Communicating effectively: Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You

I thought it was important to clarify some of the guidelines for reading Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You. Remember, if you are reading this on an iPhone, you need to wear gloves and ensure that the phone is in landscape mode. For Android users, put the phone inside a glove and then take a photo of a landscape before reading. For desktop computer users, DO NOT PRINT THIS OUT. This does not apply if you are translating it into French, or if your printer serial number is exactly 13 digits long and can be divided by at least three prime numbers.

Whatever you do, do not forward to friends or family members. You can forward it to strangers if you can guess their email address.

Hope that’s cleared everything up.

@davemcglashan

  • Power to Change have launched the C-19 Emergency Trading Income Support Scheme for community businesses that have lost trading income as a result of COVID-19. It’s available to current and previous Power to Change grantees, and to community businesses which are members of Power to Change’s strategic partners – Co-operatives UK, Locality and the Plunkett Foundation. The next funding round opens on 19th May at 10am and 100 grants will be available. You can find out more here.
  • Power to Change are also conducting a Community Business Market 2020 survey, aimed at understanding more about the community business market and to get a better understanding of how the current crisis is impacting on community businesses and what support they may need
  • Social Enterprise UK have launched an online forum, designed to bring the social enterprise community together to share their experiences of the Covid-19 pandemic, to discuss important topics and to post offers of support and calls for help. You can register for it here.
  • Third Sector have made an additional 1500 free places available for their Fundraising Conference on 20th – 21st May. Places are only available to registered charities, however. You can book a place here.
  • Supply Change and the Social Value Exchange have created an open-source directory of social enterprise suppliers which are still offering goods and services during this time. From cleaning to coffee, you can search for suppliers for your organisation here. If your social enterprise or community organisation is still operating or needs support, you can feature in the directory by filling out this short form.
  • Well done to all those who made the NatWest SE100 Index, the annual list of the UK’s leading 100 social enterprises, compiled by Pioneers Post in partnership with NatWest Social & Community Capital. It’s always good to see so many SSE Fellows in the list, which you can see here
  • SSE Fellow Hayley Stanton has launched Quiet Connections, an app which offers a safe space to easily connect with new friends and get support for those who struggle with meeting new people and speaking up in groups and conversations. Quieter people can share similar stories so they can support and learn from each other, and gain acceptance, friendship and understanding. You can find out more here.
  • If you’re at home trying to teach your children maths then Maths on Toast, a social enterprise founded by SSE Fellow Alex Fitzsimmons, could help. They are releasing lots of resources to support parents with primary age kids, including Fun Maths Monday, a creative crafty maths activity each Monday, and blog posts for parents, addressing common issues like how to help with a maths problem you can’t immediately see how to do yourself. Head here for more info.
  • Re-defined is a new, virtual conference that celebrates and cultivates the resilience of female founders and women in business in the UK. Taking place on May 29th, a programme of inspirational speakers and workshop facilitators will celebrate the successes and endurance of female founders and women in business. You can buy a ticket here.
  • The Fair Education Alliance are currently accepting applications to their Innovation Award. Open to anyone with an idea that could help end educational inequality in England, five winners will recieve 6 months of full-time salary, a place on an Innovation Incubator, an intensive programme of technical and leadership training, supportive mentoring and expert advice to help you develop, pilot and scale your idea. You can apply here.
  • Let’s end on a musical note. First up, SSE Fellow Martha Wright’s social enterprise Mindful Music have released a free set of singalong and deep relaxations with an accompanying resource pack for parents, carers, educators and anyone needing to take care of their inner child during this crisis. You can sign up here.
  • And finally, SSE Fellow Blue O’Conner is co-founder of Talk Club, a talking and listening club for men. Last week they released Soul to Save, a charity music single. You can hear the single here and find out more about Talk Club here.
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Career swapping: Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You

I don’t know if every school did this but I remember being asked to fill in a multiple choice questionnaire when I was about 15 or so, the answers to which provided a guidance to the type of job I should be aiming towards. I think I got something like ‘procurement officer’ or ‘supply chain manager’ which put paid to my ambitions of being an astronaut or an Oscar winning actor.

