THE LARGEST CIRCULATION REGIONAL BUSINESS PUBLICATION IN THE UK
ISSUE 72. MAY 2020
RISHI SUNAK
The spend, spend, spend chancellor
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CONTENTS 8
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SEEVENT From Phantoms to Plastics. Focus on the Sussex manufacturer
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SUSSEX SUPERHEROES Businesses helping out during the pandemic crisis DMH STALLARD Should companies be allowed breathing space when it comes to breach of contract?
SUSSEX INNOVATION How to survive and thrive during the lockdown
MOLLY MAID How technology can be utilised in clearing homes and offices of the Covid-19 virus
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THE BIG READ Rishi Sunak has had an interesting few months as Chancellor of the Exchequer! Maarten Hoffmann profiles Rishi Sunak, and assesses how he has fared so far.
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AVANTIS WEALTH In the midst of the chaos there are still investment opportunities
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KEVIN GREEN How to create an adaptive culture
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KNILL JAMES What needs to be done to protect the economy
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QUANTUMA Why cash flow is even more important during the pandemic
CHESTNUT TREE HOUSE Crisis appeal - your support is more vital than ever
ROCKINGHORSE Rainbow T-Shirts to raise money for Sussex children
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GENERATION GIN How the distiller switched its gin making skills to produce essential hand sanitisers
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NATWEST ACCELERATOR Rachel Swann, founder of Synergy Dance CLEANKILL How to cope with unwanted visitors at home GREENSTAR CLEANING The importance of deep cleaning
FRENCHIC Focus on the Surrey-based eco-friendly paint company
HURST How the staff and pupils are doing their bit to help during the lockdown
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MOTORING Maarten Hoffmann reviews the Stelvio Quadrifoglio
JEREMYS RESTAURANT Adapting to life during lockdown
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TRAVEL The Beauty of Belize
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GATWICK DIAMOND BUSINESS Join in one of GDB’s virtual events
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Welcome At this time of terrible woe for so many of us, we thought we would be frivolous and welcome you with a smile - and this made us all laugh like drains... To my friends who enjoy a glass of wine, l salute you. However, there are those who don’t and they are always seen with a bottle of water in their hand. Ben Franklin said: “In wine there is wisdom. In beer there is freedom. In water there is bacteria.” In a number of carefully controlled trials, scientists have demonstrated that if we drink one litre of water each day, at the end of the year we would have absorbed
more than 1kg of Escherichia coli (E.coli) - bacteria found in faeces. In other words, we are consuming 1kg of poop annually. So people who drink water are basically full of sh*t. However, we do NOT run that risk when drinking wine and beer (or rum, whiskey or other liquor) because alcohol has to go through a purification process of boiling, filtering and fermenting. Remember: Water = poop. Wine = health. Therefore, it is better to drink wine and talk sh*t than to drink water and be full of it...
Maarten Hoffmann Publisher And while you’re here... Platinum Publishing enjoys the largest circulation of any business magazines in the UK, reaching over 720,000 readers across the South East and this includes 468,000 online readers. If you can’t wait for the next issue then jump onto our social media platforms and join the conversation.
@platbusmag Platinum Publishing Group www.platinumpublishing.co.uk
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national Divorce Bonanza
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news
aw firms are braced for a surge in divorce filings as couples struggle to live with each other during the coronavirus lockdown, Britain’s so-called Queen of Divorce today predicted. Ayesha Vardag, one of Britain’s best known lawyers, said clients had been contacting her and her team in droves even during the lockdown period, sneaking calls in to the law firm while on their daily exercise or food shopping breaks from the house. “It’s been amazing how the calls have still kept coming in – two dozen a day,” she said. “They are finding lockdown is forcing their hand, they just can’t stand it any more.” When the lockdown ends, she predicted an explosion in the numbers. “All those people who have not been able to get to law firms like us will go completely mad.”
Life is like a sewer – what you get out of it depends on what you put into it BUSINESS WISDOM
Partner Appointment
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HS2 Share Jump
UK
travel restrictions remain tight due to the Covid-19 lockdown, but not everything has ground to a halt. The City is digesting the news that the Government is pressing further ahead with the mega HS2 project, which could provide a well-needed boost to construction businesses. Europe’s largest infrastructure scheme recently got the green-light, and the Government today issued a “notice to proceed”, marking the formal approval for construction to start. Contractor Costain welcomed the update. The company, led by Alex Vaughan, said a joint venture of which it is part has a £3.3 billion contract on the rail project, which includes creating tunnels in the approach to the London terminus at Euston station.
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HA Carpenter Box continues to invest in ‘home grown’ talent, with the promotion of Chris Reeves to Partner at the accountancy firm. Chris, 33, has been appointed Partner having joined the practice as a trainee in 2004. He qualified as a Chartered Accountant (ACCA) in 2010 and helped to set up the firm’s Gatwick office in 2015. Chris commented: “MHA Carpenter Box has been a significant part of my life for the last 16 years since joining as a trainee, and I’m delighted to be made a Partner. It’s a great place to work, with brilliant people and I look forward to advising and engaging with clients for many years to come." In his role as Partner, Chris will help to drive the AAG (Assurance and Advisory Group) department forward as significant changes in the world of audit are expected over the next 12 months.
national
news
Billions upon Billions
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oronavirus has boosted the net worth of American billionaire Jeff Bezos by $24bn (£19bn) as the demand for online shopping sent Amazon’s stock price to an all-time high. The Amazon founder and CEO was already the world’s richest person, but now according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, his fortune is worth $138bn (£110bn). On Tuesday, Amazon’s share price climbed 5.3% as consumers have moved online during the coronavirus pandemic. Tesla founder Elon Musk added $10.4 bn (£8.3 bn) to his fortune this year, whilst the demand for teleconferencing has seen the fortune of Zoom founder, Eric Yuan more than double to $7.4 bn (£5.9bn). Walmart owners, the Walton family, also saw a 5% increase in their net worth as consumers have come to depend on the retailing giant for goods during the lockdown.
Covid Kills Cash
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he lockdown has led to a 60% fall in the number of withdrawals from cash machines, although people are taking out bigger sums. Payment card use has risen with online shopping, particularly for groceries. Experts say the long-term future of cash could be at risk, before the UK is ready to cope with the change. This could leave behind an estimated 20% of the population who rely on cash, they say. About 11 million cash withdrawals are still being made each week, with £1bn taken out, according to Link, which oversees the UK’s cash machine network. Yet, with many shops as well as bars, cafes and restaurants closed, there is less demand for regular cash withdrawals. People are going out less, but potentially hoarding more cash. The average ATM withdrawal has risen from £65 last year, to £82 now.
The elevator to success is out of order. You will have to use the stairs, one step at a time. BUSINESS WISDOM
Interruption Insurance Woes
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ore than 100 nightclubs, pubs and bars are planning coordinated legal action against the insurer Hiscox over its non-payment of business interruption insurance claims. Hiscox sold policies before coronavirus hit the headlines, stating it would pay out when a business was forced to shut owing to a notifiable disease. Business owners have filed claims to Hiscox and other commercial insurers only to be told their business interruption policies do not cover the pandemic. Michael Kill, the chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), which is coordinating the action, said: “Businesses are being denied legitimate insurance claims, many claims are being disputed by insurers based on contrived arguments to avoid sharing the financial burden during the Covid-19 crisis.” The group is calling on more businesses to join its move against the insurer. Hiscox said it had about 10,000 companies which had purchased cover for business interruption and had been directly impacted by the government-imposed closures. It said its core small commercial package policies did not provide cover for business interruption as a result of the “general measures” taken by the government in response to the pandemic.
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Sussex sup Superhero Businesses donating Goods and Services to the Community
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usinesses whose income has evaporated during the coronavirus lockdown are not just sitting around waiting for restrictions to lift or rescue loans to be processed, they are doing their utmost to serve their communities in a variety of different ways. Rolls Royce Motors based at Goodwood is producing face visor kits from the same factory that manufactures its fleet of luxury cars with the same high standards of quality and safety. They have also joined a consortium set to manufacture more than 10,000 vitally needed ventilators to help battle against the coronavirus. Craig Askew, the Executive Vice President of control systems said ‘Rolls Royce has a crucial role to play in the fight against COVID-19’. Brighton Gin has partnered with the Lewes based premium skincare producer AS Apothecary to create a skin-safe, vegan hand sanitiser. If you have a car or van in your household that is less than 15 years old, the Brighton Karshare scheme would love to hear from you. Your vehicle will be made available for use in Brighton and Hove to care for people at this time of national crisis. Together with our community partners, we will sanitise and clean it, check it, insure it and then make it available for NHS staff, NHS volunteers, food banks, charities and care workers to help get them around wherever they’re needed, caring for people and delivering much needed food and medical supplies. At the end of the week your vehicle will be returned to you, fully cleaned and sanitised again. Mid Sussex Timber has provided a range of items, including goggles, safety glasses and face masks. Alex Waters, MidSussex Timber’s Operations Director, said we were delighted to help with the donation of PPE. There is no more important place for it to be than with health professionals at this difficult time. FATBOY SLIM aka Norman Cook has announced a free Brighton Concert for all NHS staff, Ambulance, Fire Service and
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BUSINESS COMMUNITY
perheroes Policeworkers which he hopes will take place later this year at the city’s largest venue - the Brighton Centre. He said ‘By the time life returns to normal, we will all want to celebrate and I would like to do my bit to reward and thank everyone who has been holding our lives together in these most difficult of times’. Komedia Brighton will be live-streaming weekly Krater Comedy Club shows, to keep the laughter alive, every Friday at 8pm. During the stream people will have the option to pay what they can for the show in the form of a donation which will be used to give Komedia and the comedians involved the best possible chance of surviving this incredibly difficult time. The first week’s show was hosted by awardwinning MC Stephen Grant with special guests Jeff Innocent, Lily Philips, John Moloney, Rob Deering and headliner Chris Turner, who appeared live from LA, plus the best clips from past Krater shows. Live streams will be posted on Komedia’s Youtube channel Komedia Live. School children and young people across Brighton & Hove and East Sussex are being offered online lessons during the Covid-19 lockdown to help them keep making music. The education music service
run by Brighton & Hove Music & Arts and East Sussex Music normally teaches over 5,000 pupils each week with instrumental and vocal lessons in schools. Virtual tutorials have been set up for children to join live classes online. Over 2,000 children have signed up to take part in lessons with professional music teachers. Peter Chivers, Head of Brighton & Hove Music & Arts said: “Despite not being able to physically teach pupils, we want to continue to support young musicians with practising their skills while they are in isolation with their families at home. “Playing music has been proven to have a positive impact on mental health and now more than ever, children and young people are going to need extra help and encouragement to stay motivated.” Lego has launched a new website which encourages families worldwide to connect to play-based learning across social media. The hope is that families and children can connect online via their free site to share creativity and play ideas, learn from LEGO designers and help children to continue building life-long skills such as problem solving, critical thinking and developing new forms of fun while away from school. The initiative also aims to alleviate stress
on parents during this unprecedented event. Along with other partners, the Amazon logistics network is delivering test kits to diagnostic sites set up around the UK and to NHS staff and others on the front lines of this crisis. To support those in the UK who are most affected by the COVID-19 crisis, Amazon has committed £3.2 million, including a donation to the British Red Cross and a fund to support local organisations in communities where its employees live and work. The high street fashion chain Reiss is donating 10,000 masks across the Guys and St. Thomas’ NHS Foundation Trust and Barts Health Trust to help support the increasing need for protective equipment. In collaboration with Emma Willis, MBE (Founder of Style for Soldiers), Reiss are supporting the ’Style for Surgeons’ initiative with a fabric donation to create over 900 scrubs for a network of UK hospitals. Ricardo Engineering in Shoreham have been making face shields for the Charter Medical Centre in Hove. CEO Dave Shemmans personally delivered the first delivery to the centre and he was greeted by some very grateful nurses.
