• How CashBlack & Afrofiliate Are Turning Everyday Spending Into Black Wealth - Matthew Addai CEO
    2025/12/09
    Episode Summary What if every online purchase at a Black-owned business put cash back in your pocket – and doubled donations to charity? Matthew Addai, co-founder of Cash Black and Afrofiliate, reveals how three brothers turned a 2020 lockdown idea into the UK’s first cashback platform + affiliate network exclusively for Black-owned brands. Discover the AI-powered browser extension, real-life cashback events, and why “just talk to us” is the simplest way investors can unlock this £multi-billion opportunity.Chapters [00:00] Intro – Meet Matthew Addai, CEO of Cash Black & Afrofiliate [00:51] Cash Black Explained: Earn real cashback shopping Black-owned brands [01:13] Afrofiliate: The UK’s first affiliate network for Black brands & diverse creators [01:43] Born in 2020: From sabbatical & redundancy to two tech companies [03:36] “Cash Black” started as a joke between brothers – now it’s a movement [04:33] Building partnerships: Easier in 2020 (BLM momentum), tougher in 2025 [06:46] Funding reality: Rejections, pop-up market pitches & accelerator wins [09:40] Advice to investors: “Just communicate with us” – stop guessing what we need [11:35] Brutally honest advice to aspiring founders: “Don’t start a business… unless ‘don’t’ isn’t enough to stop you” [14:00] Where to join: Cashblack.com + Afrofiliate.com Key Discussion Points Cash Black users earn cashback OR donate (100% matched) to charity Afrofiliate connects Black brands with creators of all sizes – micro to mega Built from scratch after 2020 anti-racism wave – now backed by Wray & Nephew AI “Afrobot” Chrome extension shows Black-owned alternatives while you shopKey Takeaways Supporting Black businesses shouldn’t feel like charity – it should pay YOU Investors: Talk directly to founders instead of assuming what we need If “don’t do it” is enough to stop you – don’t. If it isn’t – welcome to entrepreneurship Cashback + affiliate tech = scalable, sustainable Black wealth creationNotable Quotes “We reward members with cash back when they shop with Black-owned businesses.” – Matthew Addai “I heard ‘don’t’ from everyone… and did it anyway.” – Matthew Addai “Investors: Just communicate with us. That’s the bare minimum.” – Matthew Addai Actionable Insights for Businesses & Investors Brands: List on Afrofiliate.com today – turn customers into paid ambassadors Creators: Join Afrofiliate – monetise your audience with Black-owned + major brands Investors: Stop guessing – DM or email Black founders directly Consumers: Install the free Afrobot Chrome extension – discover & earn from Black alternatives instantlyResources Cash Black (shop & earn) → https://cashblack.comAfrofiliate (brands + creators) → https://afrofiliate.comInstagram & all socials → @cashblackhq | @afroaffiliateFree AI Chrome extension → CashBlack AfrobotThe Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    16 分
  • How Sandra Adu Built a Global Community of 570+ Black Women Designers | Black Girls In Design
    2025/12/03
    Episode Summary From feeling like an outsider in fashion to founding Black Girls in Design London (now 570+ members across UK & Ghana), Sandra Adu reveals how lockdown workshops turned into flagship programmes with Canva, BrainStation and Akaya Foundation. Discover the raw truth about self-funding, getting rejected 3× for grants, and the mentorship + accountability strategies that finally unlocked multi-year funding to empower 300+ Black girls in design.Chapters [00:00] Intro & Powerbook 2025 Recognition [00:51] Sandra’s Journey: Fashion → Graphic Design → Agency Art Director (Rolls-Royce, HSBC, Adobe) [01:48] Lockdown Pivot → Lecturer at UAL & Royal College of Art → PhD [02:15] Founding Black Girls in Design (2022) – The Community She Wished She Had [02:44] Flagship Programmes: Design Her Skills (Canva), Design Her Futures (Ghana-UK), Mastering Your Skills (BrainStation) [03:41] Self-Funding Reality: Building Everything Herself + Spending Thousands While Full-Time Employed [05:01] Rejected 3× → Won Multi-Year Funding: The Power of Storytelling & Community Support [06:30] Accountability Strategy: Mentorship Circles That Actually Work [09:25] How Corporates & Investors Can Find & Fund Black-Led Impact Businesses [11:50] Advice to Aspiring Founders: Purpose Over Profit, Start Small, Trade Skills for Access Key Discussion Points 3 flagship programmes reaching UK + Ghana Turned 3 lockdown workshops into partnerships with Canva, BrainStation & Akaya Foundation Rejected 3 times for funding → finally won by leading with personal story & measurable impact Built a 570+ strong global community in just 3 years 79% of Black business owners feel unsupported — here’s how to change thatKey Takeaways Your personal “why” and story are your strongest funding assets Mentorship + accountability circles > life coaches Write the vision, share it publicly, let the community hold you to it Start where you are: Sandra traded logos for event tickets when she couldn’t afford entryNotable Quotes “Your story is what lands the funding.” – Sandra Adu “I never wanted the next generation of Black girls to feel as isolated as I once did.” – Sandra Adu “Profit-first founders give up in year one. Think purpose first.” – Sandra Adu Actionable Insights for Businesses & Investors Corporates: Partner with visible community organisations (e.g., Black Girls in Design, Foundervine) instead of building your own pipelines Recruiters: Tap into ready-made talent pools of Black creatives instead of asking “where are they?” Founders: Write your goals publicly → join a mentorship circle → get rejected → refine → win Trade skills for access when cash is tight (Sandra’s logo-for-ticket hack still works in 2025)Resources Black Girls in Design → https://blackgirlsindesign.comInstagram & LinkedIn → @blackgirlsindesign_ Wray Forward & Powerbook 2025 → https://www.wrayandnephew.com/wray-forwardsThe Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    15 分
  • Why 81% of Black Founders Can’t Raise Capital (and How to Fix It) – Cecil Adjalo, COO Foundervine
    2025/11/26
    Episode Summary 81% of Black & ethnic-minority founders find raising startup capital difficult — vs 56% of white founders. Cecil Adjalo (COO, Foundervine) reveals the hidden structural barriers, the power of community economics, and why Black founders who reach the same milestone have already proven 10× resilience. Discover the free programmes, corporate partnerships, and mindset shifts closing the multi-billion funding gap.Chapters [00:00] Intro & Cecil’s Role at Foundervine [00:56] Wray Forward: Supporting 4,000+ Black Founders Since 2021 [02:19] The Shocking 81% vs 56% Funding Gap [02:48] Structural Barriers: Networks, Wealth, Bias & Bank Lending [04:16] Power Book 2025 – 25 Stand-Out Black UK Founders [06:09] Doing More With Less: Beard Surgeon Hits £1.7M Sales [07:34] The Power of Buying Black & Circulating the Pound [09:54] Closing the Knowledge Gap (Free Programmes vs “10× Courses”) [14:06] Confidence Crisis: Why Black Men Ask for Money Less [16:32] Banks Reject Ethnic-Minority Firms Nearly 2× More (49% vs 32%) [18:54] Corporate Partnerships That Actually Work [20:23] The One Thing Lenders Must Understand About Black Resilience [21:50] Resources & Close Key Discussion Points Black UK household wealth is up to 9× lower → less friends & family funding Ethnic-minority firms 49% loan rejection rate vs 32% overall (British Business Bank) Black founders operate ultra-lean, turning £100–£300 into million-pound businesses Wray Forward (Foundervine + Wray & Nephew) has supported 4,000+ founders for free Confidence gap: 53% of Black founders held back by fear of askingKey Takeaways Resilience is the hidden superpower: Black founders who reach the same point have jumped higher hurdles Community economics works — keep the pound circulating inside before it leaves Free, high-quality programmes beat paid “guru” courses every time Corporates get better ROI by funding community-led organisations, not