Why does this occur to me now? Because weirdly, lockdown has enabled me to try out some different careers to ‘sales and marketing manager’. I now know, for example, that I would be an appalling teacher or nursery worker, I should have nothing to do with anything that involves a drill or hammer but that I could be a quite successful window cleaner. I just need to get a better ladder.

Enjoy the news…

@davemcglashan

Covid-19 support

  • Barclays have launched the 100 x 100 Community Fund, offering charities with a turnover of £1m+ that are supporting Covid-related efforts. Grants of up to £100k are available, the deadline to apply is Friday 22 May, 2020. Apply here.
  • Has COVID-19 impacted your social enterprise? Do you need support to solve a challenge but don’t have the time, skills or resources? The School for Social Entrepreneurs is piloting a virtual volunteer platform, connecting skilled corporate volunteers with social entrepreneurs who need support. Would you like to be a part of this pilot and receive business support from home?
    • Take part in a 15 minute introductory call where we’ll find out more about what you’re looking for in terms of remote support
    • You will get to sign up to the platform, post volunteer opportunities requesting the skills you need and decide which applicant you would like to work with
    • We’ll then check in with you to find out about your experience of the platform and working with your volunteer

All you need to do is complete this quick expression of interest by Wednesday (13th May) and we’ll be in touch.

  • The third part of our series of blogs examining how SSE fellows & students are adapting to the Covid-19 crisis is live. It features a video chat between Nathan Hopkins from Woodshed Workshop and Sue Osborne, SSE Yorkshire and North East CEO. Josh Turner of Stand For Socks and Jacqueline Hollows of Beyond Recovery also share how they are working in the current climate. You can read the blog here.
  • An extremely useful ‘Coronavirus Continuity Planning for Social Businesses and Charities’ document created by ventures from the Year Here network is available here. It covers everything from Key Regularly-Updated Resources to Webinars/ Online Meet-ups and Business Planning.
  • SSE Fellow Shaun Fox has launched a ‘Sporting Age Stay At Home Challenge’ to help parents get young people active and develop movement skills. It’s free to take part and combines fun, easy set-up skills tests with expert scientific analysis to work out if your child’s level of ability at skills such as running, jumping and throwing is on track with their age. Find out more here.
  • If, like me, you’ve been struggling to get your kids to engage in a Zoom call for anything longer than five minutes then SSE Fellow Charlotte Whittaker could have the answer. Her social enterprise InCommon, which brings generations together, is sharing some games and activities around a different theme that families can try with older friends and relatives over the phone or video call. All the activities so far are available here.
  • Social Enterprise The Sewing Rooms have capacity to make 10,000 face masks for the general public and are currently running a crowdfunding campaign to go into full production and bring our furloughed staff members back to work. £10 will get you a re-usable and virus-resistant mask. You can back the campaign here.
  • If you are struggling with anxiety, stress or depression during lockdown, SSE Fellow Chris Fleet can offer qualified talking therapy through The Devon Clinic CIC. His team are volunteering 9am – 9pm Monday to Saturday. Details are at www.devonclinic.co.uk or you can call 01803 500300.

Other news

  • We have just a few places left on Creative Leadership – offering £2,00 grant, learning and peer support. It’s for people early on in careers in arts & culture (including freelancers), committed to creating social impact through their work. The last places are available on a first-come, first-served basis. They are rolex replica reserved for people who are both: based in England but *outside* of London; AND from a so-called “diverse background” (by which we mean you are any of the following: BAME; D/deaf and disabled people; have caring responsibilities; LGBTQ+; from an economically disadvantaged background). Apply in under 30 minutes.
  • SSE Fellow Isabel Emerson is delivering a series of interactive music sessions for wellbeing and social inclusion online through her organisation Open Strings Music. Sessions include Workplace Harmony, Musical Windows (including ukelele lessons) and a Musical Box Scheme which features a virtual visit from one of Open Strings’ musicians. All the details you need are here.
  • FotoAwrds, a social enterprise founded by SSE Fellow Nina Emett, have launched the Marilyn Stafford FotoReportage Award. £2000 is available to ‘ a professional woman photographer towards the completion of a compelling and cohesive documentary photo essay, which addresses an important social, environmental, economic or cultural issue, whether local or global’. You can find out more here.
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Perception versus reality: Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You

No, you’re not losing the plot. It is Thursday. I’m operating on slightly random timings at the moment. When all this kicked off part of me thought, ‘Hmm, lockdown. Doesn’t sound too bad. I can catch up with some reading, maybe learn a new language or something’.

