Wiggin’s Digital Entertainment Survey for 2010

Although we have free access to lots of expensive market research relating to digital entertainment here in the Business & IP Centre, it seems some generous folk just want to give it away.

Each year the kind people at Wiggin LLP law firm commission a report (pdf) from Entertainment Media Research and then make it available for free on their website. They survey 1,592 UK respondents, representative of the national demographic in May 2010.

Coming at 116 pages long, it contains some fascinating information. My favourite is how people would spend £1,500 on shiny new technology.

DIGITAL ENTERTAINMENT 2010

Introduction, methodology & sample profile
Headline findings
Detailed findings
Entertainment and digital activity audit
Future trends
Technology and device ownership
Cloud services
Platforms for watching movies / TV programmes
Willingness to pay for content
Social networks
Music sites & software
e-Books
Magazines
Mobile gaming & apps
Piracy

AcomprehensiveauditofentertainmentanddigitalactivityintheUKtoday,investigatingthebehaviour,trends,preferencesandattitudesacrossallformsofentertainmentactivity
•Thefindingsarebasedalarge-scaleonlinesurveyof1,592UKrespondents,representativeofthenationaldemographicconductedinMay2010
•ThesurveywascommissionedbyWiggin
•Readersarewelcometousedatainthisreportbutsuchusemustacknowledgethe2010DigitalEntertainmentSurveyfromEntertainmentMediaResearchadWigginasthesourcePleasenotethatpercentagesmaynotaddexactlyduetorounding

Naked bikes take a dive

I am always looking for an excuse to include motorbikes in this blog, and today thanks to a colleague I get an opportunity.

We have one published report by Mintel, but it dates back to 1999 when the UK bike market was booming. However, the Motor Cycle Industry Association (MCIA) publish free monthly sales figures, and as you can see from the table and chart below, the situation has changed significantly since 1999.

However it’s not all doom and gloom as the number of bikes on the road has increased (perhaps due to restored and revived classics such as my KR1-S ‘green meanie’).

And, from the ashes of the once dominant British bike industry the Phoenix that is Triumph Motorcycles has arisen.

The MCIA also produce a 2009 Statistics Pocket Guide pdf . And provide some interesting general ‘biker’ statistics:

UK POWERED TWO WHEELER MARKET BACKGROUND INFORMATION
NO. OF MOTORCYCLES IN USE (2006 : DEPT FOR TANSPORT)
1.6 million

MOTORCYCLES RIDER TEST PASSES (2006 : DEPT FOR TANSPORT)
51 thousand

TOTAL DISTANCE (KM) TRAVELLED BY MOTORCYCLE (2007 : DEPT FOR TANSPORT)
5.6 billion km (3.5 billion miles)

Finally, in order to help reverse the decline in biking, the MCIA have created a Get On website, where you can find out where to have a free try-out on a motorbike.

In case you were wondering what is meant by ‘Naked’, a helpful glossary is provided at the end of each report, enabling you to bluff your way through, the next time you find yourself talking to a biker.

Adventure (including Supermoto) – These bikes are similar in style to enduro motorcycles but are predominantly designed and capable for on-road use. Often they will have features similar to
machines included in the Touring category e.g. fairings, luggage carrying capacity etc.

Custom – These machines include ‘cruisers’ and ‘choppers’. They have flat but typically feature high handlebars, low seat height and forward footrests. Body panels
and fittings contain high polished chrome content.

Moped – In law, a motorised two-wheeled vehicle with an engine capacity of less than 50cc and a maximum speed capability of 30mph, riders must be aged 16 years
or over. Mopeds are available in Motorcycle and Scooter styles.

Motorcycle – In law, a motorised two-wheeled vehicle that is not a moped, riders must be aged 17 years or over.

Powered Two Wheelers – All types of two-wheeled motor vehicle, including Mopeds, Motorcycles and Scooters.

Sport/Touring – Machines that fit between Supersport and Touring bikes categories. Typical features include full or partial fairings and practical rider and pillion seating with
low to medium ride handlebars. Tend to have medium to large capacity engines.

