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Accountancy-Ireland-MAGAZINE-COVER-V2-april-25

Supporting SMEs ‘critical’ to Ireland’s economic success

The Institute’s latest thought leadership papers outline a series of measures needed to support Ireland’s SMEs, write Cróna Clohisey and Michael Diviney. The Institute has published the latest in its series of thought leadership papers. Supporting SMEs was informed by the views of our 33,000 members and sets out the measures that we believe are needed to achieve strategic, systemic improvements for SMEs operating across Ireland. SMEs make up the vast majority of all businesses in Ireland, and collectively they employ close to seven out of 10 people working in the business economy. It is clear from engagement with members that a critical marker of Ireland’s future economic success will be supporting our SME sector by reducing the cost and complexity of doing business. SMEs have faced an unprecedented number of new legislative requirements in recent months which significantly adds to their cost and administrative burden. In 2024 alone, the minimum wage has increased by 12 percent and additional sick leave entitlements have added one percent to payroll costs. From 1 October, the rate of Employer, Self-Employed and Employee PRSI will increase by 0.1 percent, while pensions auto-enrolment will add a further 1.5 percent in costs during 2025. Supporting SMEs calls on the Government to be cognisant of the challenges all of the above brings. While the measures are extremely important for employees, consideration must be given to the timing of implementing new employment law, and the impact on SMEs when all are introduced within a short timeframe. The paper sets out a series of proposals, grouped under four headings: Resilience and growth; Government supports and funding; Sources of business finance; and Reducing the cost of business through the tax system. Alleviating the administrative and cost burden for SMEs is at the forefront of our asks which include the following proposals: Minimum wage workers, working a full week, should be exempted from Employers’ PRSI. Tax discrimination against professional service companies must end so that they can benefit from the various investment reliefs available to comparable trading companies. Reducing Capital Gains Tax from 33 percent to 25 percent to stimulate business and personal transactions that will bring additional funds into the Exchequer. The real time reporting requirement for enhanced reporting requirements (ERR) for employers should be removed and replaced with monthly or even annual returns. Additionally, we ask for a commitment from Government not to extend ERR for at least three years until the system is embedded and an appropriate cost-benefit analysis of the current system has been properly completed. Chartered Accountants Ireland believes that more resilient businesses will be better positioned to weather crises and uncertainty, and have confidence to invest, to scale, and to create employment. Financial stability is paramount to this. The Institute is calling on Government to support SMEs in accessing finance, optimising governance structures, and investing in developing their workforces. Proposed measures to ensure resilience and the continued growth of this vital sector of the economy include: Widening the eligibility criteria for the broad range of grants available to include more ‘traditional’ industries and the service sector. Ensuring more consistent availability of grants and supports nationwide. Our members tell us that services provided in one part of the country may not be available to similar businesses elsewhere; much depends on the approach and funding at a local level. With the advent of remote working, a common approach to supporting all small businesses, regardless of location, is needed. Promoting healthy competition in the business lending market, by enhancing the role community-based lenders and alternative lenders can play in addition to the pillar banks. It is well documented that record corporation tax receipts will not always be with us and there is a strategic imperative to ensure long-term economic health for SMEs. This can only come from understanding the unique challenges facing them, not simply by virtue of their size, but also specific to the sector they operate in, and supports they need. CCAB-I’s Pre-Budget 2025 submission focuses on supporting and sustaining our SME sector Continuing the focus on the importance of the SME contribution to the Irish economy, the Institute, under the auspices of the CCAB-I, delivered its pre-Budget 2025 submission to Minister McGrath last month. The paper highlights the constraints experienced by SMEs as a result of increasing labour costs and also states that a lack of supply of housing and childcare places, in addition to high personal tax rates, are making it increasingly difficult for people to live and work affordably in Ireland. The submission identifies four key areas for budgetary focus: support SMEs by exempting minimum wage workers from employers’ PRSI and simplifying tax legislation; increase the number of childcare places available and offer working parents a €1,000 tax credit to return to the workforce; introduce a 30 percent intermediate rate of income tax to retain and attract workers and help people live affordably; continue to stimulate and support the completion of new houses. The CCAB-I believes that Ireland’s tax code has become increasingly complex in recent years and is calling for simplification of the tax rules to support businesses, enable them to grow and also ensure that Ireland remains competitive on an international stage. Childcare provision In terms of childcare, the submission includes measures to improve the supply of childcare places for pre-school children. To address the impact of working parents leaving the workforce following the birth of their children on the labour supply, the CCAB-I is calling for the introduction of a €1,000 tax credit for working parents to encourage them to return to the workforce. The CCAB-I also asks that the government plans for adequate capacity in the childcare sector by analysing local needs and ensuring adequate funding for the sector. Income tax reforms The CCAB-I believes that introducing a third rate of income tax of 30 percent would make the system more equitable. Workers in Ireland pay income tax at a rate of 40 percent once they earn €42,000. This entry point is below the average wage and is significantly lower than most countries across the UK and Europe, where incidentally having more than two tax rates is extremely common. We are a mobile profession where many are in the early stages of their careers and are planning their futures. Introducing an intermediate 30 percent rate would make the system more attractive and more equitable, lessening the tax burden on workers and putting more money in their pockets. Housing measures The submission proposes: extending the Help-to-Buy Scheme by two years to 31 December 2027; abolishing vacant homes tax; increasing the rent-a-room relief from €14,000 to €20,000 and removing the cliff-edge; abolishing the non-resident landlord withholding tax system. Cróna Clohisey is Acting Director of Advocacy and Voice at Chartered Accountants Ireland Michael Diviney is Head of Thought Leadership at Chartered Accountants Ireland.

