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PRIVACY
Opinion

Wales needs a greater focus on boosting scale-up firms

Other parts of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ provide more support to scale-up firms

Scale-up firms are growing revenues and staff levels by more than 20% a year

For more than 20-years I have been championing the cause of the small number of firms that grow quickly and make a disproportionate impact on prosperity and job-creation in the economy.

After launching the first ever Wales Fast Growth 50 back in 1999, there has slowly been an increased interest in high growth (or scale-up) firms as various research studies continue to confirm their significant contribution to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy.

One of those which continues to highlight the importance of such firms is the annual review by the ScaleUp Institute, which defines high-growth (scale-up) firms as those growing their employment numbers or turnover by more than 20% a year over a period of three years with at least 10 employees at the start of the period.

According to their latest report published last month, there were 33,445 scale-ups in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in 2019, which is an increase of 24% on 2013 as against a growth in GDP of 12% over the same period).

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More importantly, they employed 3.2 million people and generated a total turnover of £1.1 trillion for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy. In other words, whilst scale-up firms make up less than 0.6% of the SME population, they represent 50% of the total SME turnover output.

The study also shows that scale-ups are more productive than other firms with an average turnover of £338,000 per employee, are more innovative with three out of four introducing or improving a product or service in the last three years, and are export-oriented with 60% involved in international trade.

And for those who still think that growth and technology are exclusive to each other and continue to focus on a cluster approach, it is worth noting that the majority of high growth firms, as we have seen for the Wales Fast Growth 50 every year, are in sectors that are not tech-related.

Scale-ups are also diverse (with four in ten having at least one female director), are good corporate citizens with a focus on being either a social or green business and provide higher levels of apprenticeships to support young people into employment.