Things are perhaps not running that smoothly. I’m staring at an email inbox with about 300 unread emails in it and a large part of my day is spent chasing my eighteen month daughter around while she comes up with increasingly creative ways to destroy our house. I am getting very good at washing up and tidying, however. Who knew how much washing up there could possibly be? By the time this is all over I’ll almost certainly have done the required 10,000 hours of washing up to be considered an expert. So that’s something positive.

Enjoy this week’s news…

@davemcglashan

  • Has your social enterprise been affected by Covid-19?  Trying to take your business online?  Frustrated that you’ve lost your income from trading? The Lloyds Bank and Bank of Scotland Social Entrepreneurs Trade Up programme will help you get back on track and set up to go beyond this with a stronger, sustainable, resilient business model.There are less than 2 weeks unttil the closing date: 30th April. Find out more, join an online info session and apply here.
  • Social Enterprise UK are hosting a a webinar focusing on digital marketing hosted by Stephanie Bennett, MD of digital agency Battenhall on Monday (20th April) at 11am. You can register here. It follows a webinar they delivered earlier this week which discussed digital tools & working from home, which you can watch here.
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  • A really detailed article over on Pioneers Post looking at what the UK’s social sector needs now from social investment. (Five points to you if you guessed that a large part of it is grant funding.) Read the article here.
  • Along with the resurgence of hopscotch as a popular past time, ‘counting the rainbows in the windows’ appears to be keeping south east London’s children busy at the moment (we got to around 45 the other day). Now SSE Fellow Alex Winstanley of Happy Smiles is taking things a step further by raising money to send rainbow badges to NHS staff, frontline workers and carers across the country. You can donate from just £3 here.
  • If you’d like to experience the output of an organisation that has made the move online, then do take a look at our one-day workshops. We’ve currently got good availability on our Crowdfunding for Charities and Social Enterprises on 15th May – if you are thinking of running a crowdfunding campaign in the coming months it will be money well spent. Book a place here.
  • Are you a social enterprise in Essex, Kent or East Sussex? The South East LEP would like to hear how your business has been affected by the Covid-19 lock down. It’s likely that decisions on resources and funding will follow the findings of this survey so if you specifically mention social enterprise in the comments, we could see critical resources being earmarked for social enterprise across this region. You can take the survey here.
  • Donna Rowe-Green of Lancashire based social enterprise Rosemary and Time is putting together garden memory boxes to go out to local care homes and hospices.replique chaussures
     If you have links to a hospice or a care home in Lancashire, Donna can send a box (which you can see here) for free. Contact Donna by emailing [email protected]. There are also some smaller packs some smaller packs that can be sent out to individuals in Lancashire too (containing prompt cards, a scrapbook to create and guidance notes) – use the same email address to contact Donna for further details.
  • A neat idea from SSE Fellow Rhiannon Mair Griffiths and her social enterprise Comics Youth. They’ve launched Comics Youth Radio, designed to be a place of sharing and empathy and a resource for young people (and adults) about how to live IWC replica through lockdown. The fortnightly online live radio show Lockdown! at the Disco will feature songs requested by young people across the Liverpool City Region – you can learn more about it here.
  • Finally, we were saddened this week to hear of the death of SSE London Fellow Jobeda Ali. Jobeda was an incredible force of nature and well loved by many SSE staff who were around when she learnt with us. Our thoughts are with her friends and family. A page for Jobeda’s friends and family to connect and share their memories has been set up here.
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Looking for the bright side: Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You

*Our ‘Coronavirus: How social enterprises & charities can prepare‘ blog is being regularly updated with the latest resources to help support your organisation at this time*


I’ve been looking for positives among the gloom this week. There are some. London is a strangely tranquil city at the moment; I can hear birds singing outside instead of the usual din of traffic and airplanes. The air is noticeably cleaner. People smile and say hello as they cross the road to avoid coming anywhere near you. I’m chatting to old friends on the phone more (although the topic of conversation doesn’t tend to differ from one call to the next). The walls in my house are slowly becoming covered in crayon, so it feels like I’m living in some sort of alternative art installation.