Supersport – These machines are designed to mimic or directly replicate racing bikes. They normally have full fairings and low handlebars and are sometimes referred to
as race replicas.

Scooters – Have an engine, as an integral part of the rear suspension or the chassis is a step-through type, irrespective of cc or wheel size. Includes all types of
transmission.

Touring – Bikes generally have large engines and are designed for long-distance riding. Typical features include a more comfortable seating position for rider and
pillion, luggage carrying capability and weather protection, such as fairings with a fixed or adjustable windscreen.

Naked – Machines are built to a basic specification with no fairing (or only a small handlebar fairing) and an upright riding position. Engines are large to medium and
often called retro.

Trail/Enduro- These bikes encompass trials, enduro and trail bikes with an off-road or cross-country capability.

Produced : 10-May-2010 00:38:37
Copyright 2009 – Motor Cycle Industry Association Limited

MOTORCYCLES     Apr-10    Apr-09    % Change     Apr 2010 YTD     Apr 2009 YTD     % Change
ADVENTURE SPORT     902    1,282    -29.60%    2,942    3,866    -23.90%
CUSTOM     995    1,105    -10.00%    2,745    3,090    -11.20%
NAKED     2,075    2,564    -19.10%    5,819    7,297    -20.30%
SCOOTER     1,286    1,548    -16.90%    4,472    5,417    -17.40%
SPORT/TOUR     947    924    2.50%    2,873    2,822    1.80%
SUPERSPORT     1,673    2,279    -26.60%    5,383    7,901    -31.90%
TOURING     388    398    -2.50%    1,338    1,398    -4.30%
TRAIL/ENDURO     523    600    -12.80%    1,732    2,048    -15.40%
UNSPECIFIED     55    55    0.00%    194    242    -19.80%
TOTAL MOTORCYCLES     8,844    10,755    -17.80%    27,498    34,081    -19.30%

E-courses on intellectual property helping Bonbon Balm

Chocolate Lip Balm Image It is always nice to get positive feedback on events and activities we run here in the Business & IP Centre. However, our E-courses on intellectual property sometimes get a bit forgotten with the excitement surrounding big name speakers such as Alan Sugar.

So it was good to get a reminder from Sally who runs the Bonbon Balm website.

I have just started up my new online business (www.bonbonbalm.com) and wanted to say a thank you to the team at the British Library.  Your information and support on Intellectual Property has been invaluable during the start-up process. I don’t think I could have understood everything without your online courses.

Many thanks!
Sally

Image of shed door with message painted on - Inside is your invention. We'll help you stop it becoming someone else'sE-courses on intellectual property

A brilliant idea can take you a long way, but the road to protection and development can be challenging.

To help you, we have launched a series of free online courses on intellectual property.

Course 1: This will help you get to grips with IP, including patents, trade marks, registered designs and copyright.

Course 2: The second course will teach you how to search intellectual property databases to see if your idea is original.

Course 3: The third course will help you find out if there is a market for your idea.

New books in our Small Business Help collection

Although it might be easy to assume I am only obsessed with web related information for business start-ups. In fact I am also interested in good old fashioned books. And looking at the recent additions to our collection below there are some essential reads, especially in specialist business areas.

http://www.acblack.com/images/Books/batch2/9781408111109.jpgGood Small Business Guide 2010 [new edition replaces last year’s edition]
SBH 658.022 BLA

How to Start a Business When You’re Young
Barrie Hawkins & Luke Wing
SBH 658.110842 HAW

Good Small Business Planning Guide
John Kirwan
SBH 658.022 KIR

Good Green Guide for Small Businesses
Impetus Consulting Ltd.
SBH 658.4083 IMP

How to Start and Run Your Own Petsitting Business
Fiona Mackenzie
SBH 636.0887068 MAC

Reading and Understanding the Financial Times 2010-2011
Kevin Boakes
SBH 338.43 BOA

The Coffee Boys’ Step-by-Step Guide to Setting Up and Managing Your Own Coffee Bar
John Richardson & Hugh Gilmartin
SBH 647.950681 RIC

Getting to Plan B: Breaking Through to a Better Business Model
John Mullins & Randy Komisar
SBH 658.401 MUL