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A Space to Breathe? Jonathan Compton, partner at city law firm DMH Stallard and leading dispute resolution and litigation lawyer, explains why Lord Neuberger is both ‘right and wrong’ to call for a ‘breathing space’ for companies facing a breach of contract. reasonable proposal, “the breathing space” is actually both a misconception, and a honeyed trap. The idea is misconceived because, if we leave the ivory tower of the UK Supreme Court behind us, we can see life at the coal face is more subtle and complex. In the three months to 31.03.2019, there were 467,700 county court claims, [source MOJ National Statistics 06.06.2019].
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ord Neuberger has called for a breathing space for companies facing breach of contract cases during the C-19 emergency. He expanded on this on the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme (27/4/20). He is, of course, both right and wrong. His Lordship, a former president of the UK Supreme Court, is one of the most respected lawyers this country has ever produced. He is right in the general thrust of his argument that companies should be afforded what he called “a breathing space” before a claim is brought against them. Lord Neuberger was not given the chance, things being what they are in a short radio interview, to explain what he meant by a short breathing space. He did describe the process of mediation which is a means of alternative dispute resolution. But what looks like a sensible and
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Any lawyer, before simply issuing a Claim Form and Particulars in the county court, will need to follow either a set of formal procedures called “protocols” or a general procedure called “the pre-action practice direction” before a claim is issued. If a lawyer – or even someone pursuing a claim without a lawyer – decides to issue a claim without following one of these set procedures they will need to explain why to the court. There are safeguards within the court procedure to ensure this compliance. A good lawyer will perform due diligence on a defendant company and get some idea as to the means to pay off the said company. Lord Neuberger’s intervention ignores these safeguards. Further, Lord Neuberger ignores the fact that his “breathing space” ought to apply as much to people as to corporations. Does his Lordship propose a general moratorium on new claims during the C19 emergency? If so, then he runs the risk of commercial contracts and payments simply stopping.
The effects of this policy are difficult to foresee. Second, and more fundamentally, his Lordship’s argument will tend to be taken advantage of by companies who will use the article written by him to justify late payment when, in fact, they have the means to pay. The result
LEGAL
ity are well founded or not. may be to encourage litigation rather than to discourage it. His Lordship must also be aware that small businesses, which depend on prompt payment, may be prejudiced by any general rule that paying companies are entitled to a “breathing space”.
Majesty’s Courts and Tribunal Services”. The essence of a service is that it
Let the solicitors do the job they have been doing, which is one of triage of cases, clients and defendants, and let the Supreme Court do its job of deciding fine points of legal precedent and authority.
“Lord Neubrerger runs the risk of commercial contracts and payments simply stopping”
Also, we all know that deferring or removing an obligation on one party is simply asking another to carry that burden – sometimes, that is – or can be – a fair result. But to impose a general moratorium, if that is indeed what is being proposed, is unlikely to result in fairness. The courts in this country are “Her
provides a service. It is suggested by the current writer that he is far better qualified as a solicitor working at the coal face of litigation for 20 years, than is his Lordship, to look at a potential defendant company, undertake due diligence and advise his client on whether the company’s excuses of impecunios-
By his intervention, his Lordship risks that companies will delay payment and actually
www.dmhstallard.co.uk
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BIG STORY
Rishi Sunak The Coronavirus Chancellor Within weeks of taking on the role of Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak was faced with the biggest economic challenge in living memory. He has been decisive and calm, winning many plaudits. But who is Rishi Sunak? Maarten Hoffmann profiles the man who is charged with steering the economy through the pandemic crisis
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ntil February 13th 2020, the nation had little idea who Rishi Sunak was. As l write this on April 20th 2020, he is fast on his way to becoming a political rock star and tipped to be a future Prime Minster. So who is Rishi Sunak - or Dishy Rishi as many of the ladies are calling him? Sunak was born in 1980 to a doctor father and pharmacist mother in Southampton. The child of first-generation immigrants, his parents came to the UK with his grandparents around 60 years ago from East Africa. He attended Winchester, the private all-boys boarding school in Hampshire with eye-watering yearly fees of £41,709, where he became head boy. He quickly moved on to another exclusive institution by studying PPE
(politics, philosophy and economics) – the degree of choice for aspiring politicians – at Oxford. It seems that Sunak was adept from a young age at navigating the predominantly white and upper-class establishments that historically thrust the country’s wealthiest into powerful positions. Other Tory politicians of South Asian heritage have had noticeably less privileged routes into politics – Sajid Javid and Priti Patel both shunned Oxbridge and went to a comprehensive and a grammar school respectively. The young Rishi, known as Rish to his friends, spoke English at home and grew up passionate about cricket, Southampton FC and its footballing genius, Matt Le Tissier. A practising Hindu, Sunak recalled: ‘I’d be at the temple at the weekend but I’d also
be at the Saints game as well on a Saturday.” He was the target of occasional racism, mentioning to the BBC how it stung when he was abused as a Paki in a local fast food restaurant. In many ways, Sunak is a cookie-cutter Conservative politician with the PPE degree to match. The main difference is he chose not to fawn over Thatcher with student Tories and became president of the Oxford University Investment Society. Sunak the undergraduate would have been thrilled to see his older self deliver his first budget only weeks into the job – something his predecessor Sajid Javid never got the chance to. He is also a staunch Brexiteer which was a grave disappointment
“So who is Rishi Sunak - or Dishy Rishi as many of the ladies are calling him?”
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“I’d be at the temple at the weekend but I’d also be at the Saints game as well on a Saturday.” RISHI SUNAK to David Cameron, who had tried personally to win over the newly elected MP. According to one individual with knowledge of the meeting, Cameron sighed as the implacable Sunak left the room: “If we’ve lost Rishi, we’ve
lost the future of the party”. He is also rumoured to have bombshell views on the future of the United Kingdom. One fellow Conservative recalls: “I remember discussing the future of the Union with Rishi and he argued that
England should break away. He was advocating the end of the UK because it doesn’t make financial sense to him. He doesn’t have any love for the institution and I suspect he looks at it, as he looks at anything: what’s the profit?” Sunak’s allies say the chancellor does not recall the conversation and is a staunch supporter of the Union and the shared values it represents”. Coronavirus has plunged the world economy into recession, but Sunak has already faced one global cataclysm: the 2008 financial crisis. Shortly after graduating from Oxford, Sunak worked at Goldman Sachs as a junior analyst in the merchant banking division. After studying for his MBA as a Fulbright Scholar at Stanford, Sunak joined the Children’s Investment Fund Management, a London-based firm founded by billionaire Chris Hohn.
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The controversial hedge fund made a name for itself as one of the most successful and aggressive hedge funds of the financial boom. In 2007, the company launched a campaign against the Dutch bank ABN Amro, leading to its purchase by the Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS). A year later, the resulting debt led to the government handing RBS a whopping £45 billion bailout during the financial meltdown.
Sunak’s characterisation as the ‘downto-earth Tory stumping up money to help the country get through coronavirus’ is ironic, mainly because of the extreme wealth in his own household. At Stanford, he met and subsequently married Akshata Murthy, the daughter of a India’s 6th richest man, billionaire N.R Narayana Murthy who is the co-founder of Infosys, an IT company, and with whom he has two children, Krishna and Anoushka. The couple own at least four properties totalling £10 million across the UK and the US – including a five-bedroom home in London valued at £7 million alone. His wife’s stake in her father’s IT company is reportedly worth £185 million and she now runs her own fashion label, Akshata Designs
When he left finance, Sunak decided to serve the community. After William Hague stood down in 2015 as Conservative MP for Richmond in North Yorkshire, Sunak took a gamble and ran as Hague’s successor. He bet right, and won, becoming the first MP of South Asian heritage for the constituency.
Sunak got there in five years. He voted leave in the 2016 referendum, aligning himself with Johnson early on, and his only misdemeanour was joining Michael Gove’s leadership camp after David Cameron resigned. He rectified this two years later, when Theresa May made her ignominious exit, and dutifully returned to Johnson.
“How it stung when he was abused as a Paki in a local fast food restaurant.” On Political Thinking, Sunak joked that his family represents the sum total of ethnic diversity in the area. Becoming an MP marked the first step in a seamless political career, in which Sunak consistently chose right. Many politicians spend their entire lives attempting to become chancellor, but
It was a move that paid off: he was rewarded with a Cabinet position as Chief Treasury secretary under then-Chancellor Sajid Javid. He served under Javid, at one point calling him a “mentor” and a “good friend”. Sunak’s career took an unexpectedly Shakespearean turn when Javid dramatically quit in February,
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though Sunak, the Star Wars fan who dreamed of being a Jedi knight as a child, might better describe this as his Darth Vader versus Obi-Wan moment. Javid was famously given an ultimatum to keep his position on the condition he sacked all of his advisors. It was the culmination of months of tension between Johnson, his advisor Dominic Cummings, and Javid, in which Johnson and Cummings sought greater control over the Treasury, which traditionally operates separately to No.10. Javid later said that “no self-respecting minister” could accept those terms. Cue: Rishi Sunak, the minister who could. “He’s young and a lot more amenable to what the government want to do,” says former Guardian columnist Dawn Foster. She argues that Javid was a lot more experienced as a minister, meaning
ies reports that two million workers could be left out and unable to access help. The question is whether these are oversights or deliberate gaps in policy. Reports from people who work with him is that “he reads everything that crosses his desk; he reads the details and he’s a pragmatic political”. The gaps in the package to support workers are not because of an ‘i’ he didn’t dot, or a ‘t’ he didn’t cross. It’s indicative of residual hawkishness of deficit reduction but never forget his true colours, which are deregulation, low tax and low public spending – it’s where his heart is. He sounds like Gordon Brown at his best, taking decisive and dramatic action to meet the challenge of the financial crash. His approach was inclusive, consulting the Trades Union Congress as well as employers. Presumably, John McDonnell, the shadow
“The couple own at least four properties totalling £10 million across the UK and the US” that he pushed back on government policy – something that is less of a threat with Sunak. “I think Boris needed to get some loyalists into the Cabinet and Rishi is young with no real backstory, and no real history. He’s perfect for the Treasury as they wanted someone to carry out exactly what Number 10 wanted.” For all the claims of Sunak’s competence, there are flaws with his COVID-19 emergency measures. The fiveweek wait for Universal Credit is still in place, despite nearly a million people applying in just a fortnight. Despite the promised grants for self-employed workers, the Institute for Fiscal Stud-
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chancellor, didn’t want to be consulted, and went on TV within minutes to complain that Sunak hadn’t gone far enough or fast enough. This partisanship was in contrast with the reaction of Frances O’Grady, the TUC general secretary, who praised Sunak for showing “real leadership”. Even Len McCluskey, McDonnell’s co-ideologue, said the chancellor had “done the right thing.” “He is smart, he’s energetic and he listens, which is important,” says O’Grady. She would not normally be a fan of a Tory chancellor, but several days of negotiating with Sunak over
the coronavirus jobs package won her over: “It’s a lot of responsibility on young shoulders. What I would say is that he does have emotional intelligence. It’s a different style, without that sense of superiority that some have. “He is quite frank in saying he never expected he would be in this position; this is not Conservatism as we have known it for 40 years. Things are happening really fast, judgments are being made fast.” Carolyn Fairbairn, head of the CBI em-
BIG STORY
ployers’ federation, also became an admirer over cups of tea at the Treasury: “We all just felt that incredible relief. He showed that you can come together and do things that are big and have the potential to change the course of the river.”
