1
HOW I MADE IT MAXIMISE TAX RELIEF ON FUND RAISINGS DG writes: We are trying to raise £250,000 of equity finance to fund the development of our technology start-up over the next two years. We would like to use both the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) and the Enterprise Investment Scheme (EIS) but I understand the limit under SEIS is £150,000. How do we co-ordinate the two rounds? Can we do them simultaneously? It is common for businesses in your situation to split their fund raising so that the first £150,000 qualifies for SEIS and the rest, £100,000 in your case, qualifies for EIS relief, writes Chris Lane, partner at Kingston Smith LLP. But the important point to remember is that 70% of the money raised under SEIS has to be spent before the EIS qualifying shares are issued. Therefore, the EIS money, if raised at the same time, has to be held back in “suspense” until the SEIS money has been spent. It is also important that the EIS money is not thought of as a loan to your firm as this will compromise any EIS relief. A good idea would be to hold the EIS money in escrow with your solicitor until required. You will need to decide whether it is worth going through these procedures. This will ultimately depend on the rate at which you expect to spend the SEIS money. If this will be short term, then it will work, but anything longer and it may be best simply to have a second fundraising round in the future. In terms of monitoring your spending, you will need to prove you have spent 70% of the SEIS money and, therefore, will need to keep records. It may be easier if you keep these funds in a separate bank account opened for the purpose. The EIS investors will also need to be informed that the date of the EIS share issue will depend on the company’s planned expenditure rate and the issue may have to be delayed if necessary. WORKER TAKES DIVORCE PROBLEMS INTO OFFICE AJ writes: I have an employee who is going through a divorce and bringing her personal problems into work. This is affecting other staff and they tell me they feel demoralised by her behaviour. How do I deal with her? It is inevitable that work and private life overlap sometimes and normally employees manage to separate them adequately so that one does not affect the other, writes Peter Done, managing director of Peninsula. However, there are times when personal life may start to affect work life, and then you need to take action. Most employers are compassionate and are willing to do what they can to help their staff through a bad time. However, you must remember to focus on fixing the problem at work and not on resolving the employee’s personal problems. Take the employee to one side and inquire about her general wellbeing. It is important to show compassion and understanding. If she is made to feel that you do not care about her wellbeing, this may affect her view of you and the organisation as a whole. Showing you care builds loyalty and commitment and takes little effort and time. Ask the employee if there is anything you can do to offer support — possibly in terms of agreeing some time off or re-assigning some of her heftier tasks if she is not performing at her best. Do not forget, however, the point of the meeting — that you need her to adjust her behaviour to avoid demoralising her colleagues. Striking a balance is important because if she feels you are doing something for her, she is more likely to accept that she needs to give something in return.Being too harsh with her at this sensitive time may not have the desired effect. If things do not improve after your initial chat, speak to her again and reinforce your point. Get her to redirect her frustrations in the right way. If you have an employee assistance programme, remind her she can use it. Having a telephone counselling service available to staff is an excellent way of helping to ensure they have an outlet for any problems in their private or working life. Business doctor R ebecca Mortby needed space. “When we decided we wanted to grow fast, we knew we had to think about desks and environ- ment,” said Mortby, who had won a £1,000 prize to spend on her business, Greenfinch Gradu- ations, which supports overseas students and their families through graduation. “Renting an office was out of the question,” said Mortby, who graduated from Liverpool Uni- versity in international politics and policy two years ago. Since then she and co-founder Julie Truman have worked with the universities in Liverpool to offer help on accommodation, dietary requirements, dress hire and gifts. They plan to expand the business to Manchester and across to Sheffield. “We wanted to work in an office with other entrepreneurs who aren’t operating in the same sector,” said