running their own schemesNotable Quotes “When a Black founder looks the same as a white founder on paper, they’ve already overcome 10× more barriers.” – Cecil Adjalo “If communities don’t buy and sell from each other, they can never grow large.” – Cecil Adjalo “We turned hundreds of pounds into £1.7 million in sales.” – Beard Surgeon exampleActionable Insights for Businesses & Investors Lenders: Create dedicated funds or policies that score resilience & barriers overcome Corporates: Partner with (and fund) grassroots organisations like Foundervine instead of direct programmes Black consumers: Buy Black first — every pound spent multiplies inside the community Founders: Join free programmes like Wray Forward for mentorship, finance access & communityResources Wray Forward programme & Power Book 2025 → https://www.wrayandnephew.com/wray-forwardsFoundervine programmes → https://www.foundervine.com/our-programmes/wrayforward-pitchandrumpunchFree events, grants & community → foundervine.comThe Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    23 分
  • Why Neuro-Inclusion Is the Key to Profitability | Dr Louise Morpeth, CEO of Brain in Hand
    2025/11/18
    Episode Summary 90% of business leaders say they’re committed to inclusion — yet only half know how to support neuro-divergent staff. Dr Louise Morpeth reveals shocking research: 43% of neuro-divergent employees are ready to quit, but with the right adjustments businesses can unlock a 45% productivity boost, 24% higher retention, and £21,000 per person in savings. Discover the practical, low-cost steps that turn good intentions into profit.Chapters[00:00] Intro & Brain in Hand Overview[00:29] 90% of Leaders Want Inclusion – But Only 50% Know How[00:55] What Is Neuro-divergence? (Autism, ADHD, Dyslexia + More)[01:49] The Employee-Employer Disconnect[02:16] 77% of HR Leaders Worried About Insufficient Support[02:44] Creating Psychological Safety & Spotting Hidden Struggles[03:44] 45% Productivity Boost + £21K Savings Per Person[04:37] Simple Cultural Changes That Work for Everyone[06:00] 43% Considering Leaving – How to Retain Neuro-Diverse Talent[07:20] Cost-Effective Strategies (Start with Manager Training)[08:18] First Steps to Build a Neuro-Inclusive Culture Tomorrow[09:39] How Brain in Hand’s “Coach-in-Your-Pocket” Works[11:05] Why Media Portrayals of Neuro-divergence Miss the Mark[12:04] Resources & Close Key Discussion Points 43% of neuro-divergent employees plan to leave in the next 12 months Only 1 in 5 feel safe disclosing their condition to managers Inclusive workplaces deliver 45% higher productivity, 24% better retention, 11 fewer sick days Average financial saving: £21,000 per neuro-divergent employee per year Simple fixes: “Work With Me” profiles, clear schedules, unambiguous communication Manager confidence is the #1 barrier – and the biggest opportunityKey Takeaways Neuro-inclusion isn’t charity — it’s a proven profit driver Start with psychological safety and manager training (biggest ROI) Small adjustments (e.g., sending week-1 schedules early) reduce anxiety and boost performance 3 in 4 employers admit they’re missing untapped potentialNotable Quotes “45% increase in productivity, 24% increase in retention, and £21,000 saved per person.” – Dr Louise Morpeth “Only 1 in 5 neuro-divergent employees feel confident disclosing to their manager.” – Dr Louise Morpeth “We need nuance — neuro-divergence is neither tragedy nor superpower, it’s individual.” – Dr Louise Morpeth Actionable Insights for Businesses Add a “Work With Me” section in onboarding for every employee (not just neuro-divergent) Train managers on clear, unambiguous communication and reasonable adjustments Join the Disability Confident scheme and signal adjustments in job ads Run an anonymous staff survey to understand your neuro-diversity profile Pilot Brain in Hand or similar digital + human coaching supportResources Full research & employer toolkit: https://www.braininhand.co.ukBrain in Hand platform: Digital + human coaching for neuro-divergent staffThe Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    13 分