“He is rumoured to have bombshell views on the future of the United Kingdom.”
His briefing speeches have begun to hint at the fact that HMRC will work hard on getting this money back. On his April 18th daily briefing, he said that all of the money promised will “need to be paid back at some point”.
side over a second version of austerity – and his public appeal as Mister Spendy Nice Guy will evaporate. Presumably, that would mean his credentials as the ‘Tory-Lite Politician It’s OK to Fancy’ will take a hit, too.
At some point, Sunak’s image as the kindly ‘printer of endless money’ benefactor will crumble.
For now, Sunak is pretty safe, if not perfectly poised for a future in Number 10.
After coronavirus, there’ll be pressure from Number 10 to claw back the money. If so, Sunak will have to pre-
But if coronavirus has proven anything, it’s that anything can happen in a few months.
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WEALTH MANAGEMENT EXECUTED BEAUTIFULLY 18
www.pmw.co.uk
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All is Not Lost Challenging. Unprecedented. Crash. Uncertainty. The new trending phrases of despair. The once dreaded ‘B’ word seems like sweet relief right now. Good news! Adding to the seemingly all-encompassing gloom is not my intention. By Aaron Phillips, Senior Investment Broker, Avantis Wealth national duty. There are considerable profits to be made.
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y message for investors is one of calculated optimism. Most investors, at this moment in time, will be going through a recalibration of objectives and strategy to take them forward. On the tip of many investors’ tongue could be something along the lines of ‘look for opportunities’; however, most will be trying to sit tight in their bunker until ‘something’ happens. The current position of the property market and why we believe that UK developers can hold the key. Avantis has spent the last ten years selecting investments from global providers to deliver diversification for investors. We look for exceptional value for investors while helping companies improve their cash flow and fulfil projects. It has never been a better time to be involved in helping maintain UK businesses and UK jobs. But it is not all about being altruistic or a sense of
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We deal in corporate bonds and loan notes. If you are unfamiliar with these, please contact our office for a more in-depth understanding. They are a necessary means for micro and SME’s to raise capital to fulfil projects and increase cash flow. Without a second glance, these can be immediately flagged as high risk. But if you look at the security involved in a lot of these projects, it will surprise you. Unlike many assets, you can choose to invest for income or growth, and perhaps best of all, the rates are fixed negating any volatility. Investors invariably get the luxury of a first charge over assets to secure their investment. The problem facing us is that traditional asset classes have failed investors over the last 20 years. Stocks and shares, for example, have failed many. Using the FTSE 100 index as a guide, the previous peak was at the turn of the millennium when it topped 7,000.
On April 1st, it stood at about 5,500, a fall of 1,500 or roughly 22% over the period. Investors generally assumed that the stock market would show an average annual return of 4%. If this had continued over the past 20 years, the FTSE 100 index would now stand at 15,000, almost three times the actual value. The importance of the housing market to the FTSE100 has been evident recently as large developers pulled up the index by its bootstraps. Government Gilts and Savings Accounts. This latest series of rate cuts, concluding (for now) at 0.1% have slashed any income that investors would have been counting on. Gold is far from stable, and it’s probably best to not even mention oil right now. Diversification among these asset classes alone is not diverse enough. UK Property: From 1975 to 2018, a period of 43 years, the property market has delivered an average capital growth
INVESTMENT
from £100,000 to £220,000, leaving an unimpressive annualised rate of 1.85% a year. The data shows that timing is everything. However, it is essential to remember that these figures are far removed from the 20-30% profit benchmark for developers. If you analyse the purchase price of UK property market over the last 40+ years, you will see that it has not all been plain sailing but investing into a contract with the developer negates the risk of lower resale values on the investors part. Your returns are secured against the asset. The property market renaissance, February 2020 The UK property market released from the shackles of the ‘B’ word, experienced a period of sustained growth in
all but one region. Analysts believe we were in for a bumper year. Why? Because demand outstrips supply, and it continues to do so. If we remember the manifesto pledge of the Conservatives, 200k new homes a year for five years and the extension of the Help to Buy scheme, only 170k were built which is still a good number, but under what is required. The good news keeps bouncing into the construction industry, with many of the UK’s biggest house builders re-opening sites whilst continuing with social distancing restrictions. Most smaller developers have managed to adapt and kept sites 60-80% operational, so there has been reduced disruption. Developers are willing to pay up to 18% pa for the top part of their funding stack to complete or to fund a project entirely.
“It is not all about being altruistic or a sense of national duty. There are considerable profits to be made.”
We are also noticing the draw of the UK property market combined with the weakened pound enticing a host of global investors into the marketplace.
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f you feel that your once brightly shining goal is now fading into the distance, remember that there is hope. A realisation that there are opportunities out there and that lost profit can be regained. Whatever your investment strategy, it has never been more important to look for diversity in a portfolio. That will mean veering off the well-trodden path, but that is where you can find the hidden gems.
M: 01273 447 299 | T: 01273 022 039 | E: aaronp@avantiswealth.com 8 The Drive | Hove | East Sussex | BN3 3JA www.avantiswealth.com
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How to Create an Adaptive Culture By Kevin Green, former CEO of the Recruitment & Employment Confederation and HR Director of Royal Mail.
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hy do 87% of people say that they are not engaged at work?* We know that when people are engaged in their work they are happier, more productive and don’t change jobs. All leaders want their organisation to be a great place to work because they know it has an impact on the business’s performance. We know culture matters, but few organisations know how to review, modify or change their organisational culture. If we look at organisations with winning cultures, it’s not the football tables, free fruit and away days that people value, it’s how they are treated every day. Does your business define, communicate but most importantly live its values? One of the tests I use with leadership teams is to ask them to name 10 examples in the last three months when their values have been used to help with a business decision. Have they been used to make a hiring decision, or to decide who gets a promotion or pay rise?
Adapt or Die As markets get disrupted by new competitors and new technology, businesses need to be able to adapt to their changing environment. Often it’s the ability to pivot at pace which is the precursor of business success. This is why creating an adaptive culture is so important today. The science of developing an adaptive culture shows it’s not a quick or easy process. A culture describes how an organisation behaves every day, how it gets things done, the DNA of the business.
Adaptive organisations will have some common traits: they will be innovative, they will constantly be experimenting to explore different ways in which they can provide customer value, they will always be looking for better ways to do things. This quest for continuous improvement will be a core, repeatable behaviour. Adaptive organisations also have strong leaders who define the purpose of the organisation, as well as the goals. In my experience, most organisations are over-managed and under-led. Leaders empower and motivate, managers control and direct.
COMPANY CULTURE
Shifting culture There are some key building blocks in moving towards an adaptive culture. The science shows that organisations with clarity of purpose, that live their values every day and allow people direct control over their work are more responsive and agile. This agility enables them to adapt to customers’ changing expectations and so out-perform their competitors on every financial metric.
“Leaders must protect the business purpose and values, the very essence of the culture and thus avoid it being degraded.” Leaders focus on culture
Those leaders that consistently deliver great results, regardless of how the world around their business changes, will understand how to develop, enhance and then reinforce a culture that gets the most from their people.
The great value in purpose and defined values is that they are guides, they allow the people within the organisation to have the freedom to make decisions and on occasions, correct their course. But importantly they also encourage people to be as self-directed as possible - adaptive cultures create trust. You don’t need layers of managers and bureaucracy if you provide leadership guidelines (purpose and values) and allow teams to make their own decisions.
An ongoing challenge A culture isn’t static, it evolves over time but it can be destroyed quickly. Leaders must protect the business purpose and values, the very essence of the culture and thus avoid it being degraded. Leaders love to claim their organisation is nimble – in fact this means an organisation with decentralised decision-making. No business with a top down culture can be nimble or adaptive - it’s that simple. The adaptive and nimble have a clear purpose, a set of unique values and then get out of the way of their people as they respond to customers wants and needs. *Gallup, State of the Global Workplace, 2017
Kevin Green has written a new book entitled Competitive People Strategy: how to attract, develop and retain the staff you need for business success, published by Kogan Page
national Colossal Increase
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he UK’s budget deficit is set to see “an absolutely colossal increase to a level not seen in peacetime”, the director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies has said. The economic impact of coronavirus was likely to push the deficit to as high as £260bn, Paul Johnson told the BBC. He was speaking after latest figures showed that the deficit hit £48.7bn in the 2019-20 financial year. But Mr Johnson said those figures were “the numbers before the storm”. The deficit last year - the gap between the government’s income and its expenditure - was £9.3bn higher than in the 2018-19 financial year and equivalent to 2.2% of GDP. The Office for National Statistics, which released those figures, said they did not capture the big spending announced by the government to cope with the virus. “The coronavirus pandemic is expected to have a significant impact on the UK public sector finances,” it added.
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Trouble for Virgin
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irgin Australia has confirmed it has entered voluntary administration - making it Australia’s first big corporate casualty of the coronavirus pandemic. The country’s second-largest carrier cut almost all flights last month following wide-spread travel bans. It was already struggling with a long-term A$5bn (£2.55bn; $3.17bn) debt. The airline is now seeking new buyers and investors, after failing to get a loan from Australia’s government. Meanwhile, Sir Richard Branson - whose Virgin group is a part-owner of Virgin Australia - has offered his Caribbean island as collateral to help get a UK government bailout of Virgin Atlantic. Necker Island is likely worth only £10m, so a way to go there then. Virgin Atlantic has announced it is to cut more than 3,000 jobs in the UK and
end its operation at Gatwick airport. The shock announcement comes after rival British Airways said it could not rule out closing its Gatwick operation. Pilots' union Balpa described it as "devastating". The airline currently employs a total of about 10,000 people. Virgin Atlantic, which is in the process of applying for emergency loans from the government, said that jobs will be lost across the board. "We have weathered many storms since our first flight 36 years ago but none has been as devastating as Covid-19 and the associated loss of life and livelihood for so many," said Virgin Atlantic chief executive Shai Weiss.
I always wanted to be somebody, but now l realise l should have been more specific. BUSINESS WISDOM
Empty Threat
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he boss of Ryanair says the airline will not resume flights if it has to keep middle seats empty to fight Covid-19, calling the idea “idiotic”. Michael O’Leary said he was hopeful 80% of flights could resume by October if travel restrictions are eased in July. But he said empty seats did not ensure safe social distancing and were financially unviable. He added that if the Irish government imposed the rule, it would have to pay for the middle seat “or we won’t fly”. Like most other big airlines, Ryanair has grounded flights
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as countries around Europe have imposed travel restrictions to contain the pandemic.
national Tax Havens
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enmark has told companies that they will not be eligible for bailout funds to help them through the coronavirus pandemic if they are registered in tax havens, prompting calls for other countries, including the UK, to attach similar strings to their own financial support packages. The Danish government also said companies that access government support must not use profits to buy back shares or pay dividends to shareholders in 2020 or 2021. Earlier in April, Poland said its bailout funds would only be available to companies that pay tax in the country. The moves have reignited debate over tax avoidance and come as Sir Richard Branson faced criticism after asking the UK government to bail out Virgin Atlantic with a £500m loan.