Mortby, 27. “We wanted to learn from them.” Her prayers were answered when Santander announced plans for a new incubator in St Paul’s Square, central Liverpool. The bank rewarded eight young, fast-growing companies with desks on its premises and access to expertise. Mortby’s was one. “They have connections with universities and can help with advice,” she said. “We want to outgrow the incubator by the time our year is up. That’s the point of signing up.” Santander’s office space for start-ups, which opens this week, is part of an upsurge in incubators and accelerators set up to house and nurture cash- strapped entrepreneurs. Big companies, banks, univer- sities and other organisations have continued to open offices to help breed flourishing firms. Companies sign up for set periods and can benefit from investment, free resources, contacts and valu- able lessons from peers who are sharing the space. “A key element of the business incubation process is the commu- nity feeling within the premises,” said Arnaud Drapier, research manager at UK Business Incuba- tion. The trade body estimates that the number of centres open has shot up from 30 to more than 300 since 1998. More than 60% are not sector-specific. “Being with others in the same early stage and learning from them as you grow is excellent,” he said. Most accelerator programmes act as venture capital firms, taking shares in return for funds and support. Some of the better- known ones in Britain and Europe include Seedcamp, Tech- Stars and Wayra. On the other hand, traditional incubators pro- vide start-ups with support as well as a hub to work in. Some may offer entrepreneurs cash in exchange for equity. Many local councils provide busi- ness incubation centres, as do universities and not-for-profit organisations. “We’re trying to be innovative in the way we support small busi- nesses, not just in the traditional banking way,” said Marcelino Castrillo, head of small business banking at Santander. The bank started offering loans to small and medium-sized com- panies in 2009. “We have access to customers they can trade with and provide master classes as part of our Breakthrough program- me,” he said. “It’s more than desk space, which is the thing all start- ups need in the early stages.” However, some worry that while the space and access to markets are valuable, funding will be tough to secure. “We don’t want to be in a Santander building and have to go to Barclays for a loan,” said David Harries, co-owner of one of the eight companies to join the bank’s incubator. “We want them to hold our hands through growth.” Interview People Online, which he started last December with friend David Arthur, replaces real people with so-called avatars that conduct job interviews on the web. “We signed up for the incu- bator to be linked to a mainstream brand,” said Harries. “You can’t buy that recognition. We’re grateful for the office space but it’s secondary.” Although some are sceptical about the rise in the number of incubators and accelerators, it is welcomed by industry experts. “It’s about the quality, location and the people who run them,” said Simon Devonshire, director at Wayra Europe, Telefonica’s answer to a start-up incubator. It has a presence in 12 countries in Europe and Latin America. In its London space, off Tottenham Court Road, 30 companies are given €40,000 (£32,000) in exchange for shares and €20,000 worth of acceleration services. Wayra receives more than 25,000 applications a year. “The biggest contribution to their success and progress is their peers,” said Devonshire. “There are a lot more start-ups than there are accelerators and incu- bators. However, what we don’t want are lots rushing to the mar- ketplace that don’t add much or deliver progress.” A bank’s offices in Liverpool are being cleared to make way for start-ups, writes Kiki Loizou Rebecca Mortby’s Rebecca Mortby’s Greenfinch Graduations Greenfinch Graduations is receiving help from is receiving help from Santander Santander PHIL TRAGEN Dustbin queen cleans up with wheelie great line in recycling WHEN Emma Elston was growing up she didn’t know what an entrepreneur did — but she knew she wanted to be one. “I just liked Sir Richard Branson and the idea of owning an island,” she said. Her venture turned out to be quite down to earth. In 1998 her boyfriend, who became her husband, was earning a living replacing damaged waste bins on the streets of Manchester. “Julian came home from work one day saying it was daft to chuck out the old bins,” said Elston. “We agreed it would make much more sense, and earn us a good living, if he repaired them instead.” In August that year the couple founded UK Container Maintenance, repairing and refurbishing waste and recycling con- tainers