  • Why Property Concerns Are Delaying Major Milestones with Craig Carson - Barratt London
    2025/10/31
    Episode SummaryHost Clayton M. Coke interviews Craig Carson, Managing Director of Barratt London, on how London’s housing crunch is stalling Gen Z life goals and what developers are doing to help. From 40% delaying marriage/kids to deposit matches and new-build perks, discover Barratt’s “Step on the Ladder” campaign and practical paths to ownership. Ideal for first-time buyers, renters, and property professionals.Chapters [00:00] Intro & Barratt London Overview [00:29] 40+ Years, 50K Homes, TfL Partnerships [00:57] 36% Young Adults Held Back by No Home [01:26] Gen Z Delays & “Step on the Ladder” Campaign [02:21] London Land Squeeze & Lifestyle Shifts [03:45] 29% Don’t Know How to Start Buying [04:37] Cutting Through Negative Property Press [05:05] Key Worker Deposits, Deposit Unlock, 5% Match [06:50] Shared Ownership & Lifetime ISA (£1K Bonus) [08:17] New-Build vs. Fixer-Upper Advantages [10:10] Stamp Duty Explained & Broker Advice [12:02] Tapping Buyer Excitement [13:26] Government 1.5M Homes Target [14:48] Entrepreneur Advice: Stay in the Market [15:44] Resources & Close Key Discussion Points Barratt London: 40+ years, 50,000 homes delivered, 2,000/year goal via TfL brownfield sites. Gen Z Crisis: 40% delay milestones; 36% feel held back; 29% clueless on process. Market Dynamics: Land scarcity, Elizabeth Line, hybrid work, 50% affordable homes. Solutions: Mortgage brokers, Deposit Unlock (95% LTV), 5% deposit match, key worker schemes. Shared Ownership (via partners), Lifetime ISA (£1,000 bonus on £4,000 saved). New-Build Perks: Move-in ready, energy-efficient, 10-year NHBC warranty. Stamp Duty/Mortgages: Hidden costs; brokers simplify. Policy: 1.5M homes target; ambitious collaboration needed.Key Takeaways Mortgage often cheaper than rising rent—deposit access is key. Lifetime ISA adds £1,000 free per £4,000 saved annually. New homes = lower bills, no reno hassle, prime transport links. Start with a broker to avoid surprises like stamp duty. Optimism drives sales—focus on dream, not hard-sell.Notable Quotes “40% of Gen Z are putting off marriage, children, or travel because of the housing ladder.” – Craig Carson “The difference between mortgage and rent is marginal—accessing deposit is key.” – Craig Carson “Buying new: move in, put furniture down, start living—day one.” – Craig Carson “Better being in the market than not in the market.” – Craig CarsonActionable Insights for Businesses Launch beginner guides like “Step on the Ladder” to build trust. Offer deposit boosts (5% match, 95% LTV) to close rent-vs-buy gap. Market new-build energy savings and 10-year warranties. Partner with housing associations for shared ownership pipelines. Train teams on empathy—guide buyers through nerves to excitement.Resources Barratt Homes WebsiteStep on the Ladder Campaign The Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    16 分
  • Why Savings Confusion Leaves Millions Short-Changing Themselves with Sarah Pennells
    2025/10/23
    Episode Summary: In this insightful episode of The Cashflow Show, hosted by Clayton M. Coke, Consumer finance and savings expert Sarah Pennells joins to discuss the findings of Royal London’s recent research on savings and ISAs. The episode dives into why millions of UK Entrepreneurs are missing out on financial opportunities due to confusion, risk aversion, and myths about investing. Sarah shares actionable insights on overcoming barriers to savings, understanding ISAs, and empowering diverse groups, including women, to invest confidently. Perfect for anyone looking to make their money work harder!Key Discussion Points Role of a Consumer Finance Expert: Sarah explains her work at Royal London, including webinars, research on financial resilience, and creating guides to demystify pensions and ISAs. Royal London’s ISA Research: A survey of 4,000 UK adults revealed insights into