Electric Power Station
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ork has started on an electric vehicle charging forecourt that will be able to charge 24 cars at once. It is being built on a 2.5 acre site at Great Notley, near Braintree, Essex, by sustainable energy company
Gridserve. The company hopes the roadside forecourt, which will use solar power, will “solve the challenge” of where to charge electric vehicles. Chief executive Toddington Harper said it was “updating the petrol station model for a net-zero carbon future”. It is set to open in the summer and is due to be the first of more than 100 similar sites around the country.
Bloodbath
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he UK pub sector could be hit by a “bloodbath” if they are not given breaks in rent payments, an industry expert has claimed. Chief executive of UKHospitality, Kate Nicholls, called for government intervention “as a matter of urgency”. She told the Treasury Select Committee some landlords were facing legal action over not being able to pay their rent. She also said a third of the sector would be “put at risk” if lockdown measures lasted until Christmas. Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove confirmed at the weekend that pubs would be among the last businesses to re-open when measures are reduced. A spokesman for the Department for Business said they urged owners of pubs “to act in a responsible way, exercising judgement and discretion with their tenants”. The government introduced a lease forfeiture moratorium for three months as part of its response to the coronavirus to stop people being kicked out of business premises if they miss rent payments. But Ms Nicholl said it was not taking effect “across a large swathe of the hospitality industry”.
Age is of no importance unless you’re a cheese BUSINESS WISDOM
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FINANCE
Protecting the Economy Knill James believes that further support is needed urgently to prevent an additional 830,000 unemployed in the South East
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ew research that we have conducted during April shows that 830,000 people in the South East are at risk of unemployment. This is a stark and worrying number, but this is the reality of what the UK may be facing. 31% of the 1,793 SME businesses who participated in our research believe they could close permanently if the lockdown continues beyond June. Given there are 16.7 million people employed by SMEs according to the government’s own statistics released in 2019, this could result in over 830,000 in the South East being made unemployed and 5 million in total across the UK. Kirsty Wilson said: “This is not what anyone wants. Clearly therefore one of the most important issues that the government needs to focus on is to rebuild the economy. SMEs, who account for a significant proportion of the UK’s economy and workforce, need to be a priority.” Together with the other member partners of the UK200Group, Knill James has written to Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak highlighting the 3 key areas of concern for SMEs that the research has identified: 1. Access to bank funding to preserve their business; 2. Help rebuilding their business once the pandemic eases; and 3. More support for the self-employed to tide them over. In our letter, we have called on the government to prioritise support for SMEs and in particular, we have highlighted the following measures that will help address SMEs current challenges: 1. Removing some of the administra-
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tive hurdles of the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme. 2. Continued support for furloughed employees, rather than a hard end to the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme. 3. Refining the Self-Employment Income Support Scheme to ensure it is well targeted. We are delighted to see that the government has announced a 100% government backed loan facility for SMEs to borrow up to £50,000. We will find out further details on the likely terms of these loans as well as further information on eligibility criteria over the coming days and weeks but this facility should complement the main CBILS scheme. The ability to defer capital repayments for 12 months will be a key aspect for some business owners, giving them time to re-structure their business and the confidence to accept the loan. But we also know this is not enough in
itself. More support and more measures are needed; we know that many businesses need to see an end to the lockdown but are also worried about the impact on any ongoing social distancing measures. That’s why we will keep lobbying the government on behalf of SMEs.” Concluding, Nick Rawson said; “In these unusual times we need to Stay Focused; Protect the Economy and Save Jobs. We are committed to doing our bit to support our clients by raising issues with the government on SMEs behalf and by collaborating with the government and others to achieve these goals.” Nick Rawson, Partner 01273 480480 nick@knilljames.co.uk Kirsty Wilson, Corporate Finance Director 01273 480480 kirstyw@knilljames.co.uk www.knilljames.co.uk
FINANCE
Keep cash flowing COVID-19 is dire for cash flow: Maxine Reid from Quantuma on how businesses can wring as much cash generation as they can from available sources
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he current impact of COVID-19 is so unprecedented and for many businesses, the speed with which it has played out has left many feeling helpless. It follows that one of the first questions that business owners will be asking is ‘how long can we survive until the worst (hopefully) passes?’ Simply, the answer depends on how much cash the business currently has in order to keep current operations as “whole” for as long as possible. In reality not many businesses, especially in the SME space, will have sufficient cash reserves to simply wait it out and fund inevitable losses unless they operate in one of the designated essential sectors and may actually experience increased demand. What we have been seeing at Quantuma is that for most businesses the immediate response to the crisis has been to look to pare back operational cost drivers by furloughing employees; reducing number of shifts etc. but also stretching supplier credit terms (perhaps predictably) even more. In many cases the above measures will not be enough and stretching creditor days past breaking point is a risky, if understandable strategy at present, for some businesses. However, business owners and directors should ensure that as well as looking at the obvious strategies they also explore less obvious avenues. Summarised below are some additional cash preservation strategies businesses should consider: • Approaching all customers (especially the larger ones) to request that all overdue sales invoices are immediately brought up to date
• Temporary suspension of the offer of credit terms (i.e. request customers put you in funds first if requiring urgent production or supply) • Approach financial stakeholders, utilities and landlords to explore payment holidays etc. • Last but not least ensure that constant attention is paid to the evolving nature of the Government’s raft of announced measures to support UK business and ensure that where your particular business qualifies for help the application process is prioritised The most important document that any business should have right now is a cashflow forecast. Whilst small and medium sized businesses may not need to provide one to some banks when applying for CBILS backed loans a business owner, regardless of business size should have one. It will not only help to show where the pinch points are and how long the business can continue without additional support but if your bank does need one, they’ll be easy to produce. Whilst banks are changing their lending criteria in line with Government guidelines they are still lending cautiously. Where banks won’t require sight of cashflow forecasts or business plans, the lenders will instead rely on their own information to assess credit and business viability. The above suggestions are clearly not exhaustive and some will only apply to certain situations but we hope that this article will help emphasise that an obsessive focus on cash generation and preservation should be a constant preoccupation for business owners during this period of uncertainty.
www.quantuma.com
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Phantoms & Plastics
Q&A with Neil Gates, Managing Director of Seevent Plastics When was the company founded? Seevent Plastics was started by Ken Fisher in June 1987 at a single unit in Peter Road in Lancing. In those days Seevent Plastics were manufacturing a bomb carrying device for the MOD which fitted under the wing of the Phantom Jet. We certainly don’t do that anymore but we do have units 2-9 on the same Peter Road site. Ken retired and sold me the business in January 2014.
What sector does the company now trade in? Over the last six years, we have developed the business in Pharmaceutical, Animal Feed, Solid Fuel and Aggre-
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gate packaging and by continued research and development, have enabled our customers to reduce their packing costs by up to 25%. In 2016, we wrote and had published a parliamentary review on sustainability and the environment well before the Blue Planet programme some years later.
What are you doing about sustainability within your industry? The challenge for all manufacturers in Plastic is creating the closed loop supply chain. At Seevent, we are already successfully using a minimum of 30% post-consumer waste in many of our products and making all our products 100% recyclable. This
LEGAL
is ahead of Government legalisation which is currently proposed for 2022. Nearly all our factory waste is recycled and we have less than 1% going to Landfill.
What sector is your largest customer? Our largest market sector is now Pharmaceuticals and we have recently been appointed Global Supply Chain partner to GSK and we have a lot of product development going on for this particular market sector. This is being developed by our sister company, Polyplus Packaging in Reading who now specialise in Antistatic and Pharmaceutical markets.
How has the global pandemic affected your sector? The current Pandemic crisis has affected us like nearly all businesses in the UK. Many of our customers in
“We are now heavily involved in the supply of aprons to hospitals and nursing homes.� the retail sector have had to close and we have had to diversify as quickly as possible. We are now heavily involved in the supply of aprons to hospitals and nursing homes. Unfortunately, body bags are another product we are now turning our skills to due to the demand. We have had to furlough a number of staff but hope that we can open for business as usual very soon without losing any staff.
How has your bank assisted during these difficult times? Natwest Bank have been one of the great partners to Seevent over the years and their continued support at this time has been truly magnificent. When we started on our expansion
plan in 2015, Natwest put together a package enabling us to increase our production by 30%. They believed in us and it paid off. They have allowed us to develop and experiment without onerous restrictions and have been a true supporter in everything we have done. When the pandemic hit, Natwest were the first to get in touch and secure a CBIL loan for us.
Seevent Plastics Ltd 2-7 Peter Road, Lancing, West Sussex, BN15 8TH Tel: 01903 755877 Email: 07740 411056 Web: seevent.co.uk
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SUSSEX INNOVATION
Survive & Thrive with Sussex Innovation
Since lockdown began, the Sussex Innovation team has had all hands on deck providing advice and support, helping members source funding and understand the government support available.
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n light of the current crisis, business support organisations are putting all their efforts into helping businesses navigate the pandemic. Since lockdown began, the Sussex Innovation team has had all hands on deck providing advice and support, helping members source funding and understand the government support available. Sussex Innovation has seen its community come together during this pandemic, and are helping them respond in agile, creative and sustainable ways to survive the crisis and thrive in its aftermath – the theme of their new series of weekly webinars. ‘Survive & Thrive’ webinars, in collaboration with Gatwick Diamond Business, focus on a different business-critical topic each week. A member of the team hosts a panel of subject matter experts for discussion followed by Q&A. The first webinar on 8th April focused on crisis management, led by Chief Executive, Nigel Lambe. The panel included: • Peter Davies, founder and CEO at Airline Management Group
• Gary Fee, international finance director at Bright Horizons • Tim Cobb, founder and managing director at Cobb PR It was an incredibly insightful discussion of all four participants’ experiences and insights leading businesses through crisis. Tim Cobb gave communication advice, reminding businesses not to neglect clear internal and external communications, including any furloughed staff. “Wherever you can, try to give your team as up-to-date information as possible,” he commented. “There are some areas you won’t want to touch upon because they’re too delicate or you’re still trying to get your head around it yourself - and that’s fine. But as soon as you have proper plans, talk to the people. Once you start communicating to the team, it’ll ease up your stress levels.” For part of the discussion, Nigel took the panel back to previous crises including 9/11 and the 2008 recession. Gary spoke about how while this crisis is worse because it’s continuous rather than one disastrous event, the approach has got to be similar; “Keep it simple, move quickly, be agile and
“Survive & Thrive’ webinars, in collaboration with Gatwick Diamond Business, focus on a different business-critical topic each week.
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decisive, and focus on what the key things are.” The panel discussed the difficulty of chasing customers and clients for invoices but emphasised that entrepreneurs must remember the whole world is in this situation; you should manage it delicately but it’s sensible to keep chasing. Gary added, “this can’t be a strategy on its own, you must look at reducing your costs as well as recovery. Furlough schemes and other government support are all part of the puzzle of fixing your cashflow alongside collecting from existing customers.” Peter added that given the traumatic nature of this crisis, managers need to see a way through and take the opportunity to learn about themselves; “what’s important is coming out of this with revenue and as a better manager.” The following week’s webinar examined pivoting to a direct to consumer model and was hosted by Helena Jevons, Sussex Innovation’s Head of Sales and Marketing. The panel included: • David Santineer and Alvaro Bravo Cole, founders of Proactive by Design • Saikat Chatterjee, enterprise solution architect at Simplex Services • Claire Kentish Barnes, founder and distiller at Generation Distillers • Ellen Hedges, marketing, innovation and strategic consultant at Eh-Consulting
The panel discussed how to approach a pivot, with David and Alvaro outlining some of the principles of design thinking and Ellen highlighting that the businesses who respond compassionately and helpfully to the crisis will be remembered long afterwards. Saikat spoke about his new platform ShopSimple, a less complex delivery platform option for small local businesses – a perfect example of how to not only pivot for your business but to help your community during these uncertain times. Claire shared her story whereby a week before lockdown they began to panic as orders from retailers came to a halt. Her team had seen other breweries making hand sanitiser, but she wasn’t sure if there was enough demand and so posed the question on social media. She received a huge response from carers, police workers, families and nurses proving how high demand was! “I spent two weeks with help from Sussex Innovation working through
the process to get my first deliveries out. Luckily, we’re small so can be very agile. We worked through with HMRC how we can get the alcohol denatured so we don’t have to pay duty on it. We had to buy hundreds of plastic bottles, most of our usual product is locally-sourced glass so this wasn’t our brand but needs must! Cashflow was a concern, but because we did the market research and saw there was demand, we went for it.”
