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Make it British Podcast

Make it British Podcast

Kate Hills

Kate Hills is on a one-woman mission to save UK manufacturing. In this podcast she shines the light on British brands and manufacturers, and goes behind the scenes of their businesses. With tips, hints and tricks to help you manufacture in the UK and buy British. Never has there been a more critical time to get behind 'made in Britain'.

441 - 294 - Should you offer discounts to get people onto your mailing list?
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  • 441 - 294 - Should you offer discounts to get people onto your mailing list?

    One of the questions that came up on one of our recent British Brand Accelerator group coaching calls was so good, I thought I'd bring it to you on the podcast this week.

    The question was about whether a small business that makes in the UK should be offering a discount when someone opts in to their newsletter, and whether this strategy works.

    It opened a whole discussion amongst the group about the pros and cons of discounting and other ideas for getting potential customers to sign up to your newsletter.

    So if you are wondering the same thing about discounting, this episode is for you!

    Sign up the the British Brand Accelerator waitlist here - www.makeitbritish.co.uk/waitlist

    Fri, 12 Apr 2024 - 21min
  • 440 - 293 - Save English Fine Cottons

    This week I’m bringing some very sad news - that the UK’s only cotton spinning mill, English Fine Cottons, which brought cotton spinning back to Greater Manchester in 2018, has very sadly gone into administration.

    In case you don’t know about the history of English Fine Cottons, it was set up by the technical textile spinners Culimeta-Saveguard, who invested £4.8m of its own money, £2m of which was a loan from the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, to regenerate a former Victorian cotton mill and install new technology to create luxury yarn. A further £1m was awarded as a grant by the N Brown Textile Growth Programme.

    English Fine Cottons was the start of something very exciting in UK manufacturing, and for this to have happened is tragic. The collapse into administration is caused by the parent group Culimeta-Saveguard going down, and unfortunately that has taken the cotton spinning down with it. Something needs to be done to save our only cotton spinning mill, otherwise this is history repeating itself.

    So today's episode is a remastered version of a visit that I did to English Fine Cottons in 2019, along with an interview with Andy Ogden, who was the general manager at the time.

    Fri, 05 Apr 2024 - 44min
  • 439 - 292 – Reviving the UK Button Making Industry with Courtney & Co Button Makers

    Today's guests are Andrea and David Courtney from Courtney & Co buttonmakers

    Back in 2012 I was contacted by someone who was trying to save the UK’s last remaining horn button maker - Grove & Sons. He was looking for investors to buy up the machinery and pattern books from the business so that the art of natural button making in the UK was not lost.

    Well it turns out that the investor that this guy eventually found was someone called David Courtney, who saw an ad to buy the machinery and patterns, and decided that he wanted to help.

    But things are never as easy as the seem, and this initial investment took David Courtney down a very long and winding path to bring button making back to the UK.

    Over a decade later and David Courtney now has an amazing button-making factory in the Cotswolds, with state of the art machinery, producing buttons from 3 different types of materials. He’s also enlisted his lovely wife Andrea to head the factory up, and they now supply the most beautiful buttons to brands and designers wanting an authentic UK-made button, still made using the original patterns that David saved from Grove & Sons.

    This interview was recorded onsite in their factory in Bourton-on-the-Water, Gloucestershire, and Andrea and David recount the full tale of how Courtney & Co buttons got to where they are today.

    About Courtney & Co

    Courtney & Co Website

    Courtney & Co on Instagram

    FURTHER RESOURCES

    Quiz: Are you ready to work with a UK factory?

    HANDY LINKS

    British Brand Accelerator

    Make it British Website

    YouTube

    Instagram

    Fri, 29 Mar 2024 - 31min
  • 438 - 291 - Micro Factories & Supply on Demand: UK Manufacturing at its Best

    This episode celebrates 15 years since I registered the domain makeitbritish.co.uk and busts some of the myths about UK manufacturing.

    You'll find out:

    Why I started Make it British and why I'm such a firm believer in UK manufacturing.The current UK manufacturing landscape.How the UK fashion and textile industry is made up of 1,000s of micro factories.How many garment factories there really are in the UK.The benefits of making in the UK.And why supply on demand is best done locally.

    To see the video recording of this talk, go to makeitbritish.co.uk/microfactories

    Want to work together? Fill in this form so I can find out more about your business goals, and I'll get back to you with ways I can help.

    FURTHER RESOURCES

    Quiz: Are you ready to work with a UK factory?

    HANDY LINKS

    British Brand Accelerator

    Make it British Website

    YouTube

    Instagram

    Fri, 22 Mar 2024 - 46min
  • 437 - 290 – From the archive: Why UK Manufacturing is More Sustainable with Christopher Nieper OBE

    Christopher Nieper OBE is the managing director of David Nieper, a womenswear business in Alfreton in Derbyshire. The firm was set up by Christopher's parents sixty years ago and is now one of the most vertical textile operations in the UK. Christopher recently invested in state-of-the-art digital printing equipment so that the factory can print it's own fabric onsite. David Nieper already prints all their own catalogues and produce their own knitwear in house, alongside the garment production.

    In this episode you can hear about the research Christopher commissioned from Nottingham university looking at the greenhouse gas emissions produced to make clothing at the David Nieper factory in Derbyshire. The study then compared these findings to the emissions produced by making garments in China, Turkey and Bangladesh and then shipping them to the UK. It makes for very interesting insights into how making in the UK can be quantified as more sustainable. A big advocate for slow fashion, Christopher has also found that his customers keep and wear his clothes 10 times longer than average. Listen to this episode to discover: 

    How the David Nieper factory uses 'just-in-time' manufacturing to achieve a 98% sell-through on their garmentsChristopher's plans to make the David Nieper factory the greenest factory in Europe, recovering the heat generated by the factory to use as renewable energyHow he's changing the attitudes of young people in his local town by giving them a taste of what it's like inside a real manufacturing environmentThe charity that the business has set up to help rebuild a local secondary school that was in the bottom 2% of schools in the UK and make it over-subscribed for the first time in 30 yearsChristopher's idea for a labelling scheme for clothing that ranks the environmental sustainability of every garment

    This episode is the recording of a talk that Christopher did at Make it British Live! Online event in October 2020.

    About David Nieper

    Watch my Instagram reel showing behind the scenes at the David Nieper factory.

    David Nieper website

     Stay in Touch

    British Brand Accelerator - Find out how you can work with me to build your British-made brand

    Make it British website

    Fri, 15 Mar 2024 - 36min
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