How to Set Up a Freelance Writing Business
Jason Deign
SBH 659.13202341 DEI

How to Make it in Music
Stuart Smith
SBH 780.2373 SMI

Good Finance Guide for Small Businesses
[no author]
SBH 658.1592 BLA

Virtually Free Marketing
Philip R. Holden
SBH 658.572 HOL

Successful Business Plans
Jane Khedair & Michael Anderson
SBH 658.402 KHE

How to Be a Successful Life Coach
Shelagh Young
SBH 158.3068 YOU

The Handbook of Global Outsourcing and Offshoring
Ilan Oshri et. al.
SBH 658.4058 OSH

Green and ethical month in the Business & IP Centre

May is Green and ethical month in the Business & IP Centre.

We have been inspired by our very successful Web in Feb month of activities to produce a Green in May month (except that it doesn’t rhyme).

As we know from our customers coming in to the Centre, Green and ethical business is growing fast.

Surveys show that 79 per cent of consumers would rather buy from companies that limit their environmental impact.

Throughout May we’re holding special events that explore green and ethical business: the opportunities, the practicalities and the reasons to get involved. Hear from eco-experts and meet entrepreneurs who are making a difference with their businesses.

We have also updated our guide to useful information sources for starting a green or ethical business.

Week one

Get more local
Get More Local
Tuesday 6, 18.00 – 20.00, free

Week two

Green money – beginner’s guide to business finance
Johnny Martin
Monday 10, 16.45 – 19.45, £9 – a special price for social enterprises

The cutting edge of green
Insider Trends
Tuesday 11, 18.00 – 20.00, £10 when booking with discount code “BritishLibrary”

Make the trade
London Community Resource Network
Wednesday 12, 10.00 – 13.00, free

Legal milestones for green business
Keystone Law
Thursday 13, 18.00 – 21.00, £25 – with a 50% discount for British Library contacts, quote “BL2010”

Week three

Raising money for green and ethical businesses
MessageLab and the Funding Game
Monday 17, 13.00 – 17.00, £25 +VAT

Managing an ethical business
Red Ochre
Thursday 20, 14.00 – 17.00, £25 Inc VAT

Social entrepreneurs without limits
Unltd World
Thursday 20, 18.00 – 20.00, free

Week four

Developing organic and ethical skincare products
She’s Ingenious!
Tuesday 25, 11.00 – 13.00, £25

Starting a social enterprise
Red Ochre
Thursday 27, 10.00 – 16.00, £50 inc VAT

Our ‘Green and ethical month’ events
Week oneGet more local
Get More Local
Tuesday 6, 18.00 – 20.00, free
Week two

Green money – beginner’s guide to business finance
Johnny Martin
Monday 10, 16.45 – 19.45, £9 – a special price for social enterprises

The cutting edge of green
Insider Trends
Tuesday 11, 18.00 – 20.00, £10 when booking with discount code “BritishLibrary”

Make the trade
London Community Resource Network
Wednesday 12, 10.00 – 13.00, free

Legal milestones for green business
Keystone Law
Thursday 13, 18.00 – 21.00, £25 – with a 50% discount for British Library contacts, quote “BL2010”
Week three

Raising money for green and ethical businesses
MessageLab and the Funding Game
Monday 17, 13.00 – 17.00, £25 +VAT

Managing an ethical business
Red Ochre
Thursday 20, 14.00 – 17.00, £25 Inc VAT

Social entrepreneurs without limits
Unltd World
Thursday 20, 18.00 – 20.00, free
Week four

Developing organic and ethical skincare products
She’s Ingenious!
Tuesday 25, 11.00 – 13.00, £25

Starting a social enterprise
Red Ochre
Thursday 27, 10.00 – 16.00, £50 inc VAT

A radical Reworking of business

front coverI know I refer quite a bit to items I hear on Leo Laport’s Net@Night podcast.  However episode 142 of the show with Sarah Lane guesting for Amber Macarthur was all about business.

They interviewed Jason Fried and David Hansson who created Ruby on Rails and co-authored Getting Real, amongst a range of notable achievements.