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f you’re interested in attending future Survive & Thrive webinars, search for Sussex Innovation on Eventbrite for more information and to book your spot. And whether you’re facing opportunities or threats at this time – if you need support to reposition your business, Sussex Innovation has launched a programme of EU funded Task Forces with senior consultants to help business owners tackle their most pressing business issues. The team will pre-review your business documents to understand your business inside out before a two-hour
collaborative consultancy session to help you identify and answer your key business needs and key strategic decisions. We dig deep into your organisation to understand what needs to be developed and bolstered to help you achieve your ambitions. You will then receive a written report of recommendations within three days to help move your business forward.
Find out more by enquiring at info. sinc.co.uk/enquiries. In addition to this we will be offering one business who signs up from this article the opportunity to have a 1 on 1 consultancy session with the Centre’s Chief Executive.
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Molly Maid Brighton & Hove
Cleaning & Sanitising Services Offering a two pronged approach to clean and sanitise your home or office. We clean using our specialist eco-friendly, nontoxic disinfectant XtraProtect which has passed independent laboratory tests proving it is effective against all enveloped viruses including all Coronaviruses (to BS EN 14476 standards). As an added layer of sanitisation, we’ll use UVC Germicidal Light. Used for over 40 years in hospitals aiding in disinfecting air and surfaces killing fungi, bacteria, superbugs, SARS, MERS and other coronaviruses and safe to use for domestic use.
Our highly trained and friendly maids are here to help keep you, your family and loved ones safe. Our HomeSafe cleaning system allows us to clean and sanitise your home whilst keeping you, your family and our staff’s health our priority.
For more information on our HomeSafe Cleaning procedures and sanitation service please email tessa.deklerk@mollymaid.co.uk or call
01273 289878
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See what our customers have to say at uk.trustpilot.com
UVC GERMICIDAL LIGHT DEADLY TO PATHOGENS BUT SAFE FOR USE IN YOUR HOME & OFFICE Ultra-violet germicidal light has been used extensively in hospitals and laboratories for over 40 years. It destroys fungi, mould, bacteria, and viruses & is now available for use in your home & office. Germicidal light disinfects air and surfaces outright! What is UVC Germicidal Light and how does it work? Ultraviolet technology is a non-chemical approach to disinfection. UVC light is part of the light spectrum with wavelengths from 100 nanometers (nm) to 280 nm. The light works by deactivating the DNA of bacteria, viruses and other pathogens thus destroying their ability to multiply & cause disease. In fact, when the organism tries to replicate, it dies. This means that germicidal devices can be placed in rooms to illuminate floors, surfaces, walls, ceilings and the air in between. The device will be left to run whilst killing all pathogens illuminated by the UVC light. Unlike ‘fogging’ which may damage art, wood, furniture etc, this technology can be used on all porous and non-porous materials. Although Germicidal light is a non-chemical sanitation method, it is important to note that the devices emit powerful UV light which can severely damage skin & eyesight when in operation. Therefore it is best to leave the UVC disinfection to professionals, trained in its usage
For more information on the UVC Germicidial Light sanitation process, please email tess.deklerk@mollymaid.co.uk or call 01273 289878
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CHARITY NEWS
Crisis Appeal Chestnut Tree House has launched a Crisis Appeal, asking the local community for support to ensure they can continue providing hospice care for children and families – now and in the future
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or the last 17 years, Chestnut Tree House has been there for local children with life-shortening conditions and their families, both at the hospice near Arundel and in their own homes across Sussex. No one is ever charged for the care they receive at Chestnut Tree House, but less than 6% of the funding comes from the government. They rely heavily on the support of the local community, through donations and fundraising. But the coronavirus crisis is having a devastating impact on fundraising, with charity shops closed and events postponed or cancelled. This is threatening the future of the children’s hospice and the care and support they provide for local children and families. The maths are simple… It costs £400,000 a month to run Chestnut Tree House, most of which comes from fundraising. Right now, the hospice is losing 70% of their monthly fundraising income. It is only a matter of time before they run out of money. Rosemarie Finley, CEO Chestnut Tree House said: “Now, more than ever, the hospice and the people who depend on it, need your help. Community support is vital. We appreciate that this is
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a difficult time for everyone, but if you can afford to, we’d be very grateful for any help you can offer – to keep our services running and bring some desperately needed support to children and families facing some very dark times.” Your support will help children like Lilly. Seven-year-old Lilly is profoundly deaf, cannot walk and has very complex needs. Now her family are in lockdown and finding life a huge challenge, as Lilly’s mum Paula said on the phone: “I am just waiting for the phone call from Chestnut to let me know when someone can visit. That couple of
hours will be lovely, it will just mean that I don’t have to worry about her for a little while. I can relax knowing someone else is with her to give her everything she needs.” Confined to her home, Lilly and her family are struggling to cope. Your gift could fund a visit from one of the Chestnut Tree House team and give them a few hours of relief and joy. Now more than ever, the children and families who depend on Chestnut Tree House need the help of friends like you. To help to save your local children’s hospice, visit www.chestnut-treehouse.org.uk/SOS
CHARITY NEWS
Rockinghorse
Rainbow
A consortium of Sussex businesses have voluntarily pooled their skills to sell unique ‘NHS rainbow’ t-shirts in a bid to replenish vital funds for children’s hospitals.
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OVID-19 has meant that Rockinghorse Children’s Charity has lost £50,000 in fundraising opportunities, whilst demands on its hospitals’ equipment and care have never been higher. Families are now able to preserve their children’s rainbow drawings, printed on t-shirts, to raise vital funds. In just ten days, an e-commerce website and full digital marketing campaign has come to life alongside a t-shirt print and delivery service. It’s all in aid of helping the official charity arm of Royal Alexandra Children’s Hospital as it has found itself spending its emergency funding during these exceptional circumstances. Led by Freedom Works, a community workspace group, professionals have donated time, expertise, ad spend and equipment to the project that supports NHS services. Jon Trigg of Freedom Works said, “When we heard about the dire situation Rockinghorse are in, we felt compelled to help. We are a group of people that may not be equipped to help on the front line, but we sure know how to get people on a website!”. Children and adult sized t-shirts printed with a special “I’m a Rockinghorse Hero” message and rainbows of hope can now be ordered at shop.rockinghorse.org.uk, with 100% profit going directly to Rockinghorse Children’s Charity.
The project has the full backing of Ryan Heal, CEO of Rockinghorse Children’s Charity which also helps fund special care baby units in Brighton and Haywards Heath. “We’ve been inspired by the energy and passion shown by this wonderful group of business leaders, led by Jon Trigg of Freedom Works, who have come together for the greater good. It just shows that the gift of human kindness is alive and kicking in Sussex as these business heroes have decided to help Rockinghorse at such a critical time for the charity, a time we’ve never witnessed before. “We are truly grateful and urge as many people as possible to get their hands on a t-shirt, not just for the support of the charity and the NHS, but
as a keepsake from a time in our lives that we will all look back upon and say; ‘we did our bit!’” As the web shop launches, the businesses involved are spreading the word and would welcome your support. If you are able to share the story on your company social media or newsletter, please do so as soon as possible, using the campaign hashtag #NHSRainbowTee
Available in a range of sizes, custom design t-shirts are £25 and a standard design is £20. T-shirts can be ordered at https://shop.rockinghorse.org.uk/
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Distilling the ethos of Community Spirit How Generation Distillers switched their gin making skills to produce essential hand sanitisers
Claire Kentish Barnes and her husband Ed launched their distillery near Lewes two years ago. Their vision: to create a portfolio of drinks that are beautifully made, transparent in their making and marketing and made using locally sourced ingredients. Their business also supports other local enterprises by sourcing as much as they can from other local independents.
PHOTO BY NIKKI GOODEVE PHOTOGRAPHY
Usually at this time of year, the pair
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would be preparing stocks for summer trade, showing the gin at events and trade shows and developing new business; but they are not doing any of that – they are making hand sanitiser in their distillery instead. ‘The week before lockdown, orders dropped off a cliff,’ says Ed, ‘we were lucky that we are not hugely exposed in on-trade businesses (pubs, restaurants and hotels), but all of our customers were anxious, unsure of what the next weeks would bring and understandably reluctant to tie up capital in stock that they may not be able to sell.’ ‘I had heard of some of the bigger distilleries making hand sanitiser from the alcohol that we have stored and make in our distilleries’ says Claire. ‘We thought that this was something we could do, but were unsure of the need for it in our local community’. Claire posted on a few local social media sites that they have the capability and wanted to gauge whether there was a need for the product - the response was overwhelming! ‘We didn’t even think about making an alternative choice after that, we were straight into planning mode – how are we going to make this happen’? With a background in product sales and marketing, Claire was experienced in managing projects and getting product to market, and Ed’s experience as a master brewer and FMCG consultant gave them operational expertise; but the pace of
this project and what this small distillery have achieved in the time is what sets them apart. Claire and Ed delivered their first batch of hand sanitiser two weeks after receiving the online response. There were a number of very important aspects to this project that we needed to get through before we could launch the product. We needed to protect ourselves and our existing business, but alongside this we wanted to get the product to market as soon as we could. We engaged with HMRC, HSE and trading standards initially to ensure that we were working within the guidelines. ‘There was confusion as to whether
PHOTO BY PHOTOGR APHY FIRM
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There has been so much written about two specific types of business during the last few weeks. Those that are on the edge, support for which may or may not be enough to keep them afloat; and businesses that are thriving, those that fit well into the #stayhome lifestyle – conferencing apps as an example. But some businesses are doing something completely different and using their vision and their capability to try something very different from the norm, and being hugely successful.
COMMUNITY BUSINESS
we could denature the alcohol ourselves, thus removing the duty liability on the product. Spirit duty is £28.74 a litre and needs to be paid on everything leaving our bonded warehouse. To make hand sanitiser, we need to denature the alcohol, but we didn’t have a licence for that. Being part of a trade association meant that we had a direct communication link with HMRC and via the lobbying of the British Distillers Alliance, we soon had the news that we were after, that those with a bonded warehouse were able to effectively denature the alcohol and make hand sanitiser without the duty liability’. This came with
a number of caveats, in particular the use of the World Health Organisation formulation for alcohol based hand sanitiser. This was great news, and gave them a very clear focus – the recipe and methods were prescribed.
frontline workers. For every 1L that they sell to the public, they give the same away in donations. At the time of writing, they have made and sold/donated 500L and we have another 800L on order.
