Entrepreneurs and small and medium-sized companies account for the majority of business industry worldwide, and they werenât prepared for what coronavirus has unleashed. A lack of digitalisation may have put their businesses at risk, but theyâve responded by putting customersâ needs first and engaging with new digital models
Interpreting data and contextualising statistics can be tricky at times, but some figures are so stark they leave little room for doubt â 99.9% of companies in Spain are SMEs, creating 74% of the countryâs employment, according to September 2020 data from the countryâs Ministry for Industry, Trade and Tourism. Similar figures can be seen at a global level, where these businesses account for more than 90% of all companies, generate between 60% and 70% of employment, and are responsible for 50% of worldwide gross domestic product, states the International Council for Small Business.
SMEs are huge economic drivers, but at the same time theyâre the weakest link of the business ecosystem, lacking both the economic weight and infrastructure to respond to unforeseen blows such as that dealt by coronavirus.
âOver the course of the pandemic theyâve had to deal with months of closures, and many have gone from one day to the next without any income at allâ, says Alberto Cano, Director of SMEs at BBVA Spain. In a survey carried out by CEPYME in May, 63% of Spanish SMEs recognised that coronavirus was having a very negative impact on their business. To understand how small and medium-sized businesses are reacting, BBVA Open Innovation held two Open Talks, one nationally, and another worldwide. We take a look at the present and future outlook with the BBVA experts who took part.
âWhen COVIDâ19 hit, a lot of them werenât prepared. The level of progress SMEs had made with digitalisation wasnât ideal, and the majority werenât ready, depending on the type of business and sectorâ explains Montserrat Hidalgo, SMEs Manager at BBVAâs Company Digital Transformation Factory. Hidalgo stresses that âaccording to CEPYME, just 14% of companies had a digital transformation plan in place prior to the crisisâ.
Faced with this situation âlots of SMEs and freelancers realised they hadnât done their homework â they had to make themselves known on platforms beyond the physical and establish alternative communication and sales channels that didnât require a physical presenceâ, explained Javier Urizar, Director of Commercial Payment Methods at BBVA Spain and Portugal, during the event. The percentage was ridiculously low, with just 6.5% of Spanish SMEs having systems in place for online purchasing through their website, according to BeeDIGITAL data.
âTheyâve been forced to react and adapt their business and customer relationship models to these new circumstancesâ, says Hidalgo. In terms of how theyâve responded âevery SME has had to shift as quickly as possible. Some â the ones starting from a stronger position â have done it in record time, and others have taken the first steps towards distance sellingâ, states Cano.
BBVA experts agree that overall, SMEs âhave realised that digitalisation can help them increase their business revenue and reduce costs. Weâre now seeing a hybrid model that entails a shift in business philosophy, and getting there will take time and effortâ, Hidalgo points out.
As a corporation with a focus on open innovation, startups and small businesses, BBVA was sure âit needed to be part of the solution, straight awayâ said Joan Carles Alba, Director of the SME section in Catalonia, during the event. So, âwe started up a grants protocol specifically to support SMEs and freelancers, with an instant liquidity facility of âŹ25 billion, and helped bolster digital capacity and remote managementâ, he outlined.
âAt BBVA weâve helped SMEs find new sales channels, beyond e-commerce. Weâve offered training programmes to teach businesses how to sell remotely, with practical and simple solutions â using social networks for example â and have given training on digital marketingâ, said Urizar. The aim was to get companies without an infrastructure or website to have the capacity to provide services remotely, and as quickly as possible, to guarantee at least a minimum income over months of closure.
In Mexico BBVA is working with more than half a million SMEs â the countryâs backbone â most notably through its flagship project Banco de Barrio. This is about âa new strategy for branches in the commercial network to become increasingly relevant to SMEs who live within its ecosystem, and is helping them with ad-hoc, personalised financial solutions aligned with their needsâ explained  Enrique FernĂĄndez, Director of Relationship Models at BBVA MĂ©xico.
In the north of the continent, Luis GascĂł, Director of SME Section and Product at BBVA USA, recounted how BBVA had helped with its Paycheck Protection Program initiative, so teams could continue working in extreme post-pandemic conditions, helping them through the process of obtaining state credit financing. âThe bank has benefited from the programme, but 100% of the motivation of the teams that were mobilised came from knowing that they were helping SMEs and people to protect their jobsâ, explained GascĂł.
Within the world of small businesses, launching a business as a woman and responding to situations like the one we find ourselves in has its own particular casuistry. For this reason, Selin Oz, SME Banking Entrepreneurship Banking Manager at Garanti BBVA in Turkey, explained during the event the âunique focusâ of the bank in its support for women entrepreneurs: âWomen entrepreneurs need financial support, but they also need help in other areas such as training and market knowledgeâ, added the expert. The bank is therefore working on four key foundations: financial products, support and motivation, education, and new markets.
Now weâre embarking on the new normal, itâs worth asking ourselves whether the situation will revert back to how it was, or whether digitalisation will continue to advance. Experts agree that the lessons learned have been valuable, and that the changes should be consolidated, especially for users.
âThe changes in consumer behaviour arenât going to be unlearned. What has already been proven is that the experience of making mobile payments and getting appointments online without having to leave the house isnât going to go backwards, people will demand what theyâve already triedâ, says Cano.
The situation has also accelerated the speed of digitalisation in specific areas. âThe world of ecommerce has advanced three or four years in a single stroke, the doubts and initiatives that have arisen have given it the final pushâ confirmed Urizar. To keep up the pace, SMEs must uphold their commitment to innovation.