Dear Lord Young…
Congratulations on your appointment as the new enterprise csar. I am sure that the unpaid and part time role will keep you engaged.
I am pleased that you will look at how to ‘encourage people to start businesses rather than find jobs as employees’. It makes a refreshing change from the usual line of the ‘private sector creating jobs’. As we know big businesses have, on the whole, been laying people off over recent decades rather than taking them on. And just how long can we keep going with the mentality of ‘gizza job’ and ‘on yer bike/bus’ in a 21st century globalised and localised economy?
Can I suggest you take an early look at the semantics of ‘encouraging people to start businesses‘ and the very practical consequences that are likely to flow from it. When a figure in authority, never mind Government, sets out to ‘encourage us’ to do something, some of us come over all suspicious. Are you really interested in our well-being, or is there a more self centred game being played? There is a good chance that in the very act of ‘encouraging us’ you serve to engender resistance to the very idea you wish us to entertain. Psychologists call this reactance.
I have not read in detail the guidance on the Regional Growth Fund. But I understand, from correspondence with someone that has, that it specifically says that self-employment is not something it should be used to promote. Instead it should be used to encourage jobs created by employers. There seems to be somewhat of a contradiction here.
But back to the point of encouraging people to start businesses. I believe that what you really want to achieve is a society where more people do start businesses that survive and thrive. This should be the real policy goal.
So how to get there?
I would advocate that you should dissuade as many people as possible from starting new businesses. Only for those people who insist that this is something that they have to do should we roll up our sleeves and help. By working in a focussed way with a relatively small number of highly committed people we might have a chance of getting some real success stories. And as we know, success breeds success. More positive role models out there leads to more people following in their wake. This contrasts with the current approach of offering a little support and encouragement to a lot of people, resulting in high business failure and loan default rates and a widespread perception that a journey into enterprise is likely to leave you worse off than when you started.
Can I also suggest that you do not wave money at people, New Enterprise Allowance style, in a bid to encourage them to start a business? The reality is that we have armies of advisers out there wading through thousands of appointments with people who are often half-hearted in their aspiration to start a business, but whole hearted in their commitment to securing the money that they see themselves as entitled to. Instead of offering them a carefully calculated economic incentive (calculated to make things cheaper for the treasury I suspect rather than enabling people to start businesses with a decent level of working capital), offer them nothing, except excellent and committed advice, coaching and support that they need to put together an idea that is worth investing in. I suspect that almost overnight the numbers of individuals engaged in ‘enterprise development’ would fall dramatically, but those that remained engaged would be there for the right reasons – to develop long term and sustainable strategies for self employment or entrepreneurship – and not just to secure a grant or a loan that they can default on with relative impunity. NB don’t expect many of the enterprise support agencies to support this idea. They have developed business models that survive on a mass market for enterprise development.
Of course access to finance matters. But let others be the gatekeepers to it, not those who are supposed to be coaching clients to develop their enterprising ideas.
Then of course we have the challenge of helping the hundreds of thousands of people who will be faced with redundancy over the next few years. Can I suggest that we put in place a service that does not ‘encourage them to start a business’, but that does encourage them to fully explore and understand all of their options? I am sure that many of them have the potential to become successful, if initially reluctant entrepreneurs, if only we can provide them with the right kind of support.
And finally, don’t get all hung up with ‘national voluntary mentoring schemes’ and traditional business support organisations. Instead get interested in what you can do to encourage communities to provide the support that local people need in pursuing their enterprising ideas (these may be much wider than self employment and business start ups). Some of the more imaginative enterprise coaching schemes have started to develop community panels to provide practical assistance to local people. This is an approach that can certainly be developed further.
There is tons of potential out there – and at the moment we are wasting much of it.
After Business Link…Time for a change of tack?
So it was confirmed in the White Paper yesterday that Business Links will be gone by the end 2012. All that will remain is a website, and perhaps a call centre.
So what will replace £154m per year of business information, advice and guidance?
Time for DIY support I think.
Time for businesses and the wider communities of which they are a part to help themselves on their own terms.
