Grow on Trees
Britain needs to unlock entrepreneurial talent wherever it's found — plus how to become an Insider, and the childhoods of exceptional entrepreneurs

This week, the Maple Review published its final report. Spearheaded by Small Business Britain, its aim is to identify and dismantle the barriers to entrepreneurship caused by economic deprivation.
The problem it identifies is one that resonates with us and many in our network. As Blair McDougall, the Minister for Small Business, puts it in his foreword, “talent and determination are spread evenly across society, but opportunity is not.” Or, to misquote Ratatouille’s Anton Ego: “Not everyone can become a great entrepreneur, but a great entrepreneur can come from anywhere.”
We aren’t just about high-growth companies. For a great many people, starting a business is a survival strategy — a way to take charge when the labour market isn’t delivering for them.
Back in January, I wrote here about the Financial Confidence Taskforce I chaired for Xero, whose report was written expressly to feed into this Review. I’m pleased to say it has. Financial confidence — the ability to read your own cash flow, price your work and stay on the right side of HMRC — is one of the Review’s eight recommendations. So is the case the Taskforce made for teaching business and enterprise in schools, not merely personal finance, which our own work with Young Enterprise had argued for too.
Elsewhere, the Review notes that the government’s Growth Guarantee Scheme only backs term loans above £25,000. For a kitchen-table business, £25,000 is an intimidating sum to borrow. The founders the Review studied tend to need somewhere between £500 and £5,000 — enough for a laptop, a van, some stock, the first few months’ rent — the range that commercial lenders find least worth their while, since a small loan costs almost as much to administer as a large one. The state fills part of it: Start Up Loans covers £500 to £25,000, but it lends only to businesses in their first few years, and its affordability checks screen out the thin-credit, no-savings founders.
The Review’s answer is a national micro-capital system, paired with light-touch support. There is even a precedent: the old Enterprise Finance Guarantee backed loans as small as £1,000.
The other barrier worth dwelling on is the welfare cliff-edge, because it is a clear case of the state tripping up the very people it is trying to help. Move from Universal Credit into self-employment and you get a twelve-month grace period; after that, the Minimum Income Floor kicks in. From that point, the system can treat you as if you are earning the equivalent of a full-time minimum wage job, even when your actual income is much lower. The result is that a founder can lose support because of uneven cash flow, which, as everyone reading this knows only too well, almost every early-stage business experiences.
The Taskforce’s own research found that more than a third of small business owners don’t know whether they made a profit last month, and Xero’s data shows that 94% of small firms have at least one loss-making month a year, with four or five being typical. A rule designed around predictable monthly wages is a poor fit for the messy reality of building a business.
The lesson running through the Maple Review is that entrepreneurship policy cannot just be about the next unicorn. As regular readers will know, we aren’t afraid of championing Britain’s most successful entrepreneurs, but we also need to recognise the millions of people for whom entrepreneurship is a route to independence, resilience and a better life. If talent really is everywhere, our job is to make sure the opportunity to turn it into a business is too.
Xero Hour
Relatedly, I’m delighted to share that Xero’s Laura Burley has joined us as an Adviser. My favourite section of all our Advisers’ profiles is when they give their take on the UK. Laura nails it:
“The UK has genuine, structural strengths as a place to build a business — and it’s important to say that clearly, because the story is sometimes told with more pessimism than the evidence warrants.
“Britain has world-class universities, a deep pool of financial and professional services talent, and one of the most dynamic startup ecosystems in the world. The fact that over half of our fastest-growing companies are co-founded by people who chose to come here and build their businesses on British soil says something powerful about our underlying appeal.
“We now just need to work a little bit harder to remove some of the barriers, listen to founders and unleash that growth!”
Insider Trading
We appreciate the time many of you put into filling in our surveys. That’s why we want to honour it with the new role of Insider.
As long as you’re a business owner, you become an Insider by filling in our Entrepreneurs Survey and opting to leave your email address when asked, or filling it out anonymously and signing up here as a Member and ticking the Become an Insider box.
In exchange for filling in our 10-minute quarterly survey — so, 40 minutes or so of your time every year — we’ll give you priority access to our events. In particular, our No Agenda Breakfasts. We’ll build this community over time as we have with others, but fundamentally we are looking for entrepreneurs who share our mission to make the UK the best place in the world to start and grow a business.
Seeds of Greatness
Over at The Generalist, Mario Gabriele has spent the past couple of months studying the childhoods of 260 exceptional entrepreneurs. The thing that unites them isn’t wealth, or the lack of it, but their experience of economic flux. While this is the beginning of a deeper study, early indications show that the founders he looked at grew up in families where their fortunes were rising or falling — scrambling towards a fortune, or watching one slip away: “Being moved by an economic vector is a more common pattern than belonging to a specific class.”
