companies to Cambridge, the GCGP LEP area and the new Enterprise zone at Alconbury Weald.

Written by Richard Wishart

#cloud #broadband #wireless #making








Saturday, 7 December 2013

HMA Funding for Growth



Invite you to attend this FREE business information event:

Funding for Growth
#HMAF4G

How you get your hands on free Government Money

Wednesday 22nd January, 2014

Building 56 at Alconbury Weald Enterprise Zone
Programme
8:00 - 8:30 am Coffee/Breakfast/Networking


8.30 am - Welcome and introductions
Stuart Gibbons, HMA Chair.


8.35 am – Jenny Wilton, Manufacturing Advisory Service – Matched Funding for Manufacturing SMEs
Jenny, Manufacturing Advisor, will highlight how easy it is to get access to the funded support available from MAS for business growth, including matched funding for specific expert help and Product Development activities.

8.50 am - Kurt Scheepers, Grants 4 Growth – Matched funding for capital expenditure leading to increased resource efficiency.Kurt, Business Broker for the scheme, will explain how businesses can access matched funding to assist with the costs of capital equipment expenditure.

9.05 am – Carole Randall, Low Carbon Keep - Matched funded Knowledge Transfer Partnerships
Carole will explain the programme and how businesses can get matched funded support to innovate and grow through University Partnerships and Knowledge Transfer.
9.20 am - Recipients of funding share their experiences


9:30 am - Questions and Answers


Please feel free to continue networking after the formal close of the event at 10.00 am


To book please contact Louise Lee on +442033267315 or Louise@saundersandlee.com
     
    
 Partner Logos HERE


Thursday, 5 December 2013

Driving Risk Matters


LAUNCH OF DRIVING RISK MATTERS

Local entrepreneur Les Hammond has launched his brand new company "Driving Risk Matters" with some positive support from the Hunts Post. Les is an active member of Huntingdonshire Business Network and we all wish him well in his exciting new venture.

Hywell Barrett who is the business reporter at the Hunts Post who wrote the article is keen to support new business startups.

Les is giving a presentation at HBN today about the thinking and psychology behind his new "Driving Risk Matters" product.  http://www.meetup.com/Huntingdonshire-Business-Network/events/153110952/

He was responsible for Driver training for the Olympics which involved training 6000 drivers in under 3 weeks and he now wants to turn this into his own business.

It is really important that local "start up" entrepreneurs are properly supported by the local business community in Huntingdonshire

Written by Richard Wishart

#Business
#Huntingdonshire
#Startup
#HBNmember





Monday, 2 December 2013

Royal Mail Privatisation


ROYAL MAIL PRIVATISATION



The road to postal privatisation has been a long one.  Richard Wishart who is a well respected international postal consultant was interviewed on The Business Hub by Ann Hawkins.  Why did he think it was a good idea ?





Big thanks to Mark Peters and Ann Hawkins from the Business Hub for allowing the use of this clip. It is always worth listening to on a Sunday morning

http://www.thebusinesshub.info/



Written by Richard Wishart

#Postal
#Privatisation
#Royal Mail


Sunday, 1 December 2013

Driving Risk Matters

  


Whose Risk Is It Anyway?
(How to Design your Business)

HBN business event on Friday 6th December at 1230 in Huntingdon at the WI Centre on the Ring road.  Use this link to register
Les Hammond will be launching his band new company called "Driving Risk Matters" at the December HBN monthly seminar.  For his last employer Les trained 9000 drivers within 21 days.  The event was the Olympics so of course the completion date was fixed in stone - and achieved.  Les was a Parachute Jumping Instructor so motivation and psychology are part of his high on his agenda and part of his DNA.
Les will be demonstrating the business logic and the psychology that he has used to design his new business.  It is an extremely well designed concept and will be truly disruptive product when it hits the market in the new year.  For any entrepreneur thinking of setting up a new business this is the way that you design and create a disruptive and highly competitive service product.
The agenda for the presentation will be
• Ice Breaker “Ooooh Behave” what’s the worst thing you have ever done…. 
• Driving for Work Risk Management (D4Wk) – what is Driving for Work?
• Why do we need to manage D4Wk?
• Must Do, Should Do, Could Do – a model to establish minimum standards
• Management Task Vehicle Driver Risk Contribution factors
• Interventions available to respond to D4Wk Risk
• What will you do next?

