Albion Ventures’ fourth Albion Growth Report finds that nearly three-quarters (73 per cent) of small businesses with over five employees plan to grow dramatically or moderately over the next two years and only 5 per cent think they will shrink or wind down.
Based on interviews with 1,000 SMEs, the fourth Albion Growth Report sheds light on the factors that create and impede growth in post-Brexit Britain. The report finds that finding skilled staff is the biggest challenge.
With 50 per cent of small businesses with over five employees planning to grow their headcount over the next two years, finding skilled staff tops the list of challenges business owners face, up from third place in 2015.
It is a particular problem for manufacturing, construction, medical and healthcare companies. In sixth place, the decision to leave the EU ranks below perennial challenges such as red tape, regulatory change and the difficulty of accessing new markets. Lack of access to finance – one of the major problems voiced by SMEs during the recession – has fallen to 13th place from fifth last year.
On a sector basis, manufacturing companies are the most bullish about growth and the most relaxed about Brexit while retailers and construction companies are the gloomiest.
Businesses are overall split on the impact of Brexit with a third (36 per cent) thinking it will help them enter new markets and 41 per cent expecting it to be a hindrance. However, the report shows significant differences among SME owners towards Brexit by region, size and age that show similarities to the result of the vote in June.
Among those groups that are most concerned is millennial business owners aged under-35, of whom half (54 per cent) think Brexit will hinder their ability to access new markets. Leaving the EU ranks as the single biggest obstacle to growth among small business owners in Scotland and was in third place among those in London. Those groups that are the least concerned about Brexit include sole traders, 56 per cent of whom said it would have no effect on their growth potential.
Regionally, business owners in the East Midlands were the most optimistic about growth (70 per cent), followed by the East of England (69 per cent) and London (65 per cent). Wales was the most pessimistic region in this year’s report with only 39 per cent foreseeing growth.
Over a quarter of firms would consider investment from venture capital, private equity or business angels, rising to a third among larger firms with more than five employees. On a sector basis, over half (52 per cent) of IT and telecom firms are open to equity finance while construction trails at just 13 per cent.
Patrick Reeve, Managing Partner at Albion Ventures, says: “Against a backdrop of profound change, one element that has remained reassuringly unchanged is the optimism underlying the UK’s small businesses. Firms are looking to grow their headcount and productivity is on the increase. The biggest barrier to growth, finding skilled staff, is generated by success rather than failure.
“The downside is that the economy is coming under capacity constraints at a time of considerable political uncertainty. While many of the pressures on growth we have seen in recent years have eased, the skills that enable us to compete are in short supply.”