Jun 05, 2024
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The coach's corner - June/July 2024

Julia Rowan answers your management, leadership and team development questions Q. I am head of function in a large organisation. My career has gone well, and I’ve been recognised and promoted several times. I am a quiet person who puts the head down and works hard – as does my team. However, I have a new boss. He came in with a lot of fanfare and even made a presentation about the way he likes to do things. He recently told me that he doesn’t think I drive my part of the business enough. I feel I drive my team hard – but I don’t shout about it. A. This could be a personal style issue. He comes in with fanfare and clearly communicates how he likes to do things. He could be overlooking you because his style is different and time might help him see your value.  But it might also be time to recognise that as we rise in organisations, sometimes new skills need to come to the fore.  There are a couple of things you can do: Wait and see: As your manager gets to know you and the work you do, their concern about how you lead your team may abate. Talk to your manager: Say “I want to have a conversation about how we work together. You’ve probably noticed that I’m a quiet person, so what kind of information and communication do you want about the work that I do?”   Show them otherwise: Send a short email at the end of every week or fortnight sharing three successes (e.g. projects completed/moved on), and three priorities for next week. This will create a sense of momentum and a record of progress and achievement over the year. However, this could be a useful time to look at the skills that senior leaders need to develop.  Your current approach has served you well up to now. But does the organisation need a bit more? How would your stakeholders (your team, the teams you serve, your peers, etc.) benefit if you shared what you did more broadly? Not just sharing what you do, but the value add: what you have learned, the insights, information and support you can offer to stakeholders. The scope and focus of how we communicate naturally changes as we rise through organisations, reflecting what is needed from us at our level: the connection between the work of our team/function and the organisation’s strategic vision, the complexity of the decisions we make in a fast changing environment, the risks we need to mitigate and manage, and how we develop talent and ensure smooth succession. The temptation is to fall into the binary of “I can either be true to my natural style OR give my manager what he wants”. The trick is to see beyond that and to find a way to showcase your work from that quiet and hard-working place you inhabit.  I wonder what would happen if you discussed this with your team: my guess is that they would have a ton of ideas.