Designing you business proposition is probably the most important decision that any small business owner will make.  Benchmarking your business ideas is critical and HBN has a lot of expertise in this area.
Duration:  30 minutes

12:30 - 12:55 Buffet Lunch - A real treat prepared by the good ladies of the WI  
13:00 - 13:30 Seminar
13:30 - 14:00 Discussion and Questions
14:00 - 14:25 General Networking
14:25 - 14:30 Clean up and depart

Cost & Venue.
Seminars (1st Friday of Month): Cost £10 (Members pay £5) Pay on arrival at door.. 
Location:
WI Centre, 6a Walden Road, Huntingdon, PE29 3AZ 

Saturday, 30 November 2013

International Manifesto

INTERNATIONAL MANIFESTO

One of the stated priorities for the Greater Cambridge and Greater Peterborough Local Enterprise Partnership is internationalisation and one of the initiatives is to make 2014 the "Year of Exporting"  In this short blog I will try and lay out the most important structural issues that I think need to be addressed.

The traditional UKTI model is well intentioned but is fatally flawed.  Some really excellent people but doing the wrong things.  It would be very interesting to understand the UKTI budget for the the GCGP LEP area and our share of the overseas "in-country" resources.  Government funding for trade and investment (and UKTI) for the LEP area should go to the LEP board where it could be allocated far more efficiently to either UKTI or to private providers. We have a lot of very talented private sector providers and country specialists who are not being encouraged

The existing model is far too simplistic.  Currently trade is really all about sending goods out of the country with some arbitrary targeting to regions and markets.  About 60% of UK trade is with Europe but all the UKTI resources and events are focussed on very difficult and remote markets - normally as the result of a political whim. There is an arbitrary split between Trade and Investment and in fact the Investment activity has been completely outsourced and hived off to PA consulting. 

So when an overseas enquiry comes in about an overseas mission to the UK, PA consulting makes an arbitrary decision about which region to recommend.  In the past we used to see lots of overseas missions but now we see none. These visitors are potential trading partners not just people looking to set up a UK office.  We need good intelligence about all overseas visits into the UK to pitch our LEP area against other LEP areas and when there is a visit within the region we need to know about it and connect local companies into the visit.

Internationalisation is about trade in physical goods, services and knowledge but really only the export of physical goods is properly supported (very badly).  The Chamber of Commerce provides some support for export paperwork but this can be quite limited. There are four levels of physical exporting. Sending parcels through the likes of DHL, TNT or Royal Mail.   Shipping ISO containers through Felixstowe or the new London Gateway and ULDs through Stansted, East Midlands or Heathrow.  Setting up an overseas in-country distributor or even opening an office yourself in the country.  This type of granularity is not understood or differentiated within the UKTI offer.

Services are equally difficult to quantify and properly support.  Education services must be one of the biggest exports from our region with one of the longest and most profitable paybacks. Nobody accounts for say an an Indian student coming from India to study at Cambridge University.  Where does that appear in the trade figures ?

The Knowledge economy is not really understood or supported by UKTI.  ARM is probably the biggest exporter  in Cambridge but it only exports Intellectual Property in the form of technical designs for electronic chips and these are probably emailed to the customer.  Probably doesn't even appear on any UK trade figures and never crosses a physical customs border.  These type of knowledge products are no longer the exception - they are the rule.

To support our knowledge economy we need representative offices in all the global science and high technology clusters.  Early spotting of innovation and sources of funding and encouraging these businesses to set up in our region seems to be the key.  We must be seen as highly collaborative and being fully integrated. Companies from the LEP region have their offices in all the important world markets and they can be providing us valuable intelligence and even co-working space for visiting trade missions.

As any exporter knows - funding of overseas expansion can be really difficult.  There are significant structural problems with finance and we are seeing a retrenchment of financial services back into the UK. The banks are ready and willing to help but we are not properly articulating what is really required.  Maybe we need some new financial models.

A real focus on the sectors and future industries that we want to build in the LEP area must be properly represented within our internationalisation agenda.  Getting our overseas embassies and overseas offices to set up "no cost" video conferencing facilities like Google Hangouts with International Hangout hubs in all our Science Parks and Innovation Centres would be transformational.  Social Media like innovation has no borders but we must be promoting our way of working or we will find ourselves excluded.  For instance Chinese companies are now adopting their own social media brands and we are naturally excluded.

The other huge opportunity for our region is to be seen as the gateway to the rest of Europe - so that Asian or North American businesses see our LEP region as the best place to set up their European HQ or distribution centre.  We used to have very good air travel to European business hubs but now there is virtually nothing and like most other businessmen in the region I have to use London City Airport or the Channel tunnel out of St Pancras

We have incredibly poor information and have absolutely no statistics about the GDP or Balance of Trade figures for our region.  We don't even know the number of companies who are "exporting" goods, services or knowledge.  I suspect that we are actually doing very well but with some structured improvement we could be world class.

We have a vast amount internationalisation expertise in the region but we need to harness it in an effective manner. I hope this manifesto stirs the type of discussion that we need and results in tangible action

#trade #commerce #international

written by Richard Wishart