savings habits, ISA usage, and barriers to investing, such as risk aversion and lack of understanding. Risk Aversion in the UK: British savers tend to be cautious, often sticking to cash savings despite inflation risks, with myths about needing large sums to invest. Stocks and Shares ISAs: 60% of cash ISA holders are open to moving funds to stocks and shares ISAs for better returns, but barriers like jargon and lack of confidence persist. Gender Gap in Confidence: Women report lower confidence in understanding ISA rules, highlighting the need for jargon-free communication. Financial Mindset Shift: Sarah emphasizes small, consistent investments and the power of compound interest for long-term wealth building.Key Takeaways Many UK adults have significant cash savings (average £15,000) but avoid investing due to myths about needing wealth to start. Stocks and shares ISAs are accessible, starting at £50/month, and offer tax-free growth, ideal for long-term goals like retirement. Inflation erodes cash savings over time, making investing a smarter choice for funds not needed for 5+ years. Women face unique barriers in finance due to jargon; clear, simple communication can bridge this gap. Compounding is a powerful tool for wealth creation, even with small, regular investments.Notable Quotes “Personal finance, savings, and investing can still be absolutely baffling to some people, even those making demanding decisions daily.” – Sarah Pennells “You don’t invest to make yourself rich; you don’t need to be a millionaire to start investing.” – Sarah Pennells “It’s about what that money will let you do… small shifts today, through the magic of time and compounding, can mean a different place in 10, 15, 20 years.” – Sarah Pennells “Be fearful when everyone’s greedy, and greedy when everyone’s fearful.” – Sarah Pennells, quoting Warren BuffettActionable Insights for Businesses Simplify Financial Communication: Use clear, jargon-free language to make investment products like ISAs accessible, especially for women and first-time investors. Educate on Risk and Reward: Address risk aversion by highlighting long-term benefits of investing and the impact of inflation on cash savings. Promote Accessible Entry Points: Market low-entry investment options (e.g., £50/month for ISAs) to dispel myths about needing large sums. Leverage Digital Resources: Offer guides and webinars, like Royal London’s, to educate clients on financial tools and build trust. Target Long-Term Goals: Position investments as solutions for future aspirations (e.g., retirement, dream holidays) to shift consumer mindsets.Resources Royal London ISA Guides: RoyalLondon.com/ISAsguides Follow Sarah Pennells on Twitter/X The Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The Mediator - aka Theme from The Cashflow Show" [PRS] and "Better Call Clayton" [PRS] “What are YOU like?”, “60 Second Shoot-Out” &"What About The Tech?" are all intellectual properties of Dialogue [London] Ltd(c) Clayton M Coke/PRMS Ltd/Dialogue [London] Ltd | All Rights Reserved ★ Support this podcast ★
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    21 分
  • £75 Billion Opportunity: Professor Monder Ram OBE on Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship
    2025/10/16
    Episode Summary :Could the UK economy gain a £75 billion boost by empowering ethnic minority businesses?In this episode of The Cashflow Show, host Clayton M. Coke interviews Professor Monder Ram OBE, Director of CREME at Aston University, about the Time to Change report. Professor Ram reveals how ethnic minority entrepreneurs, twice as entrepreneurial as their white counterparts, face barriers in finance, markets, and support, yet hold untapped potential for growth.Learn how addressing these challenges can drive economic growth and how businesses can support inclusive entrepreneurship.Listen in for actionable insights and visit CREME at Aston University for the full Time to Change report!Key Discussion PointsCREME’s Mission: The Centre for Research in Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship (CREME) researches and develops solutions for challenges facing UK ethnic minority businesses (00:28–01:26).Entrepreneurial Disparity: Ethnic minority communities are twice as entrepreneurial but face higher business failure rates after 3.5 years compared to white counterparts (01:26–04:22).Economic Potential: Ethnic minority businesses contribute £25 billion to the UK economy, with potential to reach £100 billion if barriers are addressed (03:23–03:52).Time to Change Report: A NatWest-backed study provides 10 evidence-based recommendations to boost growth through better finance, data, and support (07:18–11:11).Finance Barriers: Black and ethnic minority entrepreneurs are twice as likely to be discouraged from seeking finance despite having bankable propositions (04:52–05:50).Support Gaps: Current business support often misaligns with the needs of minority entrepreneurs, who require high-value networks and supply chain access (06:20–07:18).Government Strategy: The Backing Your Business strategy incorporates CREME’s recommendations, emphasizing the everyday economy and inclusive policies (13:08–15:32).NatWest’s Role: NatWest’s 10-year incubator program fosters inclusive support, creating mutual atmospheres for minority entrepreneurs (17:00–18:24).Regional SME Summits: Government summits aim to gather feedback, but success depends on implementation and community partnerships (19:20–20:49).Global Lessons: Long-term, well-funded initiatives in the US and Canada show the need for sustained investment, unlike the UK’s often short-lived programs (22:16–24:11).Key TakeawaysEthnic minority businesses contribute £25 billion to the UK economy, with a potential £75 billion GVA boost if growth barriers are addressed.Key challenges include access to finance, high-value markets, and tailored support, with discouragement doubling the hurdle for bankable propositions.The Time to Change report, backed by NatWest, offers 10 evidence-based solutions, now part of the government’s Backing Your Business strategy.Community partnerships and long-term investment, as seen in NatWest’s incubators, are critical for inclusive entrepreneurship.Regional SME summits must focus on implementation to ensure minority businesses benefit from inclusive policies.Notable Quotes“Minority communities are twice as entrepreneurial as their white counterparts for many decades... yet they continue to face challenges.” – Professor Monder Ram (01:26)“Ethnic minority businesses contribute £25 billion to the economy... That contribution could increase fourfold to £100 billion.” – Professor Monder Ram (03:23)“Black and ethnic minority entrepreneurs are discouraged from accessing the system... They’re twice as likely to be discouraged from raising finance.” – Professor Monder Ram (05:20)“Supporting black businesses isn’t preferential treatment, it’s simply levelling the playing field and realising an opportunity.” – Professor Monder Ram (14:35)“The first thing is believe in yourself... There’s a huge amount of support out there and people who want to give back.” – Professor Monder Ram (25:08)Actionable Insights for BusinessesEnhance Finance Access: Partner with banks to create streamlined loan processes, reducing discouragement for ethnic minority entrepreneurs.Build Inclusive Networks: Develop mentorship programs or incubators, like NatWest’s, to connect minority businesses with high-value supply chains.Support Everyday Economy: Invest in retail, cafes, and other minority-dominated sectors to boost local economic growth.Advocate for Data Collection: Push for a UK census of ethnic minority businesses to better understand and support their contributions.Engage Community Organizations: Collaborate with groups like the Black Founders Collective to deliver tailored business support and increase visibility.ResourcesCREME at Aston University: Access the Time to Change report and more at CREME at Aston The Time to Change Report can be viewed HEREThe Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/...
