https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2105/S00093/digital-boost-productivity-commission-and-living-standards.htm
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Digital Boost, Productivity Commission and living standards |
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On Tuesday small business minister Stuart Nash kicked off the Digital Boost Alliance. On Thursday a report from the Productivity Commission told us why business needs a digital shot in the arm.
The Digital Boost Alliance is a group of 20 companies. It was pulled together by Craig Young who heads Tuanz.
There are
multinationals like Microsoft and AWS in the mix. You’d
expect that.
Money, an important part of the digital equation, is represented by the five main banks operation here. Then come local tech companies: Datacom, Xero and, if we accept Australia as local, MYOB.
New Zealand’s telecommunications sector is represented by Spark, 2degrees and Chorus. Vodafone is a notable non-starter.
CertNZ and MBIE are in the mix. So is The Warehouse. While founder Sir Stephen Tindall is a keen personal supporter of initiatives like this, the Warehouse Group sells a lot of technology and supporting products to small business.
Mindlab is a member. It hosted the launch
event.
Each partner offers something different. There are offers of discounts of products and services, extra support, employee training and research.
It’s a big, ambitious goal.
We have been here before. Other initiatives have had similar goals. The difference this time is there is more money, broader industry support. It is a public-private joint venture.
Nash says the government kicked-in $44 million for digital training and advice in this year’s budget.
He singles out cloud computing. He says it has
great potential. “A 20 percent increase in the uptake of
cloud computing could be worth another $6 billion to the
economy.”
Having a web site can help small businesses. It’s an efficient way of finding and retaining customers.
Yet it is not always appropriate. Many small businesses are subcontractors. They don’t need to sell themselves online. Nor do they need to spend money advertising with Google or Facebook.
Their digital needs are elsewhere.
I assumed their story was going to be about how they built a website and sales took off. Instead they told me how last year they moved all their backend systems to the cloud and how that made a real difference to the business.
This is where there are huge
benefits.
Larger companies can afford to have technology specialists on the team. With smaller firms responsibility might be with the owner. Most likely it will be with someone without training or experience.
Second, New Zealand small businesses are smaller than you find in other countries.
We’re talking about companies with a less
than a couple of dozen employees and the majority are much
smaller than that. In other countries these would be called
micro-businesses.
Which means the Digital Boost project is timely.
If there’s one area both the Digital Boost
project and the Productivity Commission agree on is that we
need to do more than move people to digital
tools.
There is an echo with cyber security. Many managers and business people think spending money on security products will solve the risks.
It can help, but without educating employees on how to think in more security conscious ways, that spending is wasted.
Spending money on new computers, software and
services is a start. Yet it’s crucial to set aside part of
the tech budget for training.
Likewise, it is important to use technology where it has the most benefits.
It’s no accident that Xero and MYOB are behind Digital Boost, moving to digital account keeping, tax paperwork and electronic invoicing can have an instant pay-off for a small business.
If Digital Boost delivers, Nash says it can be worth billions of dollars each year to the New Zealand economy.
That’s great, but meaningless
to individuals, what matters more is that it has the power
to lift everyone’s standard of living.
Digital Boost, Productivity Commission and living standards was first posted at billbennett.co.nz.
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