for councils and waste disposal companies. Based in Northwich, Cheshire, the business now employs 100 staff and reported sales of £5.1m last year. It expects to report revenues in excess of £5.5m when accounts are filed in December. The company’s clients include Sita UK, Biffa Waste Management and Veolia Envi- ronment Services. Julian and Emma Elston are currently looking to expand the busi- ness on to the Continent. “We take risks but they’re always calcu- lated,” said Elston, who copied out their original business plan from a library book. “When you come into a business with absolutely nothing it becomes very pre- cious and you protect it fiercely.” When her business plan failed to secure a loan with Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), the pair borrowed £30,000 on their Nat- West credit cards (the bank is part of RBS) to set up UK Container Maintenance. Almost half was spent on buying a Transit van at auction, which broke down on its first trip. “We had to have a new engine — yet more money,” she said. The couple lived in his grandmother’s house in Stretford, southwest Manchester. While he was repairing the bins Elston was striking deals from their bedroom. Within a month she had secured their first client, Trafford borough council, helping UK Container Maintenance to turn over £15,000 in its first year. The couple married in 1999, and she became pregnant. “I wasn’t able to take maternity leave so I was still ringing around doing the sales, the accounts, and VAT returns,” she said. “It was hard work and I’d feel guilty, as a mum.” They moved to rented accommodation but, unable to meet payments, were evicted. “Luckily one of our jobs in the early days of business was cutting up old caravans,” said Elston. “One of them was in pretty good nick so we asked mum if we could pitch up in her garden.” They lived in the backyard for 18 months while the business grew before buying their own house in 2001. Working together has been successful. Elston’s husband, 45, is still involved with the engineering and maintenance side of the business. “I couldn’t do what he does and he leaves the finance to me so it works, hand in glove,” she said. “Not everybody can do everything.” In 2003 the Elstons moved their equip- ment to a small shed on a pig farm in Knutsford, keeping the office at their home nearby. Three years later they moved to their present 20,000 sq ft site. Elston said: “We stood in the yard thinking, ‘Are we ever going to be able to fill this space?’ Now it’s absolutely jam- packed, like a sweetie shop of bins.” Household wheelie bins, skips and ship- ping containers are all serviced onsite with shot blasters and spray booths. There is a fabrication workshop and spare parts divi- sion. The company also buys redundant stock from local authorities, and refur- bishes and modifies it. They recently bought and adapted a 40-year-old bottle bank for electrical recycling. “Most of the UK’s bins are steel and can be refurbished, strengthened and modi- fied,” said Elston. “It’s all about the re-use, doing the best we can with what we have .” Elston grew up in Altrincham, Greater Manchester. Her parents split when she was a teenager and she and her three younger siblings lived with their mother, who owned a hairdressing salon. “We’d lost the house we lived in and were struggling for money,” she said. “Mum is my biggest inspiration; she was out working all the time to keep us going.” When Elston left Culcheth Hall School in Altrincham, aged 16, she worked in sales and administration for companies in the records and waste industries. She met Julian on a blind date in 1995. The couple have two children. Elston’s three siblings are also involved with UK Container Maintenance. Lydia, 36, is head of marketing; Lizzy, 32, runs finance; while Ben, 30, is depot manager. “It’s a real family business,” said Elston. “When I’m not here, they’re my eyes, ears and heart.” Elston, 38, was named the most inspira- tional businesswoman at the 2010 NatWest Everywoman awards. Her advice to entre- preneurs is: “Remember cash flow is king; every single day is a survival of the fittest, so you’ll need passion, a belief in what you do and hard work to achieve it.” Hattie Williams ‘Cash flow is king,’ says Emma Elston. ‘Every single day is a survival of the fittest’ PAUL LEWIS Emma Elston Co-founder of UK Container Maintenance Kingston Smith LLP, the chartered accountant, and Peninsula, the employment law firm, can advise owner-managers on their problems. Send your questions to Business Doctor, The Sunday Times, 3 Thomas More Square, London E98 1ST. Advice is given without legal responsibility. [email protected] Employment Law Experts SMALL BUSINESS 29.06.14 / 11 Baby Bransons come to life in incubators

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HOW I MADE IT

MAXIMISETAXRELIEFON FUNDRAISINGSDGwrites:We are trying to raise£250,000 of equity finance to fundthe development of our technologystart-up over the next two years.Wewould like to use both the SeedEnterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS)and the Enterprise InvestmentScheme (EIS) but I understand thelimit under SEIS is £150,000. Howdowe co-ordinate the two rounds?Canwe do them simultaneously?

It is common for businesses in yoursituation to split their fund raising sothat the first £150,000 qualifies forSEIS and the rest, £100,000 in yourcase, qualifies for EIS relief,writesChris Lane, partner at Kingston SmithLLP. But the important point toremember is that 70% of themoneyraised under SEIS has to be spentbefore the EIS qualifying shares areissued.Therefore, the EISmoney, if raised

at the same time, has to be held backin “suspense” until the SEISmoneyhas been spent.It is also important that the EIS

money is not thought of as a loan toyour firm as this will compromiseany EIS relief. A good ideawould beto hold the EISmoney in escrowwithyour solicitor until required.Youwill need to decidewhether

it is worth going through theseprocedures. This will ultimatelydepend on the rate at which youexpect to spend the SEISmoney.If this will be short term, then it willwork, but anything longer and it maybe best simply to have a secondfundraising round in the future.In terms ofmonitoring your

spending, youwill need to prove youhave spent 70% of the SEISmoneyand, therefore, will need to keeprecords. It may be easier if you keepthese funds in a separate bankaccount opened for the purpose.The EIS investors will also need

to be informed that the date of theEIS share issuewill depend on thecompany’s planned expenditure rateand the issuemay have to be delayedif necessary.

WORKER TAKES DIVORCEPROBLEMSINTOOFFICEAJwrites: I have an employeewho isgoing through a divorce and bringingher personal problems intowork.This is affecting other staff and theytell me they feel demoralised by herbehaviour. How do I deal with her?

It is inevitable that work and privatelife overlap sometimes and normallyemployeesmanage to separate themadequately so that one does not affectthe other,writes Peter Done,managing director of Peninsula.However, there are timeswhenpersonal life may start to affect worklife, and then you need to takeaction.Most employers are compassionate

and arewilling to dowhat they canto help their staff through a bad time.However, youmust remember tofocus on fixing the problem at workand not on resolving the employee’spersonal problems.Take the employee to one side and

inquire about her general wellbeing.It is important to show compassionand understanding. If she is made tofeel that you do not care about herwellbeing, this may affect her view ofyou and the organisation as awhole.Showing you care builds loyalty andcommitment and takes little effortand time.Ask the employee if there is

anything you can do to offer support— possibly in terms of agreeing sometime off or re-assigning some of herheftier tasks if she is not performingat her best.Do not forget, however, the point

of themeeting— that you need herto adjust her behaviour to avoiddemoralising her colleagues. Strikinga balance is important because if shefeels you are doing something forher, she is more likely to accept thatshe needs to give something inreturn.Being too harshwith her atthis sensitive timemay not have thedesired effect. If things do notimprove after your initial chat, speakto her again and reinforce your point.Get her to redirect her frustrations

in the right way. If you have anemployee assistance programme,remind her she can use it. Havinga telephone counselling serviceavailable to staff is an excellent wayof helping to ensure they have anoutlet for any problems in theirprivate or working life.

Business doctor

RebeccaMortby neededspace. “When wedecided we wanted togrow fast, we knewwe had to think aboutdesks and environ-

ment,” said Mortby, who hadwon a £1,000 prize to spend onher business, Greenfinch Gradu-ations, which supports overseasstudents and their familiesthrough graduation.“Renting an office was out of

the question,” said Mortby, whograduated from Liverpool Uni-versity in international politicsand policy two years ago.Since thensheandco-founder

Julie Truman have worked withthe universities in Liverpool tooffer help on accommodation,dietary requirements, dress hireandgifts.Theyplantoexpandthebusiness to Manchester andacross to Sheffield.“We wanted to work in an

office with other entrepreneurswho aren’t operating in the samesector,” said Mortby, 27. “Wewanted to learn from them.”Her prayers were answered

when Santander announcedplans for a new incubator in StPaul’s Square, central Liverpool.The bank rewarded eight young,fast-growing companies withdesks on its premises and accessto expertise. Mortby’s was one.“They have connections with

universities and can help withadvice,” she said. “We want tooutgrow the incubator by thetime our year is up. That’s thepoint of signing up.”Santander’s office space for

start-ups, which opens thisweek, is part of an upsurge inincubators and accelerators setup to house and nurture cash-strapped entrepreneurs.Bigcompanies,banks,univer-

sities and other organisationshave continued to open officesto help breed flourishing firms.Companiessignupforsetperiodsandcanbenefit from investment,freeresources,contactsandvalu-able lessons from peers who aresharing the space.“A key element of the business

incubationprocessisthecommu-

nity feelingwithin thepremises,”said Arnaud Drapier, researchmanager at UK Business Incuba-tion. The trade body estimatesthat the number of centres openhas shot up from 30 tomore than300 since 1998. More than 60%are not sector-specific. “Beingwith others in the same earlystage and learning from them asyou grow is excellent,” he said.Most accelerator programmes

act as venture capital firms,taking shares in return for fundsand support. Some of the better-known ones in Britain andEurope include Seedcamp, Tech-Stars and Wayra. On the otherhand, traditional incubators pro-vide start-ups with support aswell as a hub towork in.Somemay offer entrepreneurs

cash in exchange for equity.

Manylocalcouncilsprovidebusi-ness incubation centres, as douniversities and not-for-profitorganisations.“We’re trying to be innovative

inthewaywesupportsmallbusi-nesses, not just in the traditionalbanking way,” said MarcelinoCastrillo, head of small businessbanking at Santander.Thebankstartedofferingloans

tosmallandmedium-sizedcom-panies in 2009. “We have accessto customers they can tradewithandprovidemasterclassesaspartof our Breakthrough program-me,”hesaid.“It’smorethandeskspace,whichisthethingallstart-ups need in the early stages.”However, some worry that

while the space and access tomarkets are valuable, fundingwillbetoughtosecure.“Wedon’t

wanttobeinaSantanderbuildingand have to go to Barclays for aloan,” said David Harries,co-owner of one of the eightcompanies to join the bank’sincubator. “We want them toholdourhands throughgrowth.”Interview People Online,

which he started last Decemberwith friend David Arthur,replaces real people withso-called avatars that conductjob interviews on theweb.“We signed up for the incu-

batortobelinkedtoamainstreambrand,” said Harries. “You can’tbuy that recognition. We’regrateful for the office space butit’s secondary.”Although some are sceptical

about the rise in the number ofincubators and accelerators, it iswelcomed by industry experts.

“It’saboutthequality,locationand the people who run them,”said Simon Devonshire, directorat Wayra Europe, Telefonica’sanswer to a start-up incubator. Ithas a presence in 12 countries inEurope and Latin America. In itsLondon space, off TottenhamCourt Road, 30 companies aregiven €40,000 (£32,000) inexchange for shares and€20,000worth of acceleration services.Wayra receivesmore than25,000applications a year.“The biggest contribution to

their successandprogress is theirpeers,” said Devonshire. “Thereare a lot more start-ups thanthere are accelerators and incu-bators. However, what we don’twant are lots rushing to themar-ketplace that don’t add much ordeliver progress.”

Abank’s officesin Liverpool arebeing cleared tomakeway forstart-ups, writesKiki Loizou

Rebecca Mortby’sRebecca Mortby’sGreenfinch GraduationsGreenfinch Graduationsis receiving help fromis receiving help from

SantanderSantander

PHIL TRAGEN

Dustbin queen cleans up withwheelie great line in recyclingWHEN Emma Elston was growing up shedidn’t know what an entrepreneur did —but she knew shewanted to be one. “I justliked Sir Richard Branson and the idea ofowning an island,” she said.Herventure turnedout tobequitedown

to earth. In 1998 her boyfriend, whobecameher husband,was earning a livingreplacing damaged waste bins on thestreets of Manchester.“Julian came home from work one day

saying it was daft to chuck out the oldbins,” said Elston. “We agreed it wouldmakemuchmoresense,andearnusagoodliving, if he repaired them instead.”In August that year the couple founded

UKContainerMaintenance, repairing andrefurbishing waste and recycling con-tainers for councils and waste disposalcompanies.BasedinNorthwich,Cheshire,the business now employs 100 staff andreportedsalesof£5.1mlastyear. It expectstoreportrevenuesinexcessof£5.5mwhenaccounts are filed in December.The company’s clients include Sita UK,

BiffaWaste Management and Veolia Envi-ronmentServices. JulianandEmmaElstonare currently looking to expand the busi-ness on to the Continent.“Wetakerisksbutthey’realwayscalcu-

lated,” said Elston, who copied out theiroriginal business plan froma library book.“When you come into a business withabsolutely nothing it becomes very pre-cious and you protect it fiercely.”When her business plan failed to secure

a loan with Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS),the pair borrowed £30,000 on their Nat-West credit cards (the bank is part of RBS)to set up UK Container Maintenance.Almost half was spent on buying a Transitvan at auction, which broke down on itsfirst trip. “We had to have a new engine—yetmoremoney,” she said.The couple lived in his grandmother’s

house inStretford, southwestManchester.Whilehewasrepairing thebinsElstonwasstriking deals from their bedroom.Withinamonth she had secured their first client,Trafford borough council, helping UKContainer Maintenance to turn over£15,000 in its first year.The couple married in 1999, and she

became pregnant. “I wasn’t able to takematernity leave so I was still ringingaround doing the sales, the accounts, andVAT returns,” she said. “It was hard workand I’d feel guilty, as amum.”They moved to rented accommodation

but, unable to meet payments, wereevicted. “Luckily one of our jobs in theearly days of business was cutting up oldcaravans,” said Elston. “One of themwasinpretty goodnick soweaskedmumifwecould pitch up in her garden.”Theylivedinthebackyardfor18months

while the business grew before buyingtheirownhouse in2001.Workingtogetherhas been successful. Elston’s husband, 45,is still involved with the engineering andmaintenance side of the business.“I couldn’t do what he does and he

leaves the finance to me so it works, handin glove,” she said. “Not everybody candoeverything.”In 2003 the Elstons moved their equip-

ment to a small shed on a pig farm inKnutsford,keepingtheofficeattheirhomenearby. Three years later they moved totheir present 20,000 sq ft site.Elston said: “We stood in the yard

thinking,‘Areweevergoingtobeabletofillthis space?’ Now it’s absolutely jam-packed, like a sweetie shop of bins.”Householdwheeliebins,skipsandship-

pingcontainersareall servicedonsitewithshot blasters and spray booths. There is afabricationworkshopandsparepartsdivi-

sion. The company also buys redundantstock from local authorities, and refur-bishes and modifies it. They recentlybought and adapted a 40-year-old bottlebank for electrical recycling.“Most of theUK’s bins are steel and can

be refurbished, strengthened and modi-fied,”saidElston.“It’sallaboutthere-use,doingthebestwecanwithwhatwehave.”Elston grew up in Altrincham, Greater

Manchester. Her parents split when shewas a teenager and she and her threeyounger siblings lived with their mother,who owned a hairdressing salon.“We’d lost the house we lived in and

were struggling for money,” she said.“Mum is my biggest inspiration; she wasoutworkingall the time tokeepusgoing.”WhenElstonleftCulchethHallSchool in

Altrincham, aged 16, she worked in salesand administration for companies in therecords and waste industries. She metJulian on a blind date in 1995. The couplehave two children.Elston’s three siblings are also involved

with UK Container Maintenance. Lydia,36, is head of marketing; Lizzy, 32, runsfinance; while Ben, 30, is depot manager.“It’s a real family business,” said Elston.“When I’mnothere, they’remyeyes, earsand heart.”Elston,38,wasnamedthemost inspira-

tionalbusinesswomanat the2010NatWestEverywomanawards.Heradvice toentre-preneurs is: “Remember cash flow is king;every single day is a survival of the fittest,so you’ll needpassion, a belief inwhat youdo and hardwork to achieve it.”

Hattie Williams

‘Cash flow is king,’ says Emma Elston. ‘Every single day is a survival of the fittest’

PAUL LEWIS

Emma ElstonCo-founder ofUK ContainerMaintenance

Kingston Smith LLP, the charteredaccountant, and Peninsula, theemployment law firm, can adviseowner-managers on their problems.Send your questions to BusinessDoctor, The Sunday Times, 3 ThomasMore Square, London E98 1ST. Adviceis givenwithout legal responsibility.

[email protected]

EmploymentLawExperts

SMALL BUS INESS 29 .06 . 14 / 11

Baby Bransons cometo life in incubators