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    27 分
  • South African Wealth on the Move: Yash Naidoo of Nedbank on UK Investment Trends
    2025/10/08
    Why are South African high-net-worth individuals flocking to the UK? In this episode of The Cashflow Show, host Clayton M. Coke speaks with Yash Naidoo, Senior Wealth Planner at Nedbank Private Wealth, about the ongoing migration of South African wealth to the UK. Yash shares insights on cultural ties, investment preferences, and wealth planning strategies driving this trend. Discover how businesses can tap into this migration, from property investments to global portfolios, and help clients achieve their financial goals. Tune in for expert advice and to explore wealth planning solutions!Key Discussion PointsRole of Wealth Planning: Naidoo uses cashflow modeling to align clients’ goals, simplifying complex financial decisions for South Africans relocating to the UK (00:29–00:57).Trend of Migration: Over 15 years, Nedbank has seen consistent South African client interest in UK relocation, driven by historic and cultural ties (01:26–02:51).UK’s Appeal: Familiarity from shared legal, educational, and cultural systems (e.g., English language, rugby) makes the UK a seamless destination (02:23–02:51).Investment Preferences: Clients favor globally diversified portfolios and UK property purchases for stability and growth (03:19–04:17).UK as a Global Hub: Proximity to the EU, minimal time differences, and easy flights make the UK an ideal base for South Africans (04:46–05:16).Anti-Foreigner Sentiment: Perceived by some, but not a major deterrent for high-net-worth South Africans navigating multicultural environments (05:43–06:12).Wealth Planning First Steps: Budgeting, understanding income streams, and opening international bank accounts are key to successful transitions (06:41–07:38).Entrepreneurial Spirit: South Africans bring entrepreneurial energy, enhancing the UK’s multicultural economy (08:07–08:36).Sustained Trend: Migration is expected to continue due to education opportunities and family ties, with no signs of slowing (08:36–09:32).Practical Steps for Relocation: Start with reconnaissance trips, open international accounts, and seek professional advice to hedge currency risks (09:59–11:24).Key TakeawaysSouth African wealth migration to the UK is driven by cultural familiarity, education, and investment opportunities, a trend consistent for 15 years.Globally diversified portfolios and UK property are top investment choices for high-net-worth South Africans.Wealth planning, including budgeting and currency hedging, is critical for smooth transitions and long-term financial success.The UK’s proximity to the EU and strong infrastructure make it a strategic base for global-minded South Africans.Entrepreneurial South Africans contribute to the UK’s multicultural economy, with wealth planning enabling legacy and lifestyle goals.Notable Quotes“We try to really understand what [clients] are trying to achieve... and help them along their life journey.” – Yash Naidoo (00:29)“There’s a familiarity now between South Africa and the UK... from the legal system, the education system, rugby, cricket.” – Yash Naidoo (02:51)“The UK is an excellent positioning... It’s a wonderful transition point without taking a massive step elsewhere.” – Yash Naidoo (04:46)“South Africans are very entrepreneurial... It’s a good thing to have a multicultural society.” – Yash Naidoo (08:07)“One of the first things is to open an international bank account to transition wealth and hedge the currency risk.” – Yash Naidoo (10:26)Actionable Insights for BusinessesOffer Tailored Wealth Planning: Develop cashflow modeling services to help relocating clients align investments with lifestyle goals, like Nedbank’s approach.Target Property Investments: Market UK properties to South African expats, emphasizing move-in-ready homes to meet demand (61% prefer new builds per related housing data).Simplify Financial Transitions: Provide international banking solutions to hedge currency risks, easing wealth transfers for high-net-worth clients.Leverage Cultural Ties: Highlight UK-South Africa connections (e.g., education, legal systems) in marketing to attract South African investors.Support Entrepreneurial Ventures: Create incubators or networks for South African entrepreneurs to integrate their skills into the UK economy.ResourcesNedbank Private Wealth: Explore wealth planning solutions at www.nedbankprivatewealth.com.The Cashflow Show can be reached here:Website: www.thecashflowshowpodcast.com Email: thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/thecashflowshow Instagram: https://instagram.com/thecashflowshowpodcastTo sponsor or advertise on The Cashflow Show Podcast, contact us at thecashflowshowpodcast@gmail.comClayton M Coke can be found here:LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/claytoncokeWebsite: https://www.prmsltd.co.ukEmail: info@prmsltd.co.uk Twitter: https://twitter.com/prmsltd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/prmsltd/ Our theme music is called "The ...
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