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InterTradeIreland launches Bitesize Brexit
 

As the image above says 'It's time to address Brexit'!  As a no deal Brexit looks increasingly likely, we have expanded our Brexit offerings to include Bitesize Brexit, a new online space that is a one-stop shop for cross-border traders.  

The information is easy to digest and includes specific actions that businesses can take now, to prepare for Brexit.  This includes practical advice on getting your orders and transit brexit ready.   So don't hang about!


 
 
 
LATEST NEWS
 
Number of businesses unprepared for no-deal Brexit “a worry”
 
InterTradeIreland's latest Business Monitor results (Q2 2019) show that while Brexit is looming large in the background for businesses, most firms are opting to pay no attention to its potential impact.The startling figures from InterTradeIreland’s fresh survey reveal just six per cent of cross-border traders are prepared for cash flow and liquidity issues in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

InterTradeIreland's Business Monitor Q2 2019

 


 
 
Getting your business brexit ready - practical steps
 
 

As part of the Irish Government’s ongoing activity to help businesses and consumers to prepare for Brexit, a new campaign has been launched highlighting the practical steps all businesses – large and small – should take NOW to prepare for the UK’s departure from the EU.  Central to the campaign is  a user friendly digital guide Getting Your Business Brexit Ready - Practical Steps,which provides a comprehensive overview for businesses on the nine core steps they should take.


 
 
Opportunity for SMEs to win business with local government
 
 

InterTradeIreland and the Local Government Management Agency (LGMA) are hosting a Supplier Engagement event focusing on local government procurement opportunities in eight councils in greater Dublin and surrounding areas.

 

This FREE event will take place on Tuesday 1st  October 2019 in CityWest Hotel, Dublin. 

 

This is a chance for SMEs to meet face to face with key buyers and decision makers from the eight councils to find out about procurement processes and tender opportunities coming up.  Key procurement categories being represented on the day include Housing, Transportation, Green Energy, Finance and ICT.


 
 
 
INTERESTING ARTICLES
 
Innovative alliance raises over £65m to address key global issues
 
 
Signing of the updated Memorandum of Understanding between the NSF, SFI and DfE
Signing of the updated Memorandum of Understanding between the NSF, SFI and DfE

Tackling head-on some of the universal challenges of our time, requires cutting-edge thinking and funding from around the world. That’s exactly why the US-Ireland R&D partnership is so important. Set up in 2006, the partnership is an alliance between Ireland, Northern Ireland and the USA in which academics from the three countries join together to bid for funds. 

To date, this innovative alliance has funded over 50 projects and raised over £65 million to address key issues including agriculture, sustainability and health.The latest phase of the US-Ireland R&D Partnership aims to tackle global challenges facing the agri-food sector. If you would like to participate please visit https://intertradeireland.com/innovation/us-ireland-rd-partnership/

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
Small companies adapt faster
Article taken from R&D today
 
 
Professor Wim Vanhaverbeke
Professor Wim Vanhaverbeke

In this month's blog, world renowned innovation expert, Professor Wim Vanhaverbeke examines how small companies are embracing the global trend towards Open Innovation and collaborating with external partners to create breakthrough products and services and finds relationships based on trust lie at the heart of innovation success.

 

We are delighted that Professor Vanhaverbeke will be hosting our next Innovation event entitled 'Harnessing the power of open innovation' in Cork on 17th Sept. You'll find out, how to find the right innovation partner to drive performance in your business. Find out more and register for event


Of course, SMEs have long collaborated with customers to develop new products.  So what's different now?  Open innovation pioneers are pooling the knowledge of multiple players in networks that continually experiment to drive innovation.  The creativity and value-creation is in the network.  That's completely new.  Until now the firm might have been seen as the centre of the R&D, but nowadays the network is key.

Large companies may have the resources to do everything in-house, but they too are embracing open innovation because it accelerates the development of new ideas and innovative solutions. Multinationals such as Cisco, GE and Microsoft, for example, are each investing millions of euros to crowd-source cutting-edge ideas from entrepreneurs, inventors and SMEs. The good news for small companies is that by the virtual of being small, they have the opportunity to be much more adaptable than large companies.