Jun 05, 2024
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Ireland and the MNC golden goose

Ireland’s economic reliance on foreign multinationals is stark, posing significant risks for our future stability, writes Cormac Lucey. The Revenue Commissioners recently published the report, Corporation Tax: 2023 Payments and 2022 Returns. Despite its relatively innocuous title, however, the information contained in this report has critical implications for the Irish economy and Ireland’s public finances. It has long been known that the multinational corporation (MNC) sector pays a disproportionate share of corporation tax in Ireland and this new report from Revenue confirms it. When it comes to corporation tax, the foreign MNC sector paid 87 percent of all corporation tax in Ireland in 2022. What is startling is the extent of MNC contribution compared to our two other major tax sources: income tax and value added tax (VAT). According to a 2022 report by IDA Ireland, there are a total of 301,475 people working for foreign multinationals in the country. That year, there were 2,121,300 working across the entire economy, according to the Central Statistics Office (CSO). Hence, just 14.2 percent of the workforce was employed by the MNC sector at that time. Yet, thanks to the highly progressive nature of our income tax system and the much higher wages paid by our MNC sector, that cohort paid 54.6 percent of total income tax. The cherry on the cake is that, according to Revenue, the MNC sector also accounted for more than half of all VAT payments (53.8%). When you examine all of Ireland’s varying tax heads and apply these percentages to the expected actual 2023 tax take (as set out in the Budget 2024 documentation), it emerges that the MNC sector contributed 55 percent of Ireland’s total tax revenues that year – even if we assume that it did not contribute at all to customs, excise duty, capital gains tax, capital acquisitions tax, stamp duty or motor tax. If we make the more realistic assumption that the MNC contribution to those other tax heads was the same as its contribution to VAT, the MNC contribution to the state’s total tax take rises to a staggering 62 percent. There are two slow-motion dangers facing our MNC sector. The first is that our native incapacity drives away mobile international investment. We are already bursting at the seams in terms of the supply of housing (we can’t build enough), skilled personnel (we don’t have enough) and electricity (we’re at risk of not having enough). The second danger is that the US takes action to seize the eggs that our MNC golden goose has been laying for us by legislating for a global minimum rate of corporation tax on the worldwide earnings of all US multinationals at its current corporate tax rate of 21 percent. MNCs might save tax by paying 15 percent in Ireland only to face a six percent surcharge in the US. This measure would undermine any tax rationale for locating in Ireland and reduce our attractiveness as an investment destination. If we are at risk of having maxed out our extraction of eggs from the MNC golden goose, how stands our indigenous sector of Irish-owned operations? A recent report, published jointly by the Nevin Economic Research Institute (NERI) and trade union SIPTU, revisited the CSO analysis and concluded that the average value-added per hour of indigenous sector workers was just €28. This report shows sectoral productivity in the Republic compared to that in Northern Ireland. Apart from sectors dominated by MNC activity, productivity levels in the south lag those in the North, sometimes quite markedly. In the construction sector in the south, for example, productivity is less than half that north of the border. However unpalatable a conclusion, the economic rise of the Republic seems entirely down to foreign multinationals and appears to owe little to native endeavour. Disclaimer: The views expressed in this column published in the June/July 2024 issue of Accountancy Ireland are the author’s own. The views of contributors to Accountancy Ireland may differ from official Institute policies and do not reflect the views of Chartered Accountants Ireland, its Council, its committees, or the editor. Cormac Lucey is an economic commentator and lecturer at Chartered Accountants Ireland.

Jun 05, 2024
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“Our mission is to help organisations improve financial decision-making”

