I'm sure the list could go on and on...............the bottom line is there is more that can be done to support SMEs but instead of engaging with heads of large corporates who are so far removed from reality its unreal, why not identify successful SME business owners and pick their brains instead.
In my opinion this is down to a lack of sincerity; a lack of basic honesty on the part of our political overlords. And indeed the individuals who benefit from these agencies (who are the people who run them, not the people they're supposed to be servicing)...
I gave one small experience from over 20 years ago. The SDA didn't
CARE that they were damaging tiny fragile little business that were being started by people on inner-city housing estates. This sort of thing STILL goes on! By way of another example, go to this site and try to find MY business....
West Lothian Business Portal - Business Directory I've been based in West Lothian since 1995.... Tried DOZENS of times to have my company listed in that directory.... The reason I'm not there is that In 1999 I was directly responsible for exposing certain matters of maladministration on the part of the council in the press... Along with a raft of other things (constant hassle with getting bins emptied, council tax payments getting 'lost', garage applications getting 'lost'; God help me if I ever tried to build a house in West Lothian!) this seems to be part of my 'punishment' for 'rocking the boat...
The problem is
the mentality of the people who are running these agencies and that cuts across all aspects of our public services. Scotland (and the rest of the UK) is failing its entrepreneurs because the people running these things lack
integrity. They are disconnected from and uncaring about reality, preferring instead silly grandiose schemes that yield foreign trips and champagne suppers....
Another example.... The Chunghwa plant in Mossend. I seem to recall the figure of £12Million being floated in 1995 to bring this monstrosity to Lanarkshire.... AT THAT TIME I and MANY other commentators were pointing out that the picture tube industry was in terminal decline; and would be dead in ten years. The writing was WELL on the wall!
DESPITE that the stuffed shirts decreed that public money should be spent shipping Taiwan's OBSOLETE and ILL-MAINTAINED rubbish. What was shipped over would have cost more to scrap that it did to dump it here and squeeze the last bit of life out of it. Meanwhile, back in Taiwan, it was replaced with equipment to produce the new cutting-edge flatscreens that were ultimately to see the demise of the CRT as a display technology....
Predictably, the plant didn't travel well; and never worked properly.. And even if it HAD would be a white elephant by now in any case. All this WAS predicted at the time.In total somewhere in the region of £20Million was wasted... In a region laid waste by Thatcher's rout; STILL a wasteland in fact.
And the question I and many others asked at the time.... How many of the small, specialised shops, garages, factories, workshops could have been brought back to life for £12M? Given an average investment of £10K each (very realistic back in '95) over a THOUSAND new businesses could have been seeded...
The decision to invest in ChungHwa was a
dishonest one; As is the investment in the Edinburgh Trams Project. As will be the investment inthe new Glasgow Supercampus...
Nobody will get a knighthood out of a project to invest a few thousand quid to set up an affordable private nursery in the City Centre, or an after school club in your local village. There will be no Champagne and after-dinner speeches when that shop unit that's been lying empty for years in your local high street gets opened up by a single-mum to sell decent affordable baby clothes... The opening of a new Chinese take-away won't result in a banquet being laid on in honour for the Chinese Ambassador.... AND FOR THOSE reasons NOBODY in government or the 'agencies' REALLY gives a flying fart about these things...
From the Scotsman Article....
Sir Tom Hunter, whose grant funded the launch of the Hunter Centre, called for local authorities to "step up" in an impassioned foreword to the report.
"At its heart economic recovery will be delivered by business and small businesses and their growth has never been so important," he wrote. "For that reason, local authorities, now responsible for enterprise service delivery, need to step up to supporting those businesses in their area – we're watching,"
Well Tom; there's a bloody good chance your eyeballs will dry oot before ye see much action from local authorities! I don't believe my own treatment is
at all unusual. And when you're dealing with people whose heads are so filled with childish spite that they behave in this way...

Many of my friends and family could tell you similar tales; Government agencies are more likely to OBSTRUCT your business than help it!
Scotland is failing its entrepreneurs because it puts fantasists in place in these agencies instead of serious-minded credible adults! Dreamers who seem to imagine "Howards Way" was actually a series of management training videos!
I've been in business for over 23 years... And never
had, because I've never been able to successfully source, a bare brass penny's worth of help or assistance from any government agency... Can't even get my business listed in the local authority's directory!