I am not talking about ‘local’ Chambers of Commerce or Enterprise Agencies winning contracts from the State to deliver outputs and targets in return for tax payers cash. That will just recreate the problems of the old regime:
- post code lotteries,
- sectoral discrimination,
- services designed to trigger funding payments and hit targets, rather than work in person centred ways to deliver just in time support to the people who are hungriest for it,
- groupies who learn to lunch with the bureaucrats and help them to deliver the targets while some people who are the most hungry for support are denied it because they are not aiming to turnover £2m within 24 months, live in the wrong part of town, aren’t working in a priority sector and so on.
DIY culture can provide support that is:
- more accessible,
- more inclusive,
- much less expensive and I suspect,
- much, much more impactful in terms of creating economic, social and political progress than the current system.
Why, because it is convivial, inclusive, centred on people and relationships, not focussed on policy goals and targets, bureaucracy light, puts experts and expertise in the back seat rather than the driving seat (it is great to have them on board when we need them – but much of this stuff we can figure out for ourselves), dynamic and above all fun!
And I would ensure that everyone who wants it, who really wants to work on making progress, should have access to free, confidential and competent coaching, in the community, from a coach who is supported, and held accountable by local people. This is both practical, sustainable and affordable with the potential for a tremendous return on investment in terms of business, culture, health and well-being, community development, skills development and so forth.
The radical secret to this is that the coach engages with and works on the clients agenda – not the agendas of the planners and policy makers.
Time to take ‘enterprise development’ out of the ghettos of ‘entrepreneurship’ and ‘business support’ and to put it at the heart of our strategies for community development.
Because if we develop the people and the communities then they will build the economy.
I wonder if any of the new Local Enterprise Partnerships will have the courage, foresight and leadership to give it a go?
New Enterprise Allowance or New Enterprise Alliance?
Another government, another push for another 10 000 small businesses to be created from the ranks of the long term unemployed.
To me it seems similar to what we already have under the Flexible New Deal, unless I am missing something: it may be a tad better resourced. But, I am encouraged that Iain Duncan Smith appears to have a real commitment to social justice, at least, he chairs the cabinet committee on it. Let’s hope that his commitment to social justice rather than newspaper headlines really shapes this New Enterprise Allowance.
So what are the chances of success for the New Enterprise Allowance, and what might be the pitfalls?
To begin with, although I am a big fan of mentoring, I am not convinced that it is the best way to support people with transitions from unemployment to self employment. The best mentors (as opposed to coaches) have ‘been there, done that, seen the film and got the t-shirt’. They can offer sage advice and guidance based on practical experience (usually gained over many years in a specific and relevant industry, and importantly should be chosen by the mentee and not assigned to them by a service provider); Mentors should know what it takes and be available to put in the time and commitment necessary. Let’s also hope that they are properly trained, supported and supervised in the process of mentoring. And mentoring should not be a mandatory component but an option, we have to recognise that folks learn in different ways and for some the thought of being mentored just does not cut it.
So, if we must have a mentoring programme let us run it well. Lets take mentoring seriously. Let’s make sure that we have enough well trained mentors. Personally I doubt that we will. More likely we will find an army of middle managers looking to do some CSR, or rebadge existing enterprise advisers as New Enterprise Allowance Mentors. Plus ça change…probably
I think the enterprise coaching role is, in places where it has not been confused with enterprise evangelism, much more likely to be effective. Non directive, facilitated conversations that give people space to develop their options and make their own choices provides a sustainable route to more enterprising communities. Conversations that don’t use ‘benefits’ and ‘enterprise’ as carrots and sticks to manipulate people to meet government targets and trigger payments by ‘results’. Our industry is riddled with such practice. We need conversations that respect people and their right to choose.
I suspect that mentors will work with mentees primarily on ‘the business plan’. I doubt they will have the coaching skills to really work on developing the person rather than their idea.
Will a decision not to start up be valued and rewarded as highly as a decision to start? I hope so.