Brian Feighan, FCA, set up LearnAltus to help executives from all backgrounds understand the key financial drivers underpinning business decisions. I think most people yearn to be their own boss at some point and I was no different, but the reality of following your dream can be very daunting initially. There is no “mothership” and nothing happens unless you make it happen. You realise quickly that you will have to work harder than you have ever worked before just to get your business off the ground. Above all, you need to be passionate and commit completely. Otherwise, you won’t have the motivation to persist through the start-up phase. I started my own business in 2015. At the time, I was Head of Asset Finance with Ulster Bank. I had started my career with Ulster International Finance in Dublin after qualifying as a Chartered Accountant with EY Ireland. I was part of a specialist team designing solutions to help multinationals centralise their global financing activities in Dublin. I really enjoyed the work and spent the next 14 years working in the sector, including stints as a Director with AIB International Financial Services and Executive Vice President at Demica, an international financial advisory firm, before rejoining Ulster Bank in 2006 as an Investment Director in its wealth management division. Business inspiration Throughout those years, I noticed something: I would be sitting in a board room in London or New York closing a major financing transaction, but – apart from the CFO – the other (non-financial) executives around the table often had significant blind spots in their understanding of what was really happening. It might be a failure to appreciate the implications of taking on additional leverage, not grasping the opportunity cost of a commercial decision or not realising how a thinly capitalised entity carries very high financial risk. It struck me that many executives rise to leadership positions due to their talent and success in non-financial disciplines like sales or relationship management. As managers, however, they must also assume responsibility for key financial decisions such as capital expenditure, management of working capital and ownership of financial performance and budget delivery. It can be a scary position to be in if you don’t have a solid foundation in finance. While most leadership training programmes include a financial component to upskill non-financial managers, in my experience this training tends to be light and conceptual – when it actually needs to be deep and practical. The result is that many managers have a poor understanding of the key financial drivers in their business and lack the confidence necessary to make good financial decisions – and the inevitable poor decision-making that ensues can prove very costly for companies. LearnAltus mission That experience was really the inspiration for LearnAltus, the financial training business I established in 2015, branded initially as ProTutor. By that stage, I had decided I wasn’t getting any younger and, if I was ever going to set up my own business, now was the time. So, I left the corporate world and jumped into the unknown. I had no grand plan at the outset and it took me a while before I settled on building an online financial training platform. LearnAltus’ mission is to help organisations improve their financial decision-making. We design and deliver training programmes that, we believe, can transform an organisation’s financial capability. Our training is centred around ensuring managers can understand and interpret key financial indicators and that they are confident enough to challenge and contribute to the financial aspects of key business decisions. We build immersive decision-making scenarios and game these scenarios out in our training to help managers grasp the potential financial implications. Lasting relationships One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned running my own business is the importance of building high quality, lasting business relationships. You will always achieve much more through collaboration than you can on your own. You need to identify good people to partner with and work continuously on enhancing the value of these relationships – your team, your business partners and your clients. Ultimately, success is defined not by how you see yourself but by the value you create for others. Being a Chartered Accountant has been a big advantage in this sense. I have been fortunate to develop close relationships with key personnel at the Institute. Much of the work I do aligns with the strategic goals of Chartered Accountants Ireland so there is a natural fit. A key milestone was the introduction of the Finance for Managers suite of qualifications, developed in partnership with the Institute’s Professional Development team. With over 33,000 members worldwide, the Institute has an exceptional reach in the business community. Before I set up my own business, I was oblivious to the capabilities the Institute has, which has been a key enabler for the success of the Finance for Managers programme. We have been fortunate to work with some very committed clients too, which is key to ensuring employees are engaged learners. Boot Camp I have supported the Institute’s outreach work with secondary schools for many years. It is a fantastic initiative, which helps promote the accounting profession and make it more accessible to students. Back in 2018, we learned from conversations with business and accounting teachers about their growing concern of the perception of accounting among students and parents, particularly in senior cycle, where the current Leaving Certificate Accounting syllabus is nearly 30 years old. This led us to develop the Institute’s online Boot Camp programme. Boot Camp provides a foundation in accounting fundamentals for Transition Year and Senior Cycle students. It also incorporates an online, interactive business simulation called “Be the Boss” where students take on the role of CEO of a “real life” company faced with a major strategic decision. Since its launch in 2019, Boot Camp has exceeded all our expectations, with over 8,000 students enrolled to date. It has become a prerequisite for many schools as part of their Transition Year programmes. Further, a growing number of accounting firms now incorporate Boot Camp into their internship programmes for Transition Year students during their work placements. We also run “Be the Boss” as a national school competition. This provides a fascinating insight into the level of entrepreneurial talent and business leadership capability out there in Gen Z. Foundation for success As a business owner, I have learned that you really need to be very disciplined about how you allocate your time. There is a view that success in business comes from achieving that big breakthrough, be it a key product innovation or a major customer win. In my view, however, overnight success is a myth. The truth is that those breakthrough moments happen only because you’ve been plugging away, improving and refining your proposition every day for a long time. If you look under the bonnet of any successful enterprise, you will find a lot of hard yards being fought every day. This is what positions you to execute well on the opportunities when they arise – and they always do.