“Leaders must protect the business purpose and values, the very essence of the culture and thus avoid it being degraded.” But moving from being a distiller to being a biocide producer threw up lots more questions - did they need to be registered as a producer to bring the product to market? Did they need to have the product independently laboratory tested in order to launch? Would anyone buy it from them if they just followed the formula and didn’t get it tested? Other more practical issues almost halted their ability to press on – plastic is scarce at the moment, mostly coming from China, plastic bottles and containers were near impossible to source on the open market. A call to a local warehouse and a call from a company who had bottles in stock and were looking to free up some warehouse space meant that they had their first and second consignments covered. One of the main drivers for delivery is to make hand sanitiser at an affordable price so that it is comparable to the standard cost per unit that organisations have become accustomed to paying. The pair also decided to sell the hand sanitiser to the public as well as producing bulk for care homes, and
Although Ed and Claire have worked tirelessly and continue to do so to get the hand sanitiser to those that need it, the project has a real community feel about it. ‘Right from the start we involved our own community in this project by asking them about their needs. We have had so much contact from local councils, NHS trusts, care homes, schools, charities, volunteer groups, food banks and individuals all congratulating us on our efforts and supporting us to ensure that the product gets to where it is needed most. We have had great support from the Sussex Innovation Centre, and had exposure through local press and local business forums, there is a real community spirit from the local business community as we come together at this time of crisis and it is humbling to be able to be a small part of that’. www.generationdistillers.co.uk Claire Kentish Barnes clairekb@generation11.co.uk www.generationdistillers.co.uk @generation11gin +44 (0) 7747 848764
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FOOD & DRINK
Turnaround to Takeaway Jeremy Ashpool, chef proprietor of Jeremy’s Restaurant at Borde Hill, tells of the pivotal moment the business had to adapt quickly if it was to survive in the wake of Coronavirus and the stay-at-home policy.
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ne of the first priorities was to offer calm, positive advice to employees and give assurances that the company would do all that it could to ensure their welfare. “We then looked at how we could diversify. We began the process of evaluating what takeaway services we might be able to provide from both Jeremy’s and our next-door Café Elvira,” says Jeremy. Led by head chef Jimmy Gray and Maria, a collaborative takeaway menu offering favourites from Jeremy’s and Café Elvira was created, featuring a range of popular, tasty and nutritious dishes that could be easily served at
home, ingredients and allergen information and instructions on how to collect safely from the premises. “The feedback to what we were doing, and what we were offering was and continues to be, truly heart-warming. We were also receiving messages from lovely customers sadly too far away from us to order, but encouraging us to keep going with our new venture,” adds Jeremy. Requests also started to come in for more ‘Jeremy-style’ dishes so the team produced a ‘Fine Dining at Home’ menu which offered a variety of options together with a change to the Café’s menu too, to include Vera’s famous and delicious sweet and savoury tarts. The new menu has just launched, including Sunday roasts. This menu, currently featuring South Coast lobster as one of the starters as well as a range of vegetarian
“5 stars. We had a superb takeaway dinner from Jeremy’s for a family birthday dinner party during lockdown. It was so delicious. Easy to follow reheating instructions; good sized portions and the best way to celebrate a special occasion during this period. We will definitely be ordering again. The food was wonderful and all organised, so no contact on collection.” Customer Testimonial options as starters and mains, and the Café’s famous shortcrust Dexter beef pie, is available for collection between 3pm and 6pm on Wednesdays and between 11am and 5pm Thursdays to Sundays. Matt, the restaurant’s front of house manager, has been working hard, in charge of logistics and ensuring customers can collect their orders in a safe environment. “As the glorious spring weather continues to mitigate, to some extent, the anxiety of these troubled times, we continue to find new ways to extend the Jeremy’s and Café Elvira experience into the community and to our loyal friends and customers. We will carry on and hopefully, as one guest said, “Being a small ray of light in these dark times,” concludes Jeremy.
Dishes can be ordered with a minimum of 48 hours notice. Please call 01444 441102, or for orders after 5pm please email reservations@jeremysrestaurant.com. Menus can be viewed at www.jeremysrestaurant. co.uk Jeremy’s Restaurant, Borde Hill, Haywards Heath, West Sussex, RH16 1XP
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BUSINESS GROWTH
NatWest Accelerator Entrepreneur of the Month – May 2020 Rachael Swann, Founder of Synergy Dance® Foundation for Surrey, The Charles Hayward Trust, the Henry Smith charity, Awards for All and Active Surrey are all supporting specific projects within our charitable arm, Synergy Dance Outreach.
Tell us about yourself Synergy Dance® is a dance, yoga & fitness programme for children and teens in schools & leisure centres. We deliver innovative dance & Yoga courses, school clubs, classes, workshops, dance parties, CPD training for schools, all day holiday camps and Special Needs & Disability programmes. We are here to promote physical and mental health and well-being through accessible and innovative activities for children and adults, people experiencing disadvantage and those with SEND, to meet local needs and get people active. The adoption rate of our services has been high and we are expanding within the Freedom Leisure chain, launching in another five Sussex venues post C-19. Our traction includes 16 leisure centres, 10 outreach centres, outsourcing to two National Sports Franchises, Care Homes and 32 partnerships and collaborations. We have reached 10,524 children in the last year creating positive impact and resilience to challenges. Children In Need, the Community
Covid-19 Covid 19 has been by far the biggest challenge so far. In the face of complete loss of revenue – I knew I had to pivot the business. I was also driven by three aims: 1) To support everyone at home to keep fit and active – both those we already supply and a wider audience nationally. 2) Social responsibility to the team The new projects have given our team of talent sustained work. 3) To be a force for good - people are anxious and need structure #DanceAtHome and #YogaAtHome can potentially go out globally - to reach all who are isolated, anxious and in need of fun activities. What tips or advice would you share with other Entrepreneurs ? Just get started and put it out there – don’t delay if you have a great idea. My biggest advice is to always “Keep going”. There will be a lot of obstacles when you start up a business but passion, focus and self-belief will carry you through. Avoid trying to do everything yourself, once you are past the early stages of starting up– this leads to burnout,
lack of vision and lack of growth. By delegating to experts in their field, the business becomes robust. A company culture is driven by the team – I look for talent, dedication and loyalty – in return, we will all benefit as Synergy expands and reaches more people. To grow your business – hire a manager if you can – so they can run the ship while you focus on strategy and growth. If you are working “in the business”, you cannot realistically take it to the next level. Don’t obsess over the competition, even when they copy(!) and concentrate on outstepping them by being innovative and focussed on what you can achieve with your team. Synergy has created a virtual online platform, synergy-dance-online. teachable.com, delivering Dance, Yoga & Meditation activities for children, teens & adults, with activities for mainstream, Special Needs & Disabilities, the elderly and the Visually impaired/Blind community. They are reaching all who can benefit in the UK and abroad. The new audio clips are being shared with new partners British Blind Sport and are reaching visually impaired groups as far as New Zealand. #KeepGoing #KeepActive #KeepConnected #DanceAtHome #YogaAtHome
To donate to virtual Synergy or for more info go to http://synergydance.co.uk
Each month the leadership team at Brighton’s NatWest Entrepreneur Accelerator select a founder of the month to recognise the individuals that have demonstrated a growth mindset and entrepreneurial spirit to overcome challenges and accelerate the growth of their business in a short space of time. To find out more about the Accelerator hub, email BrightonAccelerator@natwest.com
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PEST CONTROL
Home Invaders Unwanted visitors can trigger mental health issues during lockdown, says Paul Bates, Managing Director Cleankill Pest Control people are spotting furry intruders and insects that would often go unnoticed.
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orking from home and spending more time at home generally has become the reality of the lockdown for many. For Cleankill Pest Control this has resulted in an increase in calls from residential premises as people are spotting furry intruders and insects that would often go unnoticed. Cleankill Managing Director Paul Bates says the mental health implications of having an infestation during lockdown when you can’t leave your home can be quite serious for some and affect the ability to focus on work. He explains: “It’s bad enough having a pest problem during normal times, but usually people can get out of the house or go off to work and can escape the problem. The lockdown has resulted in an increase in calls from residential premises to Cleankill as
“Hearing constant scratching or pests running about in your roof space is really stressful along with the worry of not knowing what damage they are doing and whether they are gnawing through cables. Rats are also appearing in people’s gardens especially in urban properties as there is less food being discarded in the streets. This means the rats are having to explore new territories to find food.” As well as rodents, people have been calling about clothes moths which they might not otherwise have spotted if they weren’t in their homes 24 hours a day. People are also finding time to tidy cupboards and loft spaces and uncovering textile moth problems that have been hidden. It’s also the time when pigeons and gulls are starting to arrive and nest on balconies or enter roofspac-
es, presenting a health risk to residents who are forced to spend more time in their own outside spaces during lockdown. Squirrels are starting to breed and are expert at gnawing through soffits and fascias and accessing lofts where they will nest while potentially damaging wiring and rafters. There has been an increase in calls about stored products infestations as people try to use up old ingredients at the back of cupboards, or sort through packets of dried goods only to be horrified to find the contents inside moving on its own. Cleankill recommends using a professional pest control company to tackle problems particularly where rats, mice, birds or squirrels are concerned. “Rats and squirrels can be quite aggressive and getting rid of the creatures requires a lot of knowledge and expertise. A trained professional should be able to get rid of the problem safely, humanely and quickly. But if you buy off the shelf products it is hard to know without training the correct dosage or the best location to use them in. You could also endanger children, pets and wildlife. It’s also more likely that the problem will return and cause further stress,” Paul said.
Go to www.cleankill.co.uk or call 0800 056 5477
CLEANING SERVICES
Cleaning up after
Coronavirus
With the increased need for sanitisation, the pandemic has created opportunities for innovative cleaning companies Nicki Hesketh & Dean Clark
required both now and once life returns to normal is sanitising cleans, to make sure companies’ premises are safe and stay that way. “We had carried these out in the past during the SARS virus, so we knew what we needed to do. We retrained staff in how to carry out the cleans effectively and began doing the cleans for clients who are still operating and want to ensure that their offices are Covid-19 free.” says Dean. “We realised that this could also be an opportunity for an additional revenue stream. In many countries companies have regular scheduled sanitising cleans of their premises as a precaution and we believe that this something companies should be doing here going forward. “As you can imagine premises that haven’t been open for several weeks will definitely require a general clean once they are open again to get rid of dust build-up and goodness knows what else. But for peace of mind we are also suggesting a sanitising clean.”
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ot surprisingly Coronavirus didn’t feature in the business planning for Greenstar Cleaners this year so when it hit, they had to react quickly in order to secure the future of the business.
Greenstar Cleaners have been fortunate enough to receive a grant from Coast to Capital’s Backing Business Grant Scheme. “We are absolutely delighted to have received this. Amongst other things this will enable us to purchase additional specialised equipment to carry out sanitising cleans on a large scale in the future and help build this arm of Greenstar.”