 

Experimentation is key to innovation and networks help small companies with limited resources drive the discovery process on a larger scale. Vanhaverbeke’s book observes that by tapping open innovation networks, SMEs can change business models without having the required technology in-house.Networks enable ‘on-going experimentation’

 

Networks enable 'ongoing experimentation'

 

Open innovation networks can help SMEs become highly profitable, but they only work as long as the value as created jointly is significantly larger than that produced by the partners on their own. The network’s real value is the on-going process of experimentation, which produces new and unexpected opportunities. What’s new is to co-create value and manage the ecosystem so it keeps on working. A company’s success depends on both a nurturing of the network and its constant development.

 

Personal ties and trust are critical for open innovation partnerships among SMEs, and the entrepreneur launching the network typically leads the process. The advantage? It boils down to the fact that they can activate a network faster than anyone in industry because they know personally what each partner can do, based on what they have been doing for ten years. The result is innovation at a rate three times faster than in industry. The reason: Relationships are based on trust, not thick contracts.

 

And, Vanhaverbeke says, to ensure the strength and survival of an innovation network in the long run, the value created should be divided equitably. That means sitting together with open books. If one partner sees profit margin evaporate, the others have to find a solution. Otherwise, the network will be weakened.

 

Step 1: Innovation from the outside in

 

This kind of collective collaboration is not a natural reflex for many family-owned European SMEs, who are used to management control. Small companies don’t like bringing others into decision-making. To achieve the kind of success demonstrated by Curana, that has to change.Large companies’ quicker embrace of new collaborative innovation models may help trigger new thinking among smaller companies, particularly in Europe. As multinationals seek to accelerate their innovation pipelines, the opportunities for SMEs to partner in open innovation platforms is mushrooming. The pharmaceutical industry, once a bastion of secrecy, is moving toward a new and transparent model of collaboration. Upstream early-stage research is bursting open as companies like Lilly and GSK unlock their libraries of compounds to outside researchers. It’s an outside-in approach. It’s not well studied and much less practiced – but there is a lot of potential value for this reason.

 

Because trust is so important, the first step for a small company seeking to forge an open innovation partnership is to think about its best customers – the ones it has worked with the longest and trusts the most, the ones with whom the company has proven itself, the clients who rely on the company. In discussing existing projects with these clients, savvy entrepreneurs can offer to help solve medium-term innovation challenges, creating a new dimension to the partnership.

 

Step 2: Go local

 

The second step is to develop a relationship with a local research institute or technical university which can help deliver the required expertise to bring new ideas to market. Small companies should seek local partners. Face-to-face contact with a partner you can trust is absolutely necessary, which means that proximity is essential. A local research university with a good track record of partnering with companies can help SMEs adapt new products, change business models and bring in new technologies. The “go-local” principle also applies to company partners.Of course, partnering with multinationals can be risky for SMEs who have intellectual property to protect. Tell the truth – you have something to contribute – but not the whole truth. Create demand openly for things you privately do very well.

 

Business model innovation is key

 

What kinds of SMEs are best suited to open innovation? Those with an engineering base, technological expertise, and their own established niche are ideal because customers and universities respect their capability – and will be more willing to share information they wouldn’t share with others. But innovation doesn’t have to be radical. SMEs can turbo charge sales and profits by importing ideas already used in another industry or through business model innovation. For example, in the solar energy sector, First Solar boosted sales among consumers by offering them an innovative financing package that required no cash payment to install a solar panel system on their roof. Instead, buyers leased the solar panels in combination with a 15-year contract to purchase the electricity generated by the panels. SMEs can echo that kind of business model experiment too.Europe has no shortage of hidden champions. But managers need to take the first step. It all has to start from the management side, both with individual entrepreneurs and existing businesses. Business model innovation is so important because most small firms are not working in high-tech industries.

 

Case Studies

 

Read relevant case studies @ www.exnovate.org

 

 

 
 
 
AND FINALLY...
 
Salary negotiation: nine tips you need to know
by Taken from Irish Independent article
 
 

Many people feel uncomfortable negotiating their salary. .So, how do you start the conversation? Simply follow the tips below.


 
 
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Upcoming Events
 
Local Government Supplier Engagement Event, 1st October, CityWest Hotel
 
 
 
Brexit Drop-In Event, 19th Sept, Newry Town Hall
 
 
 
Harnessing the Power of Open Innovation, 17th Sept, University College Cork
 
 
 
Brexit Drop-In Event, 1st October, Cookstown
 
 
 
Centre for Cross Border Studies 20th Anniversary Conference, 20th Sept, Dundalk