Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately
This website is currently in BETA

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

  • hot
  • hot 100
  • 50 to watch in mobile
  • Entrepreneurs Summit

Editor’s letter: Indians are hungry for SMEs

by Stuart Rock - Thursday, 30th August 2007 -

Rumour has it that Prime Minister Brown will not follow the ritual of his predecessors by making his first overseas trip as PM to Washington.

Rather, he will go to Delhi or Beijing. British entrepreneurs should be thinking along the same lines. (Note that our company of the year, Wolfson Microelectronics – one of the great British success stories of the past 20 years and led by our Entrepreneur of the Year David Milne – opened an office in Bangalore earlier in 2006.)

There are some obvious problems of doing business in India – the miserable infrastructure and problematic labour laws, for starters – but it has the widespread use of the English language, a familiar legal system, and a long-established, private sector, entrepreneurial economy that is being unleashed.

Here are just a couple of opportunities. Look to India if your business has expertise in the handling, packaging, transportation and logistics of perishable products – as the agricultural sector diversifies, it badly needs better integration with the rest of the economy.

Look to India if your business has expertise in water management – with a rapidly increasing population, the country could become “water-stressed” if it doesn’t address this issue now.

Alternatively, look to India if you want to sell your business. Indian companies are either sitting on mountains of cash or have very supportive banks. They want to go shopping – and they like buying British. (They aren’t just being sentimental. It’s much, much easier for an Indian executive to secure a visitor’s visa to the UK than anywhere else in Europe.)

INCAT was another British success story. Jointly headquartered in Bristol and Detroit, listed on AIM, it provided software services to help manufacturing companies improve their product development processes.

At the end of 2005, it was bought by Tata. Yes, that’s the same Tata that six years previously bought Tetley Tea, and which in 2005 acquired one of the UK’s most illustrious names in the chemical industry, Brunner Mond; and that is currently battling it out with the Brazilians for Corus, the Anglo-Dutch company formerly known as British Steel.

If your business is in textiles, automotive components or pharmaceuticals, you may well have received approaches already. But I wouldn’t rule out any sector. In the years to come, India will be the crucible in which many British entrepreneurs will buy or be bought – far more so than China.

Stuart Rock is Editorial Director of Caspian Publishing.

BUSINESS NEWS >>

Grass Roots entrepreneur receives an MBE for social responsibility

By Kate Pritchard - July 03, 2008 5:24pm GMT

David Evans set up Herfordshire-based performance improvement firm Grass Roots in the eighties. Today, he turns over a whopping £247m, employs over 1,000 people and has just become one of only three people in the country to receive an MBE for services to CSR.

Foresight invests in Silvigen

By Real Deals & Real Business - July 03, 2008 3:45pm GMT

Silvigen, a supplier of biomass fuels for use in the power industry, will use £1.75m from Foresight to finance the development of a processing plant in Goole, North Humberside.

Countdown to Human Capital Awards

By Catherine Woods - July 03, 2008 3:38pm GMT

At last year’s CBI/Real Business Human Capital Awards, prison administrator Vicky O’Dea was crowned the ‘people’s champion’.

Farmer focuses on versatile local product

By Catherine Woods - July 03, 2008 3:10pm GMT

Farmer Andy Fussel has turned a low-value crop into a product that appeals to those who want to lower their carbon footprint, the health conscious and even Michelin-star chefs.

Nine ways to grow your business through franchising

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 03, 2008 2:28pm GMT

Brian Duckett, MD of Howarth Franchising, gives his top tips on franchising your business.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Lee McQueen pulls a sickie

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - July 02, 2008 2:55pm GMT

First day on the job and Apprentice winner McQueen has been struck down by a flu-like virus.

Look out Boris! Sir Alan for Mayor?!

By Ally Papasodaro - June 27, 2008 4:10pm GMT

Sir Alan Sugar has been mooted as a possible labour candidate for Mayor of London, and the grizzly entrepreneur is up for the challenge.

The world's first Tibetan consumer brand?

By Matthew Rock - June 26, 2008 4:41pm GMT

Bizarre.

Elnaugh Vs. Paphitis. The Dragons are at war

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 26, 2008 2:45pm GMT

When Theo Paphitis suggested all women’s brains “turn to mush” when they get pregnant, fellow Dragon Rachel Elnaugh, entrepreneur and mother-of-five, breathed fire and brimstone.

I’m so excited. And I just can’t hide it.

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - June 25, 2008 11:09am GMT

Anyone else gearing up to go wild over the new domain name changes? No? Just think of the wit, variety and confusion it will bring to the world wide web.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover