Thursday 31 October 2013

60 seconds with......

 

Tanya Hemphill



Position: Senior Lecturer in Public Relations

Department: Business at the Warrington School of Management

Place of work before coming to the University: I was self employed for 10 years before joining the University last September. During this time I had set up and run three different businesses - a PR agency, a lifestyle magazine and an ecommerce company.

Biggest Career Achievement: Setting up my PR agency with a £3000 loan from the Prince's Trust and growing it in to an award-winning agency with clients such as John Lewis.
 
Favourite Place: Relaxing on a sandy beach.

Most memorable moment: Meeting Prince Charles after winning a 'Young Entrepreneur of the Year' award 18 months after setting up my first business.

Ultimate dream: To travel around the world with my family.

Most embarrassing moment: Forgetting to put on my car handbrake during a job interview and finding my car one inch away from hitting my (potential) boss' shiny new Ferrari. He was witness to the whole thing; and suffice to say, I didn't get the job!

Favourite song: It depends on my mood.

Favourite book: I belong to a book club, which means that I read a novel a month (on top of academic text books and journal articles for my MSc in Digital Marketing). Therefore, I've been lucky enough to read a few great new books that I wouldn't have normally chosen! My two (recent) favourite ones have been Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn and Close My Eyes by Sophie McKenzie.

Favourite food: I love Italian food (which may be linked to the fact that my Grandfather was Italian!)

Describe your self in three words: Creative, inquisitive and focussed.
 
 
You can find out more about Warrington School of Management, our specialist courses and expert staff at our website , Twitter or contacting us by email.
 

 






 

Monday 28 October 2013

Sport is not always the market for business

THE Rugby League World Cup contenders Samoa have arrived in Warrington and are using the university campus facilities in Warrington for training. Already their presence has been causing some excitement amongst students and staff and the photo opportunities and autographs are flowing.
 
The canteen takings have gone up too!
 
The events industry in the UK, which includes sports, conferences, exhibitions, trade fairs and festivals, is estimated to be worth over £35billion annually. As many as 500,000 people are employed in roles such as planning, security, logistics, catering, ticketing and car parking.
 
The Halliwell Jones Stadium was selected as a quality venue for the RLWC and it is quality venues, together with easy access which attract good events.

Warrington’s position; accessible from the motorway network and close to international airports make it ideally placed as an event-focused town. However sport and music festivals are not necessarily the market it should aim for.
 
Leading in logistics, the nuclear industry and with strengths in engineering the business of Warrington makes it ideal for strong trade shows and exhibitions.
However large capacity events venues, with heated auditoriums are required. In redeveloping areas such as the Stadium Quarter should such a venue be included?


Professor Lawrence Bellamy is Associate Dean at the Warrington School of Management, University of Chester, Warrington (Padgate) Campus. Follow @WSofManagement, @ProfLawrenceB

Thursday 24 October 2013

Warrington's New X-Factor


 Warrington’s Stadium Quarter is a priority development for the town.

A high quality mixed development of retail, offices, new homes and green spaces it is a proposal which will make the most of access opportunities to the railway station, bus interchange and by foot to the town centre.

It is an ambitious plan, but without this type of ambition Warrington will not gain the recognition it deserves as a great place to live and work.

As there are some green shoots of recovery for the economy now showing the chances of attracting investors to develop the area increases.

Since the economic downturn it has been the case that sites ripe for development, particularly those with retail and housing dimensions have been left without the financial backing to take them forward.

This is a matter of investor confidence and not necessarily an issue of affordability.
A bid has been submitted this week for a University Technical College (14-19 year old, specialist science, technology and engineering school) in the area, backed by more than 20 leading Warrington employers, all of them recognising the need for a future quality workforce. It would appear that the future is bright and it’s in Warrington.


Professor Lawrence Bellamy is Associate Dean at the Warrington School of Management, University of Chester, Warrington (Padgate) Campus. Follow @WSofManagement, @ProfLawrenceB

Wednesday 17 July 2013

Manage Innovation, It Pays

Whilst controlling costs within your business and providing good value for your customers is important, your competitors over time can replicate your cost base and product offering -  leaving you without a competitive advantage. In other words, you have to find another way to get ahead and stay ahead. According to Professor Lawrence Bellamy, from the Warrington School of Management (University of Chester), innovation holds the answer…

People love Apple. The brand recognition, product sales, status and desirability or their products is global and transcends all levels of society. Apple has enormous research and development capability with hoards of workers on a quest to deliver outstanding products. However, do all of the products have unique features? Absolutely not; Apple products share technical and design features across the range including the’ look and feel’.  The company takes good ideas and use them time and time again to get the most out of them. After all, good ideas are expensive and need to be paid back.


Creativity & Innovation

When thinking about innovation, people sometimes confuse this with creativity. Whilst these areas may be related they have differing fundamental purposes. Creativity is about coming up with new ideas, whilst innovation is often more about taking ideas, which may be pre-existing, and applying them elsewhere.

Creativity may require costly research and development or a dedicated creative staff team to deliver the new ideas. Innovation can be used throughout the organisation by all members of staff to deliver new or improved products, cost savings, better service or greater customer value. Innovation most of the time will be about incremental development, rather than breakthrough creation. It’s not just there for hi-tech companies with huge budgets, but for all organisations. However, to be successful it needs to be managed.

