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Doing business in the UK (Day 3)
Posted by rod@drury.net.nz in TechBiz at 5:40 am on Thursday, 24 May 2007

We had a number of good seminars back in Cardiff today around doing business in the UK.

It was interesting to find a bit more about the Welsh strategy to attract inward investment. 20 years ago economic development in Wales was focussed on increasing employment. They understood that the opportunities for relocating companies with several thousands of jobs at a time would eventually slow down. So the Welsh strategy is now to attract a higher value workforce, which is why they are focussing on Technology.

They have a very coordinated model. International Business Wales has outposts around the globe that look for companies that have potential - and encourage them in.

There are a number of agencies and programs that assist once you go onshore. The Techniums are a network of specialised incubators around Wales. This top to bottom integration through the programs is impressive and seems to be very effective.

Here are some points around doing business in England and Wales I took note of:

In the afternoon, we headed to the Business School at the University of Wales in Newport. Some notes:

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Comments(11)

    Comment by Juha at 9:05 am on 24 May 2007

    I think the “being part of the global economy” issue is particularly pertinent. We’re far away from everyone and everywhere, but maybe some of that isolation is self-inflicted?




    Comment by Paul Spence at 10:12 am on 24 May 2007

    I’m deriving much vicarious enjoyment from Rod’s travelogue. Do I detect a subtle but significant mindshift? Participating in the global knowledge economy, rather than being an “exporter”? I like it.

    Back home, Fonterra have reminded us just how invested in the commodity “exporter” mindset we still are. They announced a huge increase in projected payout to dairy farmers off the back of higher global demand for dairy products and the fact that Australia has no water (or milk) left. Predictably, the news media are abuzz with negativity around the implications for inflation, interest rates and the cyclical shift out of sheep growing. But the dairy farmers are smiling and talking about repaying debt and buying tractors.

    I hope we don’t become too complacent about our success however. We still need a depth of diversity in the economy and we still need to remain committed to growing the research, technology and added value component.




    Comment by Simon Young at 12:42 pm on 24 May 2007

    Hi Rod, long(ish) time reader, first time commentor. Love your work - and appreciate these tips from on the ground in Exportville :)

    “Participating in the global economy” vs “exporting” is a very interesting distinction, and it really works with technology products, because it’s easy to almost accidentally export when you’re working over the internet.

    I appreciate not just the facts you’ve posted, but also your first hand observations. Nothing beats being there, but reading someone who is there is pretty good.

    One last thing - forgive my ignorance, but what’s the difference between 4 weeks and 28 days?




    Comment by Ross Smith at 1:00 pm on 24 May 2007

    Rod - love your posts and your enthusiasm.

    I must take issue with the following: “English is the predominant business language and you can operate in the region with just English, though it is always good to be able to communicate in the language of the people you are doing business with.”

    I’ve taken (great) Aussie software to Europe for four years and have learnt (painfully at times) that Europe is not a common market - to sell anything it needs to be able to be used locally and sold locally. To compete in Germany (or France, Spain, Poland etc) against a German product, your product must speak German, as must the sales guy.

    Non-native English speakers on the Continent view it as arrogance when someone flies in from the UK for a sales call, forces them to rely on their High School English, leaves them sales material and a proposal in English and flies out again.

    So the question is: am I happy to set up in the UK to address the UK market only? If yes build the business case based on servicing that market. If Continental Europe is to be included then some hard yards need to be done to find, recruit and continually energise individual sales channels for the additional countries you want to cover. Not impossible but very expensive and tough on the liver!

    BTW it’s not just the language, there are cultural minefields everywhere if you don’t do your homework.

    Good luck and have fun!




    Comment by Dean Gerrard at 10:07 pm on 24 May 2007

    Hi Rod

    Can you explain a little bit more on the GBP61000 VAT fee you mentioned, whats that about? Is it percentaged based, or per company registration etc

    cheers
    Dean




    Comment by Rod at 10:31 pm on 24 May 2007

    Simon: 4 weeks allows for part timers. So if you work for 3 days a week, you get 12 days off.
    Dean: GBP61k is the turnover threshold before you need to be VAT registered




    Comment by Dr. Mike Reddy at 11:14 pm on 24 May 2007

    good meeting you yesterday, Rod. What I took away from the presentations by the NBS yesterday was the fact that ‘us’ the presenters got as much, if not more, from the process as ‘you’ the audience. That’s the way that I and colleagues here like to do things: students and teachers are artificial constructs and we all have something to learn from each other. Takes guts to do that, but I have never been disappointed. Hope the rest of your trip in Wales is as fruitful for you as yesterday was for me.

    Mike Reddy, Newport Business School




    Comment by James Sugrue at 9:08 am on 25 May 2007

    Nice post, but I think you were a little mislead about the VAT process. I applied 6 weeks ago and am still waiting!

    Dont forget the Red on the Union jack is tape!




    Comment by R Singers at 10:40 am on 25 May 2007

    I forget the name of your friend who gave you the advice about using apostrophes, but I’m very sure she’d also take you to task about your use of the word “around”. You mean *about*. If you talk around something you don’t mention it, which would be counter productive in a seminar.

    I highly recommend contacting these guys http://www.write.co.nz/ when you get back to Wellington and organising some plain English courses for you and your troops.

    Having been through three RFPs on the customer side in the last year I can tell you how much you appreciate coming across vendors who can write plainly and clearly. It goes a long way to wanting to actually work with them.




    Comment by Dermott at 11:21 am on 25 May 2007

    Hey guys, I think the whole apostrophe thing is getting out of hand, this is a blog, its quick and dirty, plus he is doing this from Wales while travelling.

    Rod is not responding to an RFP or selling something, it is feedback and comments from the frontline.




    Comment by David Horner at 2:52 am on 26 May 2007

    Hi Rod, good to hear you had a great trip and congratulations on the Technium win. Let me know if UK Trade Investment can help you from here in New Zealand or the UK - or if other readers want to find out more about UKTI assistance into Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland or the 9 English Regions, north / south / east / west - and then outbound from the UK and into those global opportunities. Cheers David (Inward Investment Manager, UKTI).