Will the New Enterprise Allowance engage ‘the community’ in supporting local people struggling to make the transition to self employment? No sign of community panels and networks to support the formal delivery structures. It is not so much a New Enterprise Allowance that we need in our communities as a New Enterprise Alliance….
Will the scheme be designed to encourage the formation of team based start-ups where complimentary skill sets and personalities ensure that all functions in the business are adequately covered? I doubt it. It will, if history is our guide, take the shortest, lowest cost, route from benefits to self-employment, not the route that is most likely to result in a sustainable business with the potential to grow. While we should be looking to maximise return on investment I suspect we will look to minimise investment. Cost per start-up will be the metric of choice. And the sooner we get the better.
The New Enterprise Allowance will be for long term unemployed who ‘want’ to start a business. Finding the people who really WANT to will be an enormous challenge. Personally I don’t think it is anywhere near enough for someone to want to start a business. It needs to be something that they HAVE to if they are to have a decent chance of success.
We have approaching 800 000 people who have been unemployed for more than 6 months. The New Enterprise Allowance hopes to help 10 000 of them to start a business this year, that is just over 4 in every 500.
- But which 4?
- What percentage of the 800 000 will wish to engage with the programme?
- How many will the delivery mechanism engage with at the start of the process?
- How many of those will make it through to trading?
- What positive outcomes will be delivered to those that engage with the programme but decide not to start a business?
This represents a challenge. To help find the few who really will do the groundwork required and learn what needs to be learned. It is a challenge both for marketing the scheme and effective psychological contracting between service provider and service user..
And the whole scheme reeks of yet more ‘fast enterprise’. A couple of mentoring sessions and three half days with a training company and you will be ready to roll. Well maybe. And maybe not. Where these sorts of schemes prevail they prioritise the most capable and even then have frightening business failure and loan default rates. Good business start ups plan and prepare carefully. They don’t rush it. There is little point in starting 10 000 new businesses in a year if the survival rates are not good. And please this time will someone show an interest in survival rates?
Then there is the cash element. In the transcript of his speech on Conservative Home, IDS is reported as saying:
We will provide business mentoring and a financial package worth up to £2000 to get your business up and running.
Now quite what is meant by ‘a financial package worth up to £2000’ remains to be seen. Cash grant? Loan? Benefits? But clearly in this transcript it is £2000 in addition to the mentoring provided.
But can anyone explain to me the why the magical figure of £2000? How about we teach them to access the finance that they need to give their business a well capitalised start? Whether that is £5 or £5m? If we are serious about teaching people how to run a small business let’s not cap ambition according to the size of our currently cash strapped treasury pockets.
So at first glance it looks to me like wrong pedagogy, wrong curriculum, wrong ‘financial’ package, wrong pace of change and a failure to embed enterprise culture in the community. Apart from that all systems are go. I can already hear the usual suspects sharpening their pencils in anticipation of the invitations to tender.
I hope it is me that is wrong….
What do you think?
How to Destroy an Enterprise Culture
This is the title of a workshop I am submitting to the International Conference on Enterprise Promotion, taking place in Harrogate next month. Don’t know yet if it will be accepted as it bends the ‘submission guidelines’ a little.
Workshop Aims
- To illustrate how and why most contemporary interventions designed to promote enterprise usually have precisely the opposite effect;
- To demonstrate how narrow conceptions of enterprise serve to undermine the value of enterprise development for both funders and citizens and sells our profession short;
- To outline ‘in which direction progress lies’ if we really want to develop more enterprising behaviours in the community;
- We (policy makers, professionals and community leaders) need to re-conceive what we mean by ‘enterprise’ and ‘enterprise development’ and understand more fully its relationship to ‘entrepreneurship’, ‘business development’ and ‘community’.
- We need to adopt much more ambivalent approaches to ‘entrepreneurship’, of all kinds, if we really wish to engage ‘community’.
- We need to take seriously the principles of person centred development in our work to teach people how to live a ‘becoming existence’ and pay serious attention to a credo that says above all ‘Do No Harm’.
Sounds interesting? See you in Harrogate. Or get in touch.
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