And I’ve had a chance to put together this week’s newsletter. Thank you to everyone who sent something to be included. Some really good stuff in here – this covers last week too hence the length!

Stay safe

@davemcglashan

  • Applications are still open for our biggest, funded programme – Lloyds Bank and Bank of Scotland Social Entrepreneurs programme.  14+ days of learning, a mentor, a grant and a peer-to-peer support network, run by SSE and jointly funded by The National Lottery Community Fund.  There are three levels for social entrepreneurs at start up, trade up or scale up stages of growth. In these challenging times we’ll make sure the learning on this programme meets your needs.  Our recruitment process is now fully online, and learning activities will take place online until government guidelines change. Find out more here.
  • We’re also still keen to learn more about how the current Covid-19 crisis is affecting you and your organisation, so we can tailor our learning and develop new support offerings accordingly. If you’ve got a few spare minutes, there is a survey here.
  • Our school in Yorkshire & North East are looking for a home-based part time administrator on a freelance basis for an initial period of six months. You’ll need great people skills and written communication skills, be highly organised and enjoy working as a part of a supportive team. If it sounds like you, you can find out more here.
  • Charities Aid Foundation (CAF) have launched a Coronavirus Emergency Fund, open to organisations with a charitable purpose and charitable activities, which had income of £1million or less in their last financial year. Grants of up to £10,000 are available and can cover core costs, staffing, volunteer costs, supplies and equipment, communications or other critical charitable areas. You can find out more here.
  • Pioneers Post have put together a list of grants, loans and other funding available to social enterprises and other social sector organisations. It’s well worth looking at.
  •  SSE Fellow Becky John’s business 92 Minutes is offering free communications consultancy calls with social enterprises who are supporting others remotely through this time. You can find out more here.
  • I’ve not been able to go to the shop for the last week and there are two things that I’ve needed: Haribo Starmix (which fortunately my colleague Kylie was able to deliver) and bread. If you find yourself in a similar position, live in London and need some bread then SSE Fellow Martin Cosarinsky Campos is offering online delivey through his social enterprise Breadwinner. It has the added benefit of allowing Breadwinners to keep running our programmes (which are now online) supporting refugees and young people seeking asylum. Find out more here.
  • If you are at home and find yourself with the role of ‘teacher’ added to your c.v. then SSE Fellow Sophie Parker of multi award winning Tutor in a Box  is offering live online classes for students in year 5 all the way to year 11. The first week is free, you can sign up here.
  • If you have a premises that needs cleaning, SSE Fellow LaToyah Lewis’s social enterprise Rising Stars Property Solutions can help out. Rising Stars commercial and industrial cleaning solutions and who are specialists in Bio Hazards. They are currently stepping up their capacity to clean public spaces such as hospitals, transport, schools, venues, offices, etc using the methods deployed across the NHS to disinfect for COVID-19. They use an NHS approved antimicrobial disinfectant that kills enveloped viruses such as COVID-19. They can be contacted via 01922-277117 or 07882 589997 or email [email protected].
  • Helen Mincher from SSE Yorks & North East has written a blog looking at how some of our other students and Fellows are adapting to the Covid-19 crisis. It’s the first of a series of posts detailing how our remarkable SSE fellows and students are adapting, in order to continue to deliver against their social missions. You can read the blog here.
  • Current SSE student LJ Flanders has launched a crowdfunding campaign for Cell Workout, which delivers fitness workshops to people in prison across the UK. LJ is using the campaign to launch a new ‘MADE IN HMP’ brand, producing t-shirts for men and women made by prisoners in HMPs Downview and Featherstone. It’s a great campaign, you can back it here and get your hands on one of the first t-shirts.
  • Impact Hub Kings Cross, Invest2Innovate and the British Council have partnered to to develop a new Scaling Readiness Toolkit to help enterprises access new markets. They’ll be launching it online at 11am on Thursday 9th April with a panel discussion on scaling, with perspectives from Pakistan and the UK. It’s free to take part, you can register here.
  • Early-stage, education-focused social innovators should take a look at at Fair Education Alliance’s ‘Virtual Booster’ throughout April. It gives you the opportunity to join a series of live webinars and a virtual networking event to develop your knowledge, enhance your skills and engage with experts and fellow innovators. You can register for free here.
  • SSE Fellow Henry Greenwood is recruiting a a Programme Manager (£32k) and Programme Delivery Officer (£28k) for his organisation rolex kopi Green Schools Project. Based in London, it’s an opportunity to be at the heart of an early stage social enterprise that is helping schools to develop a response to the climate crisis and get young people involved in protecting the living planet.
  • If you are in SW England, Local Spark Torbay runs a Social Enterprise Network covering Torbay and the surrounding areas. Future meetings will take place online with the next scheduled for Monday 6th April from 6pm – 8pm. You can find a link to the meeting here.  They are also running weekly Check-in/Help out meetings every Thursday evening from 6.00 – 7.00 pm. It’s an opportunity to gain information, experience, contacts and ideas. You can find out more here.
  • Finally, Year Here is a course in social innovation that is grounded in the daily experience of those at the frontline of inequality and focused on launching social businesses with potential for huge impact. Applications for the 2020/21 Social Innovation Fellowship are now open – the deadline for application is midnight on 26th April. You can apply here.
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Have I Got Social Enterprise News For You…