Based on Manor Royal, it has a number of clients related to the airport, from airlines to duty free suppliers, and these were some of the first companies to close offices. With fewer offices to clean, this commercial cleaning company had to think of a new revenue stream. Dean Clark, Managing Director, comments; “We have been in operation for more than forty years and in that time have weathered a number of recessions. In our experience it is best to secure what you are currently doing and then look to the future.” They did this swiftly, deciding that what was going to be
Greenstar Cleaners is a sustainable commercial cleaning company operating throughout the South East. For more information contact info@greenstarcleaners.co.uk. Tel: 01293 534643 greenstarcleaners.co.uk
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Queen’s Award for Frenchic Paint S
urrey based eco-friendly chalk and mineral paint brand Frenchic are thrilled to announce they have been awarded a Queen’s Award for Enterprise in the Innovation category for 2020. The prestigious Queen’s Award for Enterprise recognises outstanding achievement by a UK business, and is testament to the incredible successes achieved by Frenchic and its Founder Pam Gruhn in just over five years since their standing-start launch. Granted the award for Innovation, Frenchic are now proven to have brought the UK’s first unique chalk and mineral paint with a wax infusion to market, known as their Lazy Range. This one-ofits-kind wax infusion totally eliminates the need for a top-coat or wax to seal the paint and saves the customer more than half the time at a third of the cost. Since Dec 2014, Frenchic have offered a huge range of high-quality paint which perfectly coincided with the up-cycling revolution, helping DIY enthusiasts give old or unused furniture an entirely
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ENTERPRISE
Frenchic Founder Pam Gruhn: “We are so honoured to receive the Queen’s Award for Enterprise in the Innovation category. We pride ourselves in continually creating unique paints in must-have colours, so to be highly recognised for our Lazy Range is an incredible achievement. I started Frenchic when I grew frustrated with being unable to find a paint that ticked all my boxes, so I am thrilled with how quickly we’ve grown to become one of the UK’s market leaders and a British brand exporting across the world. Everything we produce has the customer and environment in mind, combining exceptional quality with ease of use and eco-friendly ingredients. It has been a true labour of love - a start-up with humble beginnings, no exterior funding, but simply a pure passion for paint! What drives me is the community we’ve created and the wonderful stockists we support around the world. To have this accolade really is a dream come true – truly a special moment for Team Frenchic.”
new look, without skimping on style or substance. Their rich and creamy paint is incredibly easy to use, with the range including Al Fresco Inside/Outside Range, Washable Chalk Wall Paint, Trim Paint, Waxes and accessories. The paint has no added VOC’s (Volatile Organic Compounds) and is also proudly EN:71-3 certified, so it’s perfectly child-safe.
the independent retailer on our high streets with over 550 stockists on four continents. This period of isolation has jump-started an up-cycling craze which has been building for 18-months, and Frenchic have been a major part of this. Earlier this year they recorded a 300% uplift in sales, and this month alone sees a 487%
increase. They are currently shipping 6 tons of paint per day and in 6 weeks have taken delivery of 115,000 tins of paint. Winning the unrivalled Queen’s Award for Enterprise will only further cement their status as one of the decorative paint market leaders.
www.frenchicpaint.co.uk @FrenchicPaint
Frenchic continue to go from strength to strength championing
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EDUCATION
Supporting NHS Heroes The Hurst College community members work hard, do good and engage with NHS heroes
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Gate College, Chester and who has been working with the Countess of Chester Hospital A&E Department to develop the design.
Chief Operating Officer/DT teacher Dan Higgins and his daughter Beth - who was due to take her A-levels this Summer - have made over 160 visors for NHS staff. The visors were based on an original design shared by a friend of Dan’s who works at Abbey
The Hurst-made visors have been produced from two methods, 3D printing and laser cutting, using PLA, PP and acetate - some also have foam and elastic stitched on by hand. Thirty-six visors have been made using two small 3D printers, which take around 90 minutes to print. The other laser designs, which are quicker to cut, require
he Hurst College community – teachers, pupils and parents – continue to support our NHS heroes by making visors and face masks, running a marathon and producing a fundraising t-shirt.
Amelie
more assembly time. More than 100 visors have already been distributed by Beth following requests for assistance from a number of parents and staff. She has delivered the PPE to the Brow Medical Centre in Burgess Hill, the Royal Alexandra Children's Hospital in Brighton, Hurst and Hassocks GP surgeries, and SE Ambulance services. The remainder will be delivered when more elastic has been sourced, and once further supplies of all the materials are delivered, then more visors can be made. “It’s been a real iterative process where we have changed and simplified the design to make the production as fast and easy as possible, using the kit and stock we’ve had in the DT department. We have now exhausted all the materials we had left and have had to stop production for now,” said Dan. Senior Nurse Sarah Barker started making facemasks over the Easter holidays after receiving an email request from her GP practice. News of Sarah’s handiwork quickly spread via Facebook and other organisations also requested her mask-making skills. She has made around 120 masks in total for local GP practices, pharmacies, care homes and community nursing teams. “My hobby is patchwork and as I had a huge stash of fabric I was happy to help out and put the fabric to good use, before I returned to work for the NHS on a temporary basis,” said Sarah. Year 6 pupil, Amelie set herself the challenge of running a marathon with her pet dog in less than two weeks to raise money for NHS Charities Together. She began her quest last week, running between three and four miles
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EDUCATION
“Dan Higgins and his daughter Beth - who was due to take her A-levels this Summer - have made over 160 visors for NHS staff.”
every day and fittingly completed her 26.2 miles on Sunday, which should have been the day of the London Marathon. So far, she has raised £880, just £120 short of her target, and is still expecting to hit her fundraising target. “When I was clapping the NHS workers on Thursday evenings I was thinking how brave they are and wanted to do more to help, so I decided to run a fundraising marathon. This is something I can do from my front door during our daily dog walking slot and online PE lesson time,” said Amelie. During the Easter holidays Housemistress Jami Edwards-Clarke and the girls in her care designed a t-shirt, with a little help from some friends, to raise
The NHS charity T-shirts. Inset: Paediatric Radiographers at the Royal Alex wearing Hurst-made visors
funds for the NHS. Using the girls’ drawings as a template, a Welsh friend of Jami’s produced print-ready artwork and a local West Sussex printer produced the finished article. Inspired by Jami’s Mum, who is currently working as a nurse in a make-shift Covid-19 hospital in Pembrokeshire, the house had hoped to raise at least £1000 for the NHS – that total has already been passed with more than 200 t-shirts sold and £2500 raised. “The work that every single doctor, nurse, cleaner, porter (the list goes on) has been doing made us think, what we could do to help. So, we decided to produce this fundraising t-shirt to support our amazing NHS teams, wherever they are, and my Mum!”, said Jami.
The first donation of £1000 has been sent to Brighton and Sussex University Hospitals NHS Trust for their staff wellbeing fundraising campaign which will ensure staff have the resources and support they need to fight coronavirus whilst remaining healthy, energised and well-rested over the upcoming weeks and months ahead.
hppc.co.uk
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Great relationships Great conversations Great futures
We are an award-winning firm of Chartered Accountants, Chartered Tax Advisers, Business Consultants and Independent Financial Advisers with a reputation for innovation and excellence. With our relationship led service, we look to understand the opportunities and challenges faced by you and your business. Our focus is always on client service, with open and honest relationships.
www.carpenterbox.com
Now, for tomorrow 46
national IR35 Postponed
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news
he government has postponed the implementation of reforms to IR35 tax rules in the private sector by one year in a bid to protect the economy against the coronavirus outbreak. Speaking recently at the Budget debate in the House of Commons, Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Steve Barclay announced the reforms to IR35 off-payroll working rules would now come into effect on 6 April 2021. Last month the Treasury confirmed it was to push ahead with changes to the rules, which would see every medium and large private sector business in the UK become responsible for setting the tax status of any contract worker they use from April 2020. Previously the rules had only applied to the public sector.
Imperfection is beauty, madness is genius and it’s better to be absolutely ridiculous than absolutely boring BUSINESS WISDOM
Netflix Boom
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he grimly fascinating feature of the coronavirus era is the Darwinistic way one company’s disaster is another’s fortune. So, while restaurants and bars furlough hundreds of thousands of staff as their clients are stuck indoors, supermarkets enjoy record sales. While retail property landlords suffer floods of tenants unable to pay their rents, warehouse owners make fortunes storing unsold shop goods. The winners can’t believe their luck. Some talk vaguely of how a reckoning will come their way sooner or later but that’s mainly because it feels wrong to crow. Netflix’s Reed Hastings —the biggest Covid winner after Amazon’s Jeff Bezos — tried to act sombre to investors today. Having just put on a record 16 million new subscribers, he grimly intoned that next quarter could see only 7.5 million. Get out the world’s smallest violin for a man whose shares have surged 30% this year.
Hogs Back Collection
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urrey-based Hogs Back Brewery is finding new ways to keep its beers flowing to customers through the coronavirus ‘lockdown’, as people heed Government advice to stay away from pubs and bars and work from home. The brewery, in Tongham near Farnham, has introduced a new Drive Through service for its draught, bottled and canned beers, including its flagship TEA, Hogstar lager and Surrey Nirvana Session IPA. Customers simply drive up to the Brewery Shop, place their order - from a safe distance - and the beer is loaded into their boot by shop staff, without needing to leave their car. Customers can also ‘click and collect’ by going online to www.hogsback.co.uk with orders ready for collection after 10.00 am the next day, and for those waiting for orders, beer will be served to socially-distanced tables in the open canopy area. For customers unable to leave home, Hogs Back will home-deliver orders within a 15-mile radius of the brewery, and further afield for orders of £40 or more. The Brewery Shop remains open for business, with new social distancing measures in place and closure on Mondays to allow for deep cleaning.
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The Beauty of Belize My home for over six years and a country l still love to this day - and one day l will return. As a PADI Master Instructor, l have dived just about every site in the country, spent weeks in the jungle and climbed a wealth of the Mayan ruins. I could not recommend it strongly enough. By Maarten Hoffmann
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elize is a former British colony in Central America, sandwiched between Mexico to the north, Guatemala to the west and Honduras to the south, and enjoys a 239 mile long coastline on the Caribbean. It should also be noted that the country boasts the second largest barrier reef on the planet, after Australia’s Great Barrier Reef. Belize is a hidden little gem that is largely ignored by many except those in the know - and those in the know, know what everyone else is missing.
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The country is full of friendly English speaking people who are welcoming and warm and the Barrier islands, or Cayes as they are called (pronounced keys), of which there are over 200, are some of the most beautiful you will find anywhere in the world. White sand, waving palm trees, aqua blue waves lapping on the shore, fantastic food and a laid back life that we might have all thought had gone from the modern world. Most of the islands are above sea level by just inches and all have a slightly different feel to them
dependant on how far south you go. Belize is not an expensive country to visit with an abundance of affordable accommodation alongside some exclusive beach resorts populated by the rich and famous. Homes are owned by Tiger Woods, Harrison Ford, Leonardo DiCaprio, Ivanka Trump and Francis Ford Coppola. Over the following pages, I will describe some of the many ways you can experience the beauty of Belize...
TRAVEL
GLOVERS CAYE Named after a famous pirate, this is a group of five small islands surrounded by a vast expanse of coral reef. It is also close to one of the deepest underwater trenches in the world making for some superb diving with Hammerheads, Bull Sharks and rays. The accommodations are very affordable which makes up for the cost of spending half your time underwater.
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TRAVEL
A Beach Vacation Fly into Belize City (and then get out of BC asap) and jump on the island hopper plane run by Tropic Air to Ambergris Caye, just a 10 minute flight. Ambergris Caye is named after the oil that was extracted from the whales that used to be caught and processed here many years ago but is the largest of all the Caye’s and my home for many years. The centre is the town of San Pedro, with sandy streets and no cars allowed, we would go everywhere by golf cart or bicycle with everyone shouting good morning at every turn. There are many cabana style hotels in town and a short boat trip north, takes you to a range of first-class resort hotels that will rival any in the world. From Ambergris,
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you can dive, snorkel, windsurf, kayak and jet ski followed by lunch of some of the freshest fish you will ever eat as the distance to your plate will often be less than 50 metres. To the back (west) of the island is the lagoon where Cayman crocs hang out along with a host of other wildlife, and the bird watching is excellent. Further north, you will find the Bacalar Chico Marine Reserve where, in season, you can see hundreds of turtles hatch from the sand and make the perilous charge to the sea. Offshore, you will find the Hol Chan Marine Reserve with such a myriad of coloured tropical fish that your head will spin.