Jun 05, 2024
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Whole of business approach pays dividends for Accelerate

Accelerate Accounting Solutions partners with clients to help them make better business decisions, explains founder Edel Hayes. Accelerate Accounting Solutions founder Edel Hayes, FCA, describes her business as an accounting service with a business partner approach. “Bookkeeping is very transactional,” Hayes explains. “It’s something that has to be done. End of year accounts and CRO returns are the same and business owners can get an external accountant to do them – but it’s the bit in the middle that really makes the difference.” This piece in the middle is using financial information to provide insights to support budgeting, goal setting, performance analysis, forecasting and other key business decisions. “Finance flows through the business. A lot of people don’t get that and it’s to the detriment of their business,” Hayes explains. “We work with our clients as a genuine business partner. It’s about understanding their business and what they want to achieve and supporting them in that.” Hayes established Accelerate Accounting Solutions in 2018 having worked as financial controller with several firms. Her decision was prompted by a few factors, not least of them family. “I’m originally from Dublin but live in Kildare. We have two young children, and I was commuting to Dublin every day. It became a nonsense for me,” Hayes says. “I was looking for something with no dead time spent in traffic or on trains. Time is precious. You need time to spend with your children and on outside interests. I didn’t want to waste that time and I got to thinking about starting my own business.” She also wanted more flexibility in her life. “Monday to Friday, nine-to-five. It doesn’t need to be that way for certain types of work. I was thinking that way pre-COVID even before everything changed.” Entrepreneurial spark The entrepreneurial spark was there as well. “I always had that,” Hayes says. “I had been involved in a small way in several businesses owned by family and friends. I gave them support and advice. I was dipping my toe in and out of the water but had never gone in the whole way.” The decision to strike out on her own was very much a family one. “I had a chat with my husband,” she recalls. “We decided that I should give it six months. If it didn’t work out, I would go back into employment. The jobs market was very good at the time.” She needn’t have worried. “I got clients straight away. I had a good reputation in the market and once people knew I was open for business they came to me.” Business vision Hayes’ vision for the business was to provide a lot more than just a bookkeeping or statutory accounts services. “A lot of SME owners are focused on keeping the tax authorities happy, they are ticking boxes and not going any further with finance,” she says. “A bit of effort and more commercial thinking can really make a difference. Business owners can be very reactive because they don’t have time to think. In many cases, they can’t afford a full-time accountant and they need a bit of external support. “That external help can make so much of a difference. It can give the business new insights, improve cash flows, and help with business planning and the business model. It can also help to identify areas for improvement.” Hayes initially cast the net quite wide in search of clients but this quickly changed. “I ended up with clients from a lot of different industries who were using different platforms and so on,” she notes. “Within a year, I realised that a lot of my clients were women who found me online or through referrals. I have focused on that since.” Today, the majority of Hayes’ clients come to her through referrals. “Referrals really started to take off in year two, just before COVID,” she says. “Sometimes, it was people coming from an existing external accountant who didn’t quite understand the