Saplings is the opener to a longer series, built from 260 founders, more than 560 books and 430 variables encoded for each one — everything from a father’s occupation to the number of times the family moved house. Most of that reading wasn’t done by a team of multilingual researchers but by AI agents working in parallel, one per book, with Claude doing the heavy lifting and a fair chunk of the source material in languages Gabriele doesn’t speak. I’ll be watching this closely.
Message from our Partner
At Fora, we create flexible workspaces that empower ambitious businesses to thrive. With over 70 locations across London, the UK and Germany, our spaces are designed to fuel productivity, creativity and growth.
Now, we’re bringing that vision to The Jellicoe at King’s Cross — a dedicated hub for founders and fast-growing companies. Here, flexibility meets opportunity: scale at speed with agile workspace solutions, connect with a curated community of entrepreneurs and investors, and enjoy all the perks of a Fora membership, from wellness spaces and hospitality-grade service to events that open doors.
Surround yourself with innovators and global tech giants in one of London’s most exciting neighbourhoods.
If you’re building the next big thing, this is where you want to be.
Our Next Events
No Agenda Breakfast: Forsters
🗓 Wednesday, 24 June 2026
🕐 08:45 to 10:00
📍 Baker Street, London
ℹ️ Join us for coffee, pastries, and honest conversation with a dozen entrepreneurs — no agenda, no pitches and no panels
⏩ Request a place
Ecosystem Builders Meetup: LSE Generate
🗓 Thursday, 2 July 2026
🕐 09:30 to 11:00
📍 LSE, London
ℹ️ Join The Entrepreneurs Network for an informal morning meetup for Ecosystem Builders at LSE Generate
⏩ Request a place
No Agenda Breakfast: Evelyn Partners
🗓 Thursday, 23 July 2026
🕐 10:00 to 11:30
📍 The City, London
ℹ️ Join us for coffee, pastries, and honest conversation with a dozen entrepreneurs — no agenda, no pitches and no panels.
⏩ Request a place
News and Views
We published the latest edition of Three Big Ideas
June’s APPG for Entrepreneurship newsletter landed on Tuesday
The FSB warns changes have left 104,000 small firms with new rates bills (Paywall — The Times)
Mayors in England are to be given more power to fuel innovation and boost jobs in their regions
The UK is to review its Catapult Network after concerns it has struggled to build national champions (Paywall — Financial Times)
The Royal Academy of Engineering has published the sixth edition of its annual Spotlight on Spinouts report
Arm’s CEO could receive an $800 million bonus if the company reaches a $1 trillion valuation
The former Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, published a new book setting out policies to get Britain growing
The chairman of M&S has claimed that there has rarely in the company’s history been a time when the regulatory environment has been less friendly to growth (Paywall — Telegraph)
Why a compute tax is not a good idea
How working from home complicates the AI jobs story
What the early lives of 260 world-changing founders tell us about entrepreneurship
HMRC’s R&D advance assurance pilot: a guide for startups
What Baroness Lane-Fox’s life-changing car accident taught her about resilience
Join Us
Our Supporters, Advisers and Strategic Partners are essential to helping us understand what entrepreneurs need to flourish, and are closely connected with our work. If you already support us — thank you. If you don’t, please consider helping us make the UK the best place in the world to start and grow a business.
Friends of the Network
Breakout Beauty UK
⏰️ Deadline: Monday, 15 June 2026
ℹ️ Breakout Beauty UK helps beauty founders turn great products into standout brands, fast
⏩ Find out more
From Product to Proof: Making Your Tech Investor Ready
🗓 Tuesday, 16 June 2026
🕐 13:00 to 14:00
📍 Online
ℹ️ Learn the hidden technical risks investors look for and how to stay in control
⏩ Find out more
C4C Global Awards
⏰️ Deadline: Tuesday, 30 June 2026
🏆 Finalists will be invited to pitch their solutions live at Convene 4 Climate Lisbon and the winners will be flown to Miami to present their solution at Convening Leaders in January 2027
ℹ️ The C4C Global Awards recognise scalable solutions and industry leaders driving sustainable transformation across business and the business events sector through innovation, technology and measurable impact
⏩ Find out more
Support for UK Entrepreneurs
We’re often asked where founders should turn for practical support beyond policy. So we’ve curated a list of government sites and trusted organisations we regularly recommend. Each week, we share a section from our Support for UK Entrepreneurs page. Are we missing something? Let us know.
Innovation, R&D and Commercialisation
Innovate UK provides grant funding and innovation support to help businesses develop and commercialise new products and services.
Innovate UK Business Growth provides free one-to-one advisory support to innovation-driven SMEs with high growth potential.
Catapult Network provides access to specialist facilities, expertise and partnerships to help businesses commercialise new technologies.
Knowledge Transfer Partnerships (KTP) provide funding to support collaboration between businesses and universities on innovation projects.
Best wishes,
Philip
Philip Salter
Founder
The Entrepreneurs Network