Dyson vacuum cleaners utilise a ‘cyclonic’ extraction system. Dyson did not invent this concept; it had been used within industrial dust-extraction applications for many years previously. Instead, they took the idea and used it in vacuum cleaners - a new product application. Other manufacturers now also produce ‘cyclonic’ or vortex extraction based vacuum cleaners. Dyson however has been so successful in developing and promoting the concept that far fewer people are now calling their vacuum cleaner a ‘Hoover’.

We all see things in our daily working lives which we think could be done better. The challenge for any business should be to ensure that those improvements, whether they are associated with products (which include all the things we sell i.e. physical goods, services or ideas or knowledge) or processes (the things we do) are nurtured, considered and put in place in a cost effective manner. Innovation can work for us not only on the big things but also importantly on the micro level. If we put together many small innovations within an organisation then cumulatively they add up to a large improvement and are difficult for other organisations to copy.

So how do we get our business to be more innovative? Key areas are:
·         Leadership of the innovation agenda
·         Screening’ project proposals
·         Empowering people to act
·         Embedding innovation into the DNA of the organisation


Comparison sites such as Confused.com, GoCompare and Money Supermaket have been instrumental in changing the way we purchase insurance and other finance services. Direct Line pioneered the work which made this approach possible, by moving away from High Street insurance brokers to telephone applications and expert systems to process the data from insurance quotes. Comparison sites are a development of this early work and have been instrumental in helping to make shopping for financial service more visible and convenient. Now though new types of organisations are being formed which get consumers together and negotiate deals from insurance companies on behalf of groups of customers, for better premiums. The industry is gradually changing.


Leadership

Leadership throughout the organisation should recognise and encourage suggestions made for innovation projects, whether product or process focused. Leaders should clarify the most important areas of focus: product, service or cost? Though many projects may be small, any development is a step in the right direction. Whilst not all projects will be given the ’green light’ without a stream of innovation proposals the company will not generate sufficient opportunities for the future. Successes should be widely promoted as the way forward for the company.


Screening

Organisations should not blindly implement all suggestions, but should go through a supportive screening process.‘ Innovation Champions’ should work with employees to help them put together the project proposals. Large projects will need to be considered at a senior level; smaller projects within departments. Try to keep this process to a minimum level of bureaucracy.


Empowering

Some people will put proposals forward which have little or no expenditure and have limited impact outside of their area of working. If what they are proposing appears reasonable after a conversation with their manager then the answer should be ‘yes’. Why put barriers in the way of improvement?  For complex projects then some training may be needed to give people the skills they require in taking proposals forward, this may involve researching, writing and calculating and project management skills.


Embedding

Use staff appraisals, budget setting processes, staff awards and meeting agenda items to reinforce the need for innovation. Arrange for innovation events periodically to encourage employees to focus upon possible projects and make it part of the usual way of working across the organisation. Measure the successes being achieved and report back. Make it part of the culture of the organisation and an expectation that all will contribute at some level.

In summary, innovation should be at the heart of the culture of a company, as it gives the organisation the best chance of long-term success. It should be built-in and not bolted-on and encompass the whole of the organisation. Once the innovation culture develops then success will breed success - accelerating performance improvement. However, management needs to focus efforts to get this moving… innovation won’t just happen, it needs managing.



Need help with Innovation?

The University of Chester has up to 15 Business Innovation Vouchers available, to provide a discount on business services. Each voucher entitles businesses to one of the following:

£1000 off a project valued at £5000 or more

£3000 off a project valued at £10000 or more

Vouchers will be allocated to successful applicants, usually for small consultancy or technical services projects; but they could also be used for small research and development contracts.

For more information please contact The Research & Knowledge Transfer (R&KT) Office
01244 511481

Business Pride reflected through the Warrington Business Awards 2013

Prof Lawrence Bellamy presenting the University of Chester Start Up Business of the Year to Culture Warrington

The Warrington Business Awards 2013 represented a brief glimpse into the success which the Warrington effect is breeding. 


Colin Stevens, Better Bathrooms
Outperforming Liverpool and Manchester in a number of economic indicators the area is punching above its weight. One of the Winners, Better Bathrooms has noted a turnover increase of £1m to £42m in seven years, which is astonishing when considered in the context of the financial crisis and recession during this period. Clear leadership and a positive culture were cited as being drivers of success. In addition some of the spin-off council organisations received awards too, including Culture Warrington, showing that releasing organisations to be more enterprising and less bureaucratically constrained can allow them to soar. Some nominations were for companies returning for a second year, such as Totalpost Services (who are developing a successful international profile) showing that success could be maintained. There was also an encouraging line up of new nominees, including Abeti Medical Solutions, indicating the innovative talent coming through. Overall however the most striking aspect of the awards event was that the room was full of people who showed great pride in the business of Warrington. Having pride and passion is important for business as it drives a determination to succeed, a key ingredient in building a great company.


Professor Lawrence Bellamy is Associate Dean at the Warrington School of Management, University of Chester, Warrington (Padgate) Campus. Follow @WSofManagement, @ProfLawrenceB