In their new book Reworking they attempt to debunk many business clichés, based on ten years of experience of running 37 Signals an internet based business.

They looked back over their first ten years of starting and growing their business to see what lessons they had learned, and how they could present the best of those ideas as succinctly as possible.

I tend to agree with them when they say that so many business books don’t really need to be more than 50 or 60 pages long, as their authors aren’t really saying very much. To generate enough content for 150 or 200 pages takes many years of experience.

Get more sleep
The first idea covered in the interview, Get More Sleep, may sound obvious, but working extreme hours has become something of a obsession especially with workaholics, and especially in the United States. But as they point out, the practical result is that you just end up with people being tired the whole time, and sooner or later it usually leads to burnout. Also, you can’t make up for the loss with an occasional one nights good sleep. You have to be consistent about your sleep. I like their quote, ‘you have to sleep in order to do good work.’

Ignore your competition
The second is about not copying, or even bothering to find out what your competitors are doing.

As they rightly point out, running a business takes a lot of time and you have to prioritise what you are going to spend that time on. Given that fact, they feel you are better off  spending it on your customers and your own products, rather than what other people are doing.

You can’t pay complete attention to your competitors, and your customers, and your products, and your employees, and your vision. You have to make some decisions and prioritise. So David and Jason would rather spend their time making the people who use their products very happy, instead of worrying about customers they don’t have yet, who might be being approached by their competitors.

They quote Henry Ford; ‘The competitors you should be worrying about are the ones that don’t care about you. They are the ones who are focussed on building their own business.’

According to David and Jason there is a business cold war going on, especially in the software industry, where everyone is spending their time trying to get one-up on everyone else. ‘We have to add two more features to counteract the one new feature from our competitor’. There are very few winners in this world where companies try and outspend their competitors, and everyone ends up looking the same.

Business is like software
They feel that businesses should be malleable, as we aren’t building bridges or skyscrapers. A company can change, it can try new things, it can iterate. ‘We try new stuff all the time, some works and some doesn’t. Our business itself has ‘bugs’, and we fix them as we go.’

‘When people think of a business as a monolith that has to have a lot of structure and policies, then they are sort of screwing themselves.’

‘There are few phrases I hate more than ‘this is how we do things around here’’. It is such a wrong and circular argument, but you hear it all the time.

The book has a simple structure with one idea every page or so. ‘The whole point of the book is that it is short, it is a quick read, because… aren’t you supposed to be doing something? These business books that take you a week or two to read, just seem like a waste of time.’

Learning from mistakes is overrated
‘There is a weird obsession, especially in the tech world, where everyone is telling you to fail early and fail often. What is that advice, fail often?’

‘Our take is that there is certainly some thing to be learnt from failure, but you are better off learning lessons from things that work well. Focus on the things that have gone right for you and try and do those things again. If you think that failure is so natural it will happen to you, you will start making really bad business decisions, and not looking at the odds.’

The obsession with growth

‘What is the point of everyone trying to build a billion dollar company? What is wrong with a million dollars? When did a million dollars become a small amount of money? When did running a business that generates $10 million a year become not a good and cool thing to do?’

‘Typically what happens is that people aren’t very happy working at these big big companies, and they are very slow at innovation. They have to acquire innovation by buying the small guys. The small guys are where the innovation and excitement happens.’

‘Why not build a great little company that is doing incredibly well, you can generate millions of dollars a year in profit. Who is going to be ashamed of that? And you can enjoy it, and you can get to sleep. That to me is really what it is all about.’

Entrepreneurs have a bad name
‘That word has so many bad connotations, it means risking everything, including your family, because you have to go all-in, right away. It’s just not true. The way we build our software company was by doing work on the side. You don’t need to throw away all your safety nets on day one and charge after this thing with a everything you have.’

‘In many ways I think the American dream has been perverted. I think before, it was simply financial independence, and somehow it has become this thing where you have to build a billion dollar company. It should get back to the way it was.’

I will leave my favourite quote from their interview to the end. ‘Starting a business does not have to be rocket surgery’. I’m not sure if this was a deliberate play on rocket science and brain surgery but I would like to adopt it as a business start-up slogan.

