Nottingham Business School and Nottingham University Business School have teamed up with the Government’s Growth Voucher programme to help businesses access and pay for the advice they need to grow.
The programme has been launched by the Small Business Charter, the awards scheme aimed at driving local economic growth through business school support for entrepreneurs and small businesses.
The initiative provides match funding to small businesses to pay for and access high quality leadership and management advice from a national consortium of top business schools.
Thousands of businesses have already benefited from strategic support via business schools holding the Small Business Charter and through Government Growth Vouchers.
This new roll out of Growth Vouchers, by six leading business schools who hold the Small Business Charter, will allow more entrepreneurs to access world class support to expand their businesses. The Small Business Charter was launched at an event at No10 in June.
Both of Nottingham’s Business Schools are trailblazing members of the Small Business Charter Award scheme. An award received in recognition of the role it has played in helping to kick-start British enterprise.
Nottingham Trent University’s Future Factory project has helped over 500 small and medium sized businesses in the East Midlands to improve their green credentials through access to the University's leading-edge resources.
Since 2001, The Hive, Nottingham Trent University's Centre for Entrepreneurship and Enterprise, has also helped in excess of 350 start-up companies, with almost 70% of those businesses still trading and prospering today. And in 2013, Nottingham Business School also launched its annual Thinkubator Challenge, which saw up to 1,500 students and staff members spend an entire day helping 60 SMEs with their real business challenges.
Nottingham University Business School recently worked with local business Impression Digital as part of its ERDF funded Growth 100 programme run in conjunction with Nottingham City Council. As a result of taking part in Growth 100, Impression have made progress by taking on new employees, improving their finance systems and are now considering implementing a non-executive board. Impression also won some opportunities for new business from networking with the other participants on the programme. 100 Nottingham-based businesses will take part in Growth 100 over two years.
Enterprise Adviser to the Prime Minister, Lord Young, said: “Strategic advice is key to business success and I welcome the arrival of the Business Schools in Nottingham as partners delivering the Growth Vouchers Programme. With their support, more small businesses will be able to access the advice they need to succeed and grow and create more jobs and opportunities.”
Ian McNaught, Executive Director of the Small Business Charter said: “I am thrilled and excited that business schools awarded with the Small Business Charter are now at the frontline of Government’s support network for ambitious small businesses. Growth Vouchers are a great new weapon in our armoury as we work to link the expertise of Britain’s world class business schools like those in Nottingham with the dynamism of our ever growing ranks of entrepreneurs.”
Professor Martin Binks, Dean of Nottingham University Business School said: “We have a longstanding commitment to supporting UK small- and medium-sized businesses and the Growth Voucher initiative is enabling us to expand our reach and support more businesses to realise their growth aspirations.”
Alison Smith, Head of Executive Education and Corporate Relations at Nottingham Business School, said: “The fact that both business schools in Nottingham are members of the first group of six to roll out the Growth Voucher Scheme shows the commitment we have to supporting businesses in the city. Nottingham Business School has been at the forefront of university business engagement for more than three decades, using the wide range of expertise available throughout the university, from science to design, to solve real business problems.”
Small Business Charter business schools have directly helped over 8000 small businesses – working with them through workshops, mentoring and other business support. These schools have been behind 800 business start-ups and have helped 4,700 students to find work placements in Britain’s exciting micro-business and start-up sector. Teaming up with the Government’s Growth Voucher programme is yet another way in which Nottingham’s business schools are helping to support the small business community.
Eligible businesses can apply for a voucher to match fund up to £2,000 towards the cost of strategic advice in the following areas:
- Review of growth opportunity – competitor analysis tools
- Cash flow and general financial management
- Marketing and sales strategies for micro-enterprise
- Process mapping – understanding where I add value in my business
- Raising the finance for growth
- Planning next steps – with a business mento
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Notes to editors: The University of Nottingham has 43,000 students and is ‘the nearest Britain has to a truly global university, with campuses in China and Malaysia modelled on a headquarters that is among the most attractive in Britain’ (Times Good University Guide 2014). It is also the most popular university in the UK among graduate employers, in the top 10 for student experience according to the Times Higher Education and one of the world’s greenest universities.
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