The Jungle If island hopping is not for you or you would like to mix it up, inland you will find some of the most wonderful virgin rainforest jungle to be found anywhere. Over half the country is covered by tropical rainforest, much of it unexplored. There are 4,000 species of tropical flowers, 250 kinds of wild Orchids and 500 species of birds. You will also encounter Jaguar, Puma, Ocelot, Armadillo, Tapir and Crocodiles along with raging rivers, waterfalls
and limestone caves. Keep exploring and you will also come across Mayan ruins. Once home to over 2 million Mayans, there are sacred temples, pyramids, palaces and awesome structures - many totally undiscovered. And don’t be too surprised if a bunch of British soldiers suddenly pop out of the canopy as the UK still use this jungle to train our soldiers in jungle warfare and survival techniques.
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Island Life If you really want to get away from it all, you now have the choice of hundreds of islands - some exclusive resorts, some cabana shacks and some totally deserted for that Robinson Crusoe experience.
CAYE CAULKER (above)
So laid back it is almost horizontal. The old Hippy island that still has that vibe and the backpackers paradise. It is known as the ‘go slow’ island, which is slightly ironic as none of the islands are exactly hectic!
TOBACCO CAYE (right)
This is a budget dream with little houses to rent on stilts into the sea, BBQ’s every night and singing around the campfire.
ST GEORGE’S CAYE (BELOW)
This caye is a national treasure and celebrated each year during St. Georges Caye Day that marks the day that the Baymen drove away the Spanish invaders. Many private dwellings owned by some of the wealthiest Belizeans with a small selection of cabin resorts.
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TRAVEL
LAUGHING BIRD CAYE
One of the most beautiful islands in Belize that gets it name from the laughing gull that comes to the island to breed. As it sits on an elongated piece of the reef, it has an abundance of marine life and is part of a Word Heritage Park. No overnight stays are allowed but it makes a fantastic stop-over for snorkelling and diving.
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THE BLUE HOLE Not an island but a giant sinkhole, or a Cenote, 43 km from the mainland and one of the most exciting dive sites in the world. The Hole is 318m wide and 124m deep and was formed during the quaternary glaciation period some 153,000 years ago when the sea level was much lower and it was a dry cave. As the oceans began to rise again, it was flooded and is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Discovered for diving by the famous Jacques Cousteau, who placed his exploration vessel, the Calypso in the hole to fully discover this incredible site. Cousteau, the Discovery Channel and millions of divers agree that this is on the list of “The 10 Most Amazing Places on Earth’. Easily reached from the islands but also available as a day trip from the mainland.
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Sightseeing
CARACOL (below)
CAHAL PECH (below right)
LAMANAI (above)
Although one of the most challenging Belize ruins to reach, the trip to Caracol is also one of the most scenic drives. It is the largest known Maya centre within the country and holds “Canaa” (Sky Place), the largest pyramid or man made structure in Belize at 140 feet tall. A large part of Caracol is still being discovered, but numerous carved monuments populate the area, and the main reservoir is an engineering masterpiece.
Research in 1988 found ten mounds. Excavations show that Cahal Pech was inhabited from 1000 B.C. to around 800 A.D. The central part of the ruins provides a beautiful panoramic view of the surrounding area. Thirty-four structures, including temple pyramids, two ball courts, an alter and five plain stelae fill the 2-acre site.
Lamanai is the Maya word for “subme crocodile.” The site’s name – “Lamana or “Lamayna” was recorded by Franci missionaries in the seventeenth centu is one of the only sites retaining its or name and is among one of the larges ceremonial centres. Most visit Laman road through San Felipe or Orange W rather than by boat. A “jungle cruise”, trip, is an excellent chance to see bird plants and crocodiles. Lamanai has m 719 mapped structures, including two century Christian churches as well as 19th century sugar mill.
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TRAVEL
Adventure
CAVE TUBING One of the oddest, and most fun, things to do in the jungle is Cave Tubing. Sounds daft but you start, with a guide, at the mouth of a cave with a river running through, and launch yourself off in a large rubber ring to float through the mountain. With a torch strapped to your head, you see amazing limestone formations and stalactites as you lazily float through the mountain with the occasional terror of the cave floor dropping away and your rubber ring picking up tremendous speed - and all in the dark. Eventually, your group floats out the other side into sharp jungle sunlight with Toucans, Herons, Macaws and Parrots all around.
Belize is a fascinating country with so many facets that it would take hundreds of pages to fully explore. From the mid-nineteenth century it was called British Honduras by the English invaders, until 1973 when it was officially named Belize by the British colonial office. One of the few former British colonies that actually benefitted from the Brits being there, the Belizeans are a warm, friendly and beautiful race of people who will welcome you to their stunning country.
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STELVIO QUADRIFOGLIO By Maarten Hoffmann
A
s the mantra goes “If you have never owned an Alfa Romeo, you are not really a petrol
head”. Silly mantra really as they used to be stylish Italian models that were totally rubbish, broke down on a daily basis and rusted in front of your eyes. The regular joke was “Why do Alfas have heated rear windows? To keep your hands warm whilst pushing it”. I have to admit to owning a GTV back in the day and when it went, it was great - it just didn’t ‘go’ very often - but l had very toasty hands!
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So that was the 70’s and 80’s but it is a very different proposition today. The Fiat Chrysler Group purchased the brand in 1986, along with Lancia, and things started to change. Having been founded in 1909 by Alexandre Darracq, the company struggled for many years but following the acquisition, reliability greatly improved and they retained a fair portion of the Italian style that made Alfa what it was. The Stelvio, the first SUV ever produced with that famous badge, is named after one of the best driving
roads in Europe - the Stelvio Pass in Italy. It is a very competent car but with so much competition in this sector, it took the adding of the Quadrifoglio badge to set it apart. Quadrifoglio means four-leaf clover and has adorned many of the company’s historic racing cars over the years. It aligns with Audi’s RS, Mercedes AMG and Jaguars SVR as the hot version of the standard car - and hot it certainly is. Porsche have dominated the small SUV sector for a while with the Macan
MOTORING
Turbo having not been too worried by the Audi SQ5 or the Mercedes GLC63. It is often said that small SUV’s lack panache and character but once ‘souped up’, they do tend to take on a different personality. Taking a regular Stelvio, itself one of the few SUVs with some character a driver can engage with, Alfa Romeo’s engineers, led by Roberto Fedeli, whose resume includes Ferrari’s 599, F12 and 458 Speciale, and the Giulia Quadrifoglio, set about developing not only a rival to the Macan Turbo, but a class leader. With 510bhp, a sub four-second
“I have to admit to owning a GTV back in the day and when it went, it was great - it just didn’t ‘go’ very often.”
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0-62mph time and a 7min 51sec Nürburgring lap time, the Stelvio Quadrifoglio has all the tools required to take down Porsche’s junior SUV. Beneath the Stelvio QV’s aluminium bonnet is the 2.9-litre, twin-turbo V6 as found in the Giulia Quadrifoglio. Power is the same, at 510bhp, and the eightspeed ZF gearbox has been recalibrated to suit both the increase in kerb weight over the saloon and the four-wheel-drive transmission. It’s the first time this engine and gearbox combination has been offered with Alfa Romeo’s Q4 driveline. The Stelvio QV is rear-wheel drive by default, and it’s only when the system detects an angle of slip or a loss of traction that it will direct up to 50% of the engine’s torque to the front wheels through a carbon-fibre propshaft. A rear limited-slip differential, active torque vectoring and Alfa’s Pro-DNA switchable drive mode system are all standard. The car also comes fitted with standard brakes, although carbon-ceramics are
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an option but they do take quite some time to warm up and become truly effective. Much work has gone into making it as light as possible with aluminium double wishbones, suspension components, bonnet, doors, wheel arches and the engine resulting in a total kerb weight of 1830kg and therefore 95kg lighter than the Porsche. The drive is very Italian. Lots of stylish features and an exhaust note that screams Italy. The gear changes are pretty much seamless and l tended to drive in Dynamic or Race mode most of the time, to not only get that rasping roar from the pipes but it also significantly sharpens the throttle, suspension and gearbox response. It’s a highly evocative soundtrack as it charges from corner to corner with no lack of enthusiasm or grip. In Race mode the ESP is totally off and if the rear end steps out, it is supremely easy
to correct. With 510bhp on tap, there is plenty of oomph to get you into, and out, of trouble. It’s a fun and exciting drive and that is not the first phrase that rolls off my tongue when driving an SUV. The interior is well laid out and offers everything you need but l do like the little touches, such as the retro arched dash above the dials, the beautiful aluminium paddle shifts and, of course, that iconic badge in the centre of the wheel. Overall, the Stelvio QV is an impressive bit of kit. Steering, brakes, chassis and that engine combine to deliver a welcome slice of enjoyment. It masks its weight well, has impressive body control and can really be manipulated by the driver. It may well be fast, but it’s not simply a fuss-free point-to-point machine – it’s far more fun than that. If an SUV is unavoidable in your garage, and until now only Porsche’s Macan Turbo was on your radar, you’d be missing out by not adding Alfa Romeo’s Stelvio Quadrifoglio to your wish list.
TECH STUFF Model tested: Stelvio Quadrifoglio Engine: 2.9-litre bi-turbo V6 Power: 510 bhp Speed: 0-62 3.8 seconds Top: 176 mph Economy: 28.8mpg Price from: £69,500
“With 510bhp, there is plenty of oomph to get you into, and out, of trouble. It’s a fun and exciting drive and that is not the first thing that rolls off my tongue when driving an SUV.”
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VIRTUAL EVENTS
The gdb Virtual Event Programme Below is a selection of gdb Virtual Events to help keep you connected with your fellow members. Follow the links to book your places and please check the Events Page on the gdb website for regular updates https://www.gatwickdiamondbusiness.com/11-events.html Wednesday 6th May Survive & Thrive: How to apply for grants 13:00-14:00 David Porter, Sussex Innovation and Graeme Cox, Emteq Free of Charge Tuesday 12th May gdb Virtual Elevenses & Networking 10:30-11:30 Stay connected with the gdb Team and your fellow Members Free of Charge – gdb Members only Wednesday 13th May Survive & Thrive: Furloughvation! 13:00-14:00 Sussex Innovation Free of Charge Tuesday 19th May gdb Virtual Elevenses & Networking 10:30-11:30 Stay connected with the gdb Team and your fellow Members Free of Charge – gdb Members only Wednesday 20th May Survive & Thrive: Positive Mental Health and Wellbeing 13:00-14:00 Sussex Innovation Free of Charge Thursday 21st May Advanced Communication: Working with your communication style 10:00-11:15 Nicky McCrudden, McCrudden Training Free of Charge
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Tuesday 26th May gdb Virtual Elevenses & Networking 10:30-11:30 Stay connected with the gdb Team and your fellow Members Free of Charge – gdb Members only Wednesday 27h May Survive & Thrive: Building your social media presence 13:00-14:00 Sussex Innovation Free of Charge Friday 29th May - gdb May Virtual Members Meeting 11:30-12:45 Stay connected with the gdb Team and your fellow Members Free of Charge – gdb Members only Tuesday 2nd June Should I consider selling my business now and what is it worth? 10:00-11:15 Ken Gorman, Director at Transworld Business Advisors - London South West Free of Charge
The gdb Team would like to extend their sincere thanks to all those who have offered to support the gdb Virtual Event Programme.
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