Are you ready to publish your book?

They say everyone has at least one book inside of them, although I have yet to find mine. However, I have now seen quite a few clients who are ready and waiting to find a publisher for their manuscript or idea. Now we have a course tailored just for them, and you, if you are burning to get yours out into the wide world (and of course a copy for the British Library under legal deposit).

*  Have you thought about writing a book but didn’t know where to start?
* Have you got lots of ideas and don’t know which one to choose?
* Are you concerned about writing something that may not get published?

Get Published Today!
Get these and many more questions answered at an information packed half-day course on Wednesday 14th April from 10:00am –  13:00 with registration from 9:30 at the Business and IP Centre, British Library.

Veteran book coach Mindy Gibbins-Klein (best known as founder of The Book Midwife®) will be guiding you through every step of the process of planning, writing and publishing a successful book. Her clients have written and published over 300 books and most of them have completed the writing in just 90 days!

* Learn how to choose the best topic, title, publishing solution and market for your book
* Understand what your true message is
* Avoid the mistakes most first-time authors make
* End up with the best possible book in the shortest possible time
* Engage with your target market so they respond to you
* Know when the editing is finished and the book is ready
* Understand how the publishing industry works and use that to your advantage
* Get help from unlikely sources to promote your book
* Make your book ‘work’ for you and earn you income and higher fees
* Get the media attention you want and deserve
* Catapult your book to the top of the bestseller lists…and much more

How to write & publish your book in 5 easy steps

Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs – Supporting Small Businesses

On Tuesday I was invited to an HMRC partner conference and networking event at 100 Whitehall. The meeting actually took place in the Churchill room so was redolent of history.

The objective of the afternoon was to see how HMRC can work with partners to improve support for their SME (Small and Medium Sized Enterprises) customers.

The obvious question was why would they take this approach, and they were impressively frank and honest with their answers. It starts with their vision; “our customers will feel that the tax system is simple for them and even handed’.

Our Way
–    We will understand our customers and their needs
–    We will make it easy for customers to get things right
–    We are passionate in helping those who need it

I love the way they refer to tax payers as customers, and am amazed that they put in writing that they are passionate about helping them. This is not the kind of language one expects from a civil service department, and especially not the tax office. I suppose the real test is whether their customers see it the same way.

SME’s are a key customer group for HMRC. There are 4.8 million SME’ in the UK and they account for over 99% of all businesses in the country. They make up  over 50% of business turnover and employ some 14 million people. They collect or contribute over 40% of tax receipts.

The bottom line is that £6bn is lost from the Exchequer each year because of failure to take proper care in record-keeping. SME’s make up the bulk of that ‘tax gap’, but are often scared of, or unwilling to contact HMRC directly to address tax problems.  Whereas they are much more willing to talk to others such as the partners invited to the meeting. These ranged from business advisors, to professional bodies (such as the Federation of Master Builders), to accountants and even trade retailers such as Screwfix.

Stephen Banyard, HMRC’s Director of the Business Support Unit gave some fascinating information on the scale of their challenge:
– For instance £1.6 billion pounds of tax income is lost due to mistakes made by business.
– This despite the fact that HMRC receive 10 million phone calls a year from their customers.
– Seventy percent of companies use a tax agent to avoid dealing with the forms themselves.
The Tax deferral scheme introduced to help businesses make it through the recession has helped more than 242,000 companies, totalling nearly £4.23 billion.
– All tax related information will be moved onto the Business Link website,  but will allow content to be mashed-up on partners websites.

The key problem that HMRC face is the lack of record keeping from tax payers. To help address this they have partnered with Staples officer supplier. They have  produced jointly branded marketing materials which are displayed in Staples stores and on their website.

They are even sponsoring a Channel Five TV show starting on 10 March this year. The Business Inspector will be a troubleshooting series aiming to transform failing small companies, with the intention of to encourage good-record keeping.

Keeping records (pdf 57KB) Brings together the main record keeing guidance for easy reference by our customers and provides opportunity to mention the new penalties that maybe applicable.