business and where it wanted to go. Accountants in practice sometimes don’t understand new industries or the motivations of entrepreneurs. “A lot of entrepreneurs are motivated by multiple factors – time, impact, creativity – it’s not just about profits. We understand our clients at a much deeper level. We wouldn’t recommend a target of a million euro in revenue if a client wants to manage a small team and work a 30 hour week. It’s about finding what motivates the business owner and building that into our plans.” Hayes says she always advises potential new clients to shop around. “There are lots of accountants out there and it’s very important to find the right fit for your business. We want to be a proper business partner and be able to have non-judgemental frank conversations with clients. You need to be comfortable with each other to do that.” Investing in technology An early decision to invest in technology and cloud-based systems that could support a much larger practice paid dividends during the pandemic. “We had the technology platforms and standard operating procedures in place almost from the beginning. When COVID came, because we were already online and had a client portal in place, it was business as usual for us,” Hayes says. “Clients who were not yet in the virtual space felt a sense of calm from me. This is what we do. The concept of virtual accounting firms was already well established in the US but not so much here at the time. Some people got the idea, some didn’t. When COVID came, everyone got it.” Hayes gets real satisfaction from seeing the positive impact her service can have for clients. “You can see amazing results from tracking the numbers. For example, a business owner can see if they are leaking profits in certain areas and do something about it. They can see if people are working in the wrong areas,” she says. “They could spend months making the same mistake over and over again because they are not tracking the numbers. If that’s costing money, it could push the business into trouble.” It is also important to adapt to clients’ changing needs, she adds. “A business in year one has completely different needs than it will have in years three or four. It will have grown and changed. We understand that and adapt with our clients’ needs.” Crucial lessons Looking back, Hayes believes she probably cast the net a little too wide at the outset. “That can have a detrimental effect on a business. That was a lesson learned. It took me two full years to realise it.” Hayes advises those contemplating starting a business to take advice where they can get it and to leverage their own networks where possible. “People think it’s easy to set up and get running, but it’s not. I had a chat with Chartered Accountants Ireland’s Practice Advisory Team, and I found I was clueless. They were a great help. “You need to lean into your existing network. You will get clients through that. One hard lesson is not to be afraid to let a client go if they are a bad fit. It’s better to clear the space for other clients who are the right fit.” Another piece of advice is not to undercharge. “Everyone is tempted to do it but try to avoid it. Also set up your systems as if you have a bigger business from the start. That will set you up for growth.” Accelerate Accounting Solutions is continuing to grow. “Demand is twofold. We have people looking to switch accountants for a better fit and people starting up their own businesses,” Hayes says. “The entrepreneurial spirit is there. COVID made people realise that they can take a risk and set up their own business. If it doesn’t work out, it’s not the end of the world. “There is a lot of consolidation in the accounting market. Smaller practices are being bought up. Many clients don’t want to move to a bigger firm because they want a more hands-on approach from their accountant. People come to us for our model, which offers a more individualised service.” Interview by Barry McCall.