Greetings from me in my bedroom to you in your kitchen / living room / attic / broom cupboard / bedroom. I suppose I should really be doing this week’s newsletter via Teams or Zoom but I need to work out how to use them beyond chat conversations…

The serious part: Have I Got Social Enterprise News will be continuing as much as possible over the coming weeks and I’ll keep putting out all the information that I see that could be supportive to you and your organisation. If there is something that you think should be included, send it my way. Funding, online meet ups, working from home tips, podcasts – anything that you have found useful to help you going. If you have a specific request for support or a problem that you feel a HIGSENFY subscriber may be able to help with, let me know and I can put it out there.

Do keep sending any social enterprise news too. More then ever, we need to find some positive news to shout about. If you sent anything in the last week or so, it will be somewhere in my inbox and I’ll include it next week.

Stay safe…

@davemcglashan

Latest support + resources

  • My colleague Sophie emailed earlier this week with details of how charities and social enterprises can try to manage the current situation. If you missed it, it’s up on our website and we’ll keep updating it as we can. You can find it here
  • We’re also using our Twitter feed (@schsocent) to try and provide the latest support on offer. If you are offering online services, offers, or support for others during this time share them with using the hashtag #SocEntSolidarity and we’ll share them with our followers.
  • Our friends at Good Finance have created a COVID-19 Resource Hub for Charities & Social Enterprises. As with all these things, I imagine it’s worth bookmarking it and checking in regularly as the situation evolves. You can find it here. 
  • Digital agency Copy and Code are offering a free hour-long sessions to social impact organisations experiencing technical or communication challenges during the outbreak.
  • The always excellent Madeleine Sugden has compiled detailed advice for comms around coronavirus. Once again, it’s being updated regularly. Bookmark it here.
  • Matt Haworth has made his book The Digital Fundraising Book freely available to all. If you are looking at how you can migrate more of your fundraising online it’s well worth a look. There are also some great tips on building an online presence too. Read it here
  • ‘While none of us can pretend we really know what’s going to happen, we can influence the future’ writes Social Enterprise UK’s Dan Gregory in a piece exploring the wider societal impact that coronavirus may have. It’s well worth reading.

A couple of bits from me

  • As we move to an online world (for now) we’re going to deliver our one day workshops we can online. You can keep booking them rolex replica. If there are additional courses you think we should be running, let me know and we’ll do our best to put something together.
  • With that in mind, i’m also keen to hear from anyone who has a workshop they deliver online that could be of interest to our audience – contact me by email and I’ll get back to you next week.
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