Self-employed and partnerships

Form or record
A record of all sales and takings, including cash receipts. For example • till rolls • sales invoices • bank statements • paying-in slips • accounting records.
A record of all purchases and expenses, including cash purchases. For example: • receipts • purchase invoices • bank and credit card statements • cheque book stubs • accounting records.

Why
Allows you to quickly see what you are owed and accurately work out your total income. Allows you to quickly see what you have spent, how much you owe and what you can claim for tax purposes.

Further information
Self-employed: go to www.hmrc.gov.uk/sa/ rec-keep-self-emp.htm Partnerships: go to www.hmrc.gov.uk/sa/ rec-keep-part-partners.htm Phone Self Assessment Helpline 0845 900 0444

Facebook vs. Linkedin networking evening report

Phil, Richard, Heather and MontyI am glad to report that the evening lived up to its billing, with an excellent crowd, some learnings from our speaker Heather Gorringe of Wiggly Wigglers (WW), and some intensive speed networking courtesy of my colleague Gaby Rose.

Heather explained that her first venture into Social Media was with a podcast, which is now broadcast every Monday on iTunes. Although I notice their blog dates back to September 2005, which puts them amongst the very earliest of commercial bloggers.

Next came a Facebook group because it meant they could send a weekly newsletter to members. But also gave those same subscribers an easy way to opt out, rather than feel they were being spammed, as often happens with email newsletters.

She feels that Facebook allows you to get your personality and your brand out into the public domain. She recommends you join other groups and invite them to join your group, as a way to expand members. Theirs currently stands at 2,218 which is impressive.

Does using Facebook bring in sales?

Heather illustrated her answer to this with the story of a bride who published her wedding pictures on the WW Facebook group. This acted as a wonderful free WOMA marketing (word of mouth marketing), and seems likely to have generated several sales.

The test is that if you are willing to answer questions from you customers, you can generate a lot of interest. WW currently have over 320 topics on their Facebook group. Their followers get to hear about everything special going on with the company, and to participate in special offers which are only seen by the Facebook group.

Twitter

Heather said that she thinks Twitter should really be called Peeper, as it gives you a wonderful opportunity to listen to conversations your customers are having.

She deliberately set up an intriguing profile in order to encourage people to follow her, and suggests everyone does the same.

Why does it work?

She found her current accounting software through Twitter , after two previous failures.

In desperation Heather tweeted complaints about her BT phone service, and from four months of trying to get a resolution, and just ten days to being cut off. Within twenty minutes she had a reply and a meeting with her key contact within two days.

The power of trending topics can be seen in the example of the American farmer who used the moo hash tag. Within two hours the story reached 368,000 people, with the only cost being a little bit of time, resulted in national and international press coverage.

Heather gave the example of a complaint about WW service which have been seen as a PR disaster, but was actually an opportunity to put things right in a very public way, and ended up with some excellent comments from the orginal complainer.

Her tip was to search on topics relevant to you, and then follow appropriate people as they are likely to follow you back.

Also save searches on your company name so you can see when you are mentioned on Twitter.

She currently spends half an hour a day on social media activities, but believes it more than pays for the time invested in building a positive view of the WW brand.

Watch Heather in action

Business & IP Centre supports economic growth

Last week I attended our annual Partner Reception and enjoyed catching up with Goretti Considine from City Business Library, Mark Sheahan our inventor in residence, and many others from the over 150 attending.

This year we also announced the publication of an evaluation report showing how we have supported economic growth in London over the last few years. The report was conducted by economics firm Adroit Economics Ltd and included how many jobs and new businesses The Business & IP Centre has helped create, as well as highlighting some of its success stories.

In summary the report shows that:

  • We have created 829 new businesses for London and sustained 632 businesses
  • We have created 786 new jobs, or 1,615 including the new business owners
  • These businesses have increase their turnover by £32m in the past two years
  • For every £1 invested by the LDA and British Library, we have gained an average turnover increase of £4.61
  • We have generated a Net Present Value of £11.3m to the public purse

The report also shows how much entrepreneurs value our services:

  • 98% would recommend the Centre to others
  • 97% will continue to use the Centre
  • 89% achieved success with the Centre’s help