Eastern Eye (UK)

How Mastercard’s Strive UK can support minority ethnic small business owners

NEW PROGRAMME WILL OFFER BUSINESS OWNERS HELP WITH DIGITAL TOOLS

-

RESTRICTIO­NS around the pandemic last year hit many businesses and Nirali Buch Mankodi was no exception.

Nirali is the co-founder of Superfoodi­o, a company that makes natural and plant-based snacks. When the pandemic hit, she quickly had to look for alternativ­e ways to reach their customers.

As brick and mortar shops which stocked their delicious treats were closed, Nirali decided to turn her attention to their online operations.

“When Covid-19 hit the UK, we were severely impacted, and saw a decline of up to 80 per cent in sales revenue due to our central London stockists being shut and people not travelling into London for work,” she said.

“We had to assess how our business would survive and so turned our focus to online and started working on building our online platforms and digital channels to reach customers directly.

“We also used the time to rebrand to more attractive packaging and accelerate areas of the business such as new product developmen­t.”

Adversity can provide opportunit­ies for enterprisi­ng businesses, and Nirali’s story illustrate­s how being quick to adapt can help a company stay afloat. According to Nirali, “As a small business, being able to operate remotely during the last 18 months has been essential for us. The technology we rely on the most is high speed and reliable internet, which allows us to stay connected with our customers, our team and everyone in our supply chain. Our main method of communicat­ion has been video conferenci­ng.”

Nirali’s Superfoodi­o is the sort of enterprise that Mastercard’s Strive UK programme seeks to support. Aimed at Britain’s micro and small enterprise­s, the programme supports business owners to access and use digital tools and technology essential for growth.

Launched in September, Strive UK will support 650,000 small businesses over the next three years by providing guidance free of charge, offering helpful tools as well as one-to-one mentoring. It is partnering with Enterprise Nation, Digital Boost and Be the Business to help realise this goal.

A particular focus for Strive UK’s programme is businesses run by females and those from a minority ethnic background.

Mastercard president for UK and Ireland, Kelly Devine, said, “Small businesses are the beating heart of the British economy.

“The past 18 months have proved almost unendurabl­y tough for many. Strive UK has been set up to act as a free resource for small business owners across the country, helping them to navigate the digital economy, build relationsh­ips and communitie­s, and ultimately realise their growth ambitions.”

A survey by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) showed that the UK’s small and micro businesses could potentiall­y miss out on an estimated £827 billion growth opportunit­y over the next five years if they are not supported to digitise. It found that 41 per cent of small business owners said their company would not have survived without digital tools.

Digital Boost, which has partnered with Strive UK, provides small businesses the opportunit­y to have unlimited one-to-one conversati­ons with digital and business experts free of charge. Guidance is available on a wide range of topics, when the business needs it, no matter where they are on their journey.

Managing director director Karen Licurse said, “Micro and small businesses have told us the support they value most is highly personalis­ed and in the moment. They want specific, tangible things they can do differentl­y right now, not just generic advice. That’s why we created Digital Boost.” Nirali said, “Technology has advanced so much that there’s always something new to learn and tools to utilise, which make life running a business easier. As a start-up, we have a growth mindset and therefore are easily able to adapt to new solutions that become part of our business and we can’t live without.” Strive UK will support small businesses in a number of ways, including an online ‘One Stop Shop’ for entreprene­urs with advice on all areas of growing their business, one-to-one mentoring for businesses to identify the right digital tools for them, and a forum to speak to similar businesses who have already successful­ly managed to integrate new tools.

Founder of Enterprise Nation, Emma Jones CBE, explained how Strive UK can help small businesses. “Millions of people are currently starting or growing a business in the UK, and they know that access to support will help their business ambitions. But founders can be put off from getting help due to the volume of support programmes in the market and not knowing the part of the business that needs help. “The solution we are building as part of Strive UK will address this by taking the business owner through a basic diagnostic and then connecting them, in one simple journey, to all the support programmes and resource on offer. In short, it will make the business support market much more efficient.”

In Nirali’s experience, “It can be difficult to find the right source of finance, especially as a start-up. Finance and cash flow to support growth for the business is a balancing act. You also want it to fit your needs and requiremen­ts as there is no one size fits all.”

She adds, “Accessing finance also requires a lot of input which can also take your focus away from working on and building your business.”

According to Be the Business CEO Anthony Impey MBE, “Strive UK will help unlock the tremendous potential and entreprene­urial drive of ethnic minority owned businesses, and that will be transforma­tional – both for the businesses and for their communitie­s.”

Mastercard also recently published a whitepaper with recommenda­tions for the UK government to break down the barriers that micro and small businesses face. It identified four key areas of opportunit­y – empowering businesses to take advantage of digital technology, simplifyin­g the support ecosystem, encouragin­g peer-to-peer mentoring and networking and targeting resources at underserve­d segments of the small business community.

Nirali, whose four-year-old business has a fivestrong team, said, “We are going through a rapid growth period and are eager to reach our full potential. This requires working with the right partners and also working capital to support large orders in our industry.”

It is small businesses such as these that are the lifeblood of the British economy and local communitie­s. Collective­ly they are the UK’s biggest employer. Strive UK seeks to help such micro and small businesses, as the UK looks to build a more inclusive economy while recovering from the pandemic.

By leveraging Mastercard’s global network and local partnershi­ps to support small businesses that have the highest propensity for growth, Strive UK hopes to deliver impact at scale and help ensure the UK economic recovery is as sustainabl­e as it is inclusive.

Mastercard is investing $250 million over the next five-years to support micro and small businesses globally.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? TECH IT: Mastercard’s Strive UK plans to support 650,000 small businesses over the next three years; (right) Nirali Buch Mankodi; (inset left and below) Superfoodi­o products
TECH IT: Mastercard’s Strive UK plans to support 650,000 small businesses over the next three years; (right) Nirali Buch Mankodi; (inset left and below) Superfoodi­o products

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom