It鈥檚 a glorious spring afternoon outside the Norwegian Church Arts Centre on Cardiff Bay, which reopened earlier this month.

The now iconic landmark is also a social enterprise, an appropriate location to meet Derek Walker, chief executive of the newly renamed Cwmpas (formerly the Wales Co-operative Centre).

The non-profit development agency for co-operatives, social enterprises and employee-owned businesses has undergone a major rebrand and will now be known as Cwmpas.

鈥淲hen we started 40 years ago, we were just focused on co-operatives but we鈥檝e broadened what we do and offer,鈥 said Derek, explaining the rationale behind the name change.

鈥淧eople found our name to be misleading and didn鈥檛 understand the breadth of what we did. It was getting in the way of what we wanted to achieve as an organisation,鈥 he added.

After consulting with clients, staff and members, they decided on Cwmpas which Derek said could be easily identified by both Welsh and English speakers as the organisation looks to grow and expand across the border.

The move has been made easier by some members in the organisation鈥檚 100-plus staff who relocated to England but continued to work remotely during the pandemic.

鈥淲e have been contacted by other regions in England who tell us they鈥檇 like a co-operative centre. We鈥檝e obviously got something that others would like, so there could be opportunities to do more work in England and Scotland,鈥 said Derek.

Cwmpas has also refocused its strategy to include a stronger mission statement of "creating a fairer, greener society鈥 by growing the number of social enterprising businesses which have a triple bottom line.

The rebrand also hopes to emphasise how the organisation has expanded and diversified the work that it does.

This year, its Digital Communities Wales project was extended until 2025 with 拢6m in funding secured from the Welsh Government to support the digitally excluded areas in Wales.

Refocusing funding

It鈥檚 not just the company鈥檚 name and ethos, where Cwmpas receives its funding will also change as the Shared Prosperity Fund (SPF) replaces funding from the EU.

Currently, the organisation gets its funding from Welsh Government, the European Regional Development Fund, the National Lottery Community Fund and the Nationwide Foundation.

It has also grown its commercial services with small fee-paying consultancy work with private businesses, public bodies and other organisations.

However, money from the European Regional Development Fund, which funds the Social Business Wales programme, is due to end in June 2023.

They are now in ongoing discussions with the Welsh Government about future funding after ERDF ends.

The 海角视频 Government unveiled its Shared Prosperity Fund earlier this month, announcing that communities in Wales will get 拢585m of funding over the next three years despite criticism that it fails to match EU funds of 拢375m a year.

When asked about making up this shortfall in funding, Derek said he hopes they can secure funding from the Welsh Government for Social Business Wales and then bid for further funding under the prosperity fund.

As the Shared Prosperity Fund cuts out the elected Government of Wales, going straight to local regions, Derek said this will make it harder to put together a Wales-wide consistent service.

鈥淧reviously, you went to one place and you bid for funding and if you were successful then you鈥檙e able to deliver it. Now we鈥檙e going to have to speak to lots of different players in order to pull something together,鈥 said Derek, adding that he is hopeful that the interventions listed by Westminster in the fund align with what the organisation is trying to achieve.

鈥淭he contents of the prospectus does really speak to supporting social enterprises and co-operatives, so it looks like that will be a source of funding to support the sector. But how it鈥檚 going to work practically, it鈥檚 too early to say,鈥 he said.

Cwmpas renaming publicity at Antur Stiniog, Blanua Ffestiniog
North Wales social enterprise, Antur Stiniog.

The rise of social enterprise

The social enterprise sector in Wales has grown to over 2,300 businesses, employing up to 56,000 people and generating 拢3.1-3.8 billion in value, according to the latest figures by Cwmpas.

Many of these businesses are social enterprise start-ups that were set up during the pandemic and have since gone to Cwmpas for support.

鈥淭hese are people looking to change careers or have become more community-minded as a result of seeing what鈥檚 important during the pandemic,鈥 said Derek. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great sign that people are attracted to a fairer business model.鈥

But the workplace environment has changed as a result of the pandemic and Derek believes this change is for good.

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He said: 鈥淧eople want flexible working to be able to manage their work life and family life, but there鈥檚 got to be a reason for them to go to the office. Whether to speak to colleagues or perhaps speak to people working in other organisations that they wouldn鈥檛 speak to if they were working from home.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about creating a new type of space that will work for people.鈥

Derek sees collaborative offices as the future of work, citing Spark, a new collaborative workspace in Cardiff University which opened last month.

鈥淭he big benefit is working alongside other organisations with an opportunity to collaborate and partner with them, which you wouldn鈥檛 have in a self-contained office.鈥

鈥淐ollaborative spaces can be the future of work, but you鈥檝e got to make it an attractive place for people to want to work in. If staff work perfectly well at home, you鈥檝e got to provide something else that they can鈥檛 get from home as an incentive.鈥

Community banking

Aside from being the chief executive officer for Cwmpas, Derek is also a board member of Banc Cambria, the community retail bank.

It is supported by the Welsh Government and in partnership with Monmouthshire Building Society.

The aim is to launch Banc Cambria in 2023 and open 30 branches across Wales offering a bilingual service, but regulatory approval and 拢20m in banking reserves are still required before it can launch.

But is a community bank needed in a growing cashless society where most banking services are offered online?

鈥淚t is absolutely needed,鈥 said Derek. 鈥淚nitial market research has shown that there is a demand for this. We hear all the time about small businesses in Wales needing to cash up at the end of the day and not being able to get to a bank because it had closed.鈥

He added: 鈥淚t will provide banking services in communities that don鈥檛 currently have them. People will be able to bank with a bank which has its headquarters in Wales. The profits from that bank will stay in Wales and stay with a member-based business.

鈥淚ts values align with what we want to achieve, that鈥檚 why we鈥檝e been backing it and making it happen. I think it鈥檚 going to be really important for the economy and support small businesses to have banking services that they need in their local communities.

鈥淭his community banking model is being looked at in other parts of the 海角视频. Hopefully, we鈥檒l see them spring up in other regions, but it may be that Banc Cambria in Wales might be the first, we鈥檒l see.鈥