Category: Asset Based Finance (page 10 of 10)

WIN a T6 or T7 Tractor!

Once we heard that Farmers Guardian has once again teamed up with New Holland to give you an opportunity to win the use of an Auto Command™ tractor for one year, well we just had to share this!

As well as this, the winner along with nine lucky runners-up will win a factory tour for up to five people at Basildon, Essex – which is the home of the popular T6 and T7 tractors series.

The T6 range comprises seven models which produce between 119 – 173hp and is the tractor of choice for the mixed farmers, as well as contractors and specialist agribusinesses. The range includes three new Auto Command™ continuously variable transmission models for even greater efficiency and ease of use.

The T7 range models range between 171hp and 274hp. The T7 is perfect for both farmers and contracting operations, offering excellent performance and exceptional fuel efficiency. They are ideally suited to a wide range of farming tasks including field cultivation, high-speed transport and front loader activities thanks to exceptional manoeuvrability and versatility. Nine T7 models also features the Auto Command™ Transmission for maximum efficiency.

Both ranges are built in the award-winning manufacturing facility in Basildon, Essex, which celebrates in 2014 its fiftieth anniversary.

To enter this great competiton visit their website at www.farmersguardian.com

Something Nice On Your Lunch Hour

Above Agriculture – A Summer In The Skies

Jason Hawkes has been taking aerial photographs from the skies above the UK for more than 20 years. Perched in the open door of a helicopter, hundreds of metres above the ground, his vantage point offers a colourful and striking view of the land below.

Here – with his latest set of images – he explains how he spent the summer of 2013 criss-crossing Britain, snapping the natural and manmade patterns and shapes that dominate our rural landscape.

Just click the link below to view the slideshow.

/www.bbc.co.uk/news

All photographs subject to copyright. Aerial images courtesy Jason Hawkes. Music by the Steve Miller Band, Paul Weller and KPM Music.

Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 17 September 2013.

Manufacturers pin growth hopes on new products and exports

Britain’s manufacturers are substantially increasing their strategy for innovation to grow their presence in emerging markets, according to a new survey sponsored by NatWest.

More than two thirds of companies plan increasingly ambitious innovation of new products, technology and research to aid exports to new countries during the next three years, according to a survey conducted by the manufacturers’ organisation EEF.

The move follows a difficult recovery where most businesses focused on improving processes to cut costs and meet the needs of existing customers. More than 70% of the 147 companies questioned for the survey plan to move into new markets on the strength of innovation in products and services, a rise from 54% during the past three years.

Resources and expertise

However, innovation is a difficult process, which requires significant resources and expertise, and selling into new markets has heightened some of the challenges faced by manufacturers, including low cost competitors and ever shorter product life cycles.

Steve Radley, EEF Director of Policy, said: “After a long and slow recovery manufacturers are looking to drive growth through innovation, developing new products and services for new markets. However, the demands of selling into new markets have increased the ‘need for speed’ when it comes to innovation, something that remains a key challenge for manufacturers.”

To help overcome these barriers companies are increasingly collaborating with customers, suppliers and research institutions on innovation activity. The percentage of companies working with research institutions has risen significantly, up from 44% in 2010 to 62% in 2013.

Such collaboration is not limited to within the UK as 51% of companies, including smaller businesses, were working with organisations overseas.

Companies also use government support to help with their innovation. This is well targeted, with schemes such as the Knowledge Transfer Partnership and the new network of Catapult centres helping companies to access expertise and facilities. European funding has also proved an important source of support.

The EEF has urged the government to build on existing work by raising awareness, ensuring stability and keeping access simple. In particular, government should:

  • Ensure stability by announcing a long term commitment to the Technology Strategy Board; maintain the breadth of support mechanisms such as the R&D tax credit
  • Simplify and streamline application processes and consider an ‘innovation active’ qualification to fast-track access to support.
  • Improve access to the new network of Catapult centres by streamlining membership models and, longer term, develop metrics to ensure SME engagement.

Growing confidence

Mark Eastwood, Head of Manufacturing for Business and Commercial Banking at NatWest, said: “Manufacturing plays a vital role in the UK economy and is the backbone of real growth, so it is fantastic to see that confidence is growing across the sector. Investment in innovation and research is key to keeping on top of this global market and manufacturers need stability and certainty as they look to invest in new products and markets.”

Despite the increasing attention being given towards innovation however, the survey also highlights that at 1.1% of GDP Business Expenditure on R&D (BERD) in the UK remains low by international standards. Even after adjustments for structural differences between countries, the UK is 0.4% below the OECD average and further behind the leading countries such as the US, Sweden and Korea.

Newer posts »