Jun 05, 2024
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“We were in it to win it – the only way was forward”

Pure Telecom co-founder and CEO Paul Connell talks ambition, business strategy and lessons in entrepreneurship. Paul Connell is Chief Executive of Pure Telecom, the Irish-owned provider of high-speed broadband and fixed line telecoms to homes and businesses nationwide. Established in 2002 by Connell and his business partner Alan McGonnell, Pure Telecom employs 80 people and has annual revenues of about €30 million. Connell is also Chair of the Dublin Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. Here, he talks to Accountancy Ireland about his experiences as an entrepreneur and co-owner of a successful business. Question: Can you tell us a bit about your early career? I qualified as a Chartered Accountant with BDO Simpson Xavier (now BDO Ireland) in the nineties and worked in accountancy and finance for a few years. In 1996, when I was Group Accountant with Iretex Packaging, I brought the group to a full public listing on the London Stock Exchange and, after that, I joined Global Telesystems (GTS) as Financial Director for Ireland. Global Telesystems was an American multinational supplying telecom services to the European market. At its peak in the late nineties, it supplied over 25 percent of telecoms services in Ireland through other national carriers. That’s how I got into telecoms. It was very exciting at that time because the Government deregulated the market in Ireland and opened it up to competition. Sean Bolger set up ITL and Denis O’Brien started Esat Telecom. I nearly blessed myself that I was a Chartered Accountant when I joined GTS because they understood numbers. I spoke their language, so I got on very well with them. It was a great place for me and, from there, I decided to partner with Alan to set up our own telecoms business in 2002. Question: What was your experience like going from being an employee to a business owner? I said to myself at the time, ‘I’ll give this a year and, if it doesn’t work, I’ll give it up.’ I had a young family and I needed a steady income. It doesn’t matter how big your bucket is if there is a hole in the bottom. We needed to make money like any other business. We actually lost money in the first year, but we were profitable in year two and we never looked back. It was all terribly exciting. As a business owner, you are everything – financier, salesperson, HR manager, cleaner – all rolled into one, so we stuck at it and we were very lucky that we didn’t need to draw any money for the first year or two. I don’t think I have ever worked as hard as I did in those earlier years. Question: Why do you think Pure Telecom was so successful from the get-go? We just kept it tight. When I worked with GTS, the company was losing money every quarter. I remember asking them, ‘Would we not be better investing the money rather than losing it? Just shutting things down would make more money’, and they said, ‘You don’t understand telecoms – we’re all about market share’. When we set up Pure Telecom, we knew we didn’t have that luxury. We weren’t big enough and we needed to have a profitable business. We went after everything that moved. If a guy in Kerry wanted to talk to me about giving us business, I’d get into the car, drive that morning to Kerry, meet him, get the business and come back to Dublin. Once we acquired any new customer, we wrapped them up in cotton wool. Customer service was a very big priority for us. We started out selling to businesses and then, in 2007, an Australian company selling residential services approached us and we acquired their business here in Ireland. That’s how we got into the residential telecoms market. It was completely different. Selling to domestic customers is a volume-based business, so you can’t look after every single customer like you can with business customers. It took us about two years to get a handle on it. We brought it back down to basics and, over time, our base started to grow by 25 percent every year. It was phenomenal. Today, we employ about 80 people and we have an annual turnover of approximately €30 million split roughly 15/85 between business and residential. The telecoms market has changed a lot since we started. We could just as easily be called ‘Pure Broadband’ or ‘Pure Data’. Voice and ‘plain old telecoms’ are gone and our big focus now is on higher broadband speeds for customers. Question: What advice do you have for other entrepreneurs starting a business? When I was leaving BDO Simpson Xavier, I remember the Managing Partner David Simpson sitting me down and asking, ‘what are you thinking of doing?’ I told him I might start my own business and he said to me, ‘look, if you do that, you must have no fear. Don’t be afraid to gear up. If you don’t, you’ll just become a bookkeeper. You have to be prepared to take risks with any business’. So, when we started Pure Telecom, I knew we would need to have the courage of our convictions. I’m very lucky that both Alan and I were prepared to take the risks we needed to take. We both had young families at the time, but we were in it to win it, so the only way was forward. I have a great wife and I remember her saying to me, ‘the worst thing that can happen is that you fail and, if you do, you just get up, dust yourself off and start again’. When you start a business, you find out very quickly who is friend and who is foe. More often than not, people are your friends and they will help you, support you and keep you going. It’s a big learning curve though so, these days, when someone starting a business asks for my advice, I try to make time to help them. Question: Were you ever afraid your business might fail? We were lucky in that Pure Telecom was making money from a very early stage, but I wouldn’t say I was afraid of failure either. In Ireland, we admire people who try something and fail. If they put their best foot forward and it doesn’t work out, we support that. You can only do your best. If you look into the past of any one individual in this country who has done well for themselves, you will find failures. That’s how we learn. When we started out, I remember saying to Alan, ‘maybe this will fail but, if it does, we won’t leave anyone in debt. We will move on, but we won’t leave a bad legacy behind us.’ As long as you are honest and you don’t try to cheat the system, there is nothing to be ashamed about if it doesn’t work out. Question What was the biggest challenge you faced building the business? Trying to get finance initially to get the business off the ground was tough. When I worked with GTS, I had bank managers offering me tens of millions of euros. Then, when we started Pure Telecom, I was dragged over the coals looking for just €100,000. In the end, I went elsewhere. I think a lot of people will tell a similar story. That’s where the courage and determination really comes in. If you want to fulfil your dreams of starting your own business, there are people out there who will help you to do it. There are ways and means of getting your project up and running. My advice is follow your gut. Don’t be afraid – just go for it.

Jun 05, 2024
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