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You are at:Home»Features»UK SMEs Are Being Forced to Redefine How They Compete
Jon French, a renowned artificial intelligence speaker,
Jon French, a renowned artificial intelligence speaker,

UK SMEs Are Being Forced to Redefine How They Compete

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Posted By sme-admin on January 8, 2026 Features

Small and medium-sized enterprises account for 99.9 percent of all UK private sector businesses, according to the House of Commons Library Business Statistic Report. This makes SME performance a central pillar of UK economic stability.

However, the environment SMEs operate in has shifted materially. Competitive pressure is no longer defined solely by price, scale, or sector, but by how quickly organisations can adapt to change. For smaller firms with limited buffers, delayed decisions compound risk more rapidly than in larger enterprises.

Evidence suggests that firms which adopt digital tools and technologies are more likely to improve efficiency and operational outcomes. A UK national survey found that 81 percent of firms using operations-centred digital platforms reported efficiency gains and stronger innovation outcomes compared with less digitally engaged peers, highlighting the performance edge modern digital practices can provide.

At the same time, a government-led SME Digital Adoption Taskforce underscores that expanding digital and AI adoption across the small business sector is central to future competitiveness and productivity growth, because many firms still face barriers to adoption. For SMEs, where leadership decisions translate quickly into outcomes, delaying digital change carries a growing opportunity cost.

Why Speed and Curiosity Are Becoming Competitive Advantages

For UK SMEs, uncertainty is no longer an occasional disruption but a constant operating condition. Planning cycles that once stretched years ahead are being replaced by ongoing adjustment, as leaders respond to shifting customer behaviour, technology change, and market volatility in real time.

In this environment, competitive advantage is less about having the most advanced systems and more about leadership behaviour. Businesses that perform well tend to stay close to customers, challenge assumptions early, and act before change becomes unavoidable. Curiosity, vigilance, and decisiveness increasingly separate those that adapt from those that stall.

This marks a shift in what effective leadership looks like for SMEs. The ability to interpret weak signals, test ideas quickly, and course-correct with confidence is becoming as important as operational efficiency, particularly in organisations where decisions translate directly into outcomes.

Leading Change Rather Than Reacting to It

While technology is often cited as the catalyst for disruption, evidence suggests that execution, not tools, is the dominant failure point. Deloitte research consistently shows that organisational change initiatives are more likely to fail due to cultural resistance, leadership misalignment, and unclear direction than technical limitations.

For SMEs, this places particular emphasis on leadership clarity. When teams understand where the business is heading and why change is necessary, uncertainty becomes manageable. Without that alignment, change tends to be experienced as disruption rather than progress.

In smaller organisations, where leaders are closer to day-to-day operations, the way change is framed and led can determine whether it accelerates growth or undermines confidence.

Expert Insight on Thriving Through Disruption

To explore how organisations can remain competitive during periods of sustained change, Tabish Ali, a UK-based digital PR and editorial outreach specialist, spoke with Jon French, a renowned artificial intelligence speaker, whose career spans leadership roles in global organisations and fast-moving commercial environments.

In the interview with the AI Speakers Agency, he shares practical insight into what separates businesses that adapt from those that stall, how leaders can build confidence amid uncertainty, and why embracing change early often shapes long-term outcomes.

Q1. In the era of AI, what will separate the winners from the losers?

Jon French: If I think about the companies that I’ve worked for and the career that I’ve had, and I think about the characteristics that separate the winners from the losers over that time, I’d probably put it down to those individuals and companies that are constantly vigilant and are curious. So, taking time to carve out time for research, listen to customers, and then aren’t afraid to be bold to disrupt because they want to, not because they have to.

Q2. What’s the secret to thriving during immense change?

Jon French: The secret is to enjoy it, very simply. I always say to my colleagues, my teams, that you have to be comfortable being uncomfortable. And that sounds counter-intuitive, but actually the most high-performing businesses I’ve ever been a part of, and the high-performing teams I’ve ever been a part of, seek that difference out. They seek that change out.

And so, if you’re not enjoying that change, if you’re not embracing that change, then change will happen to you. So, you have to be the ones that are driving the change first and foremost.

But this is a journey. Most technological change, most change in business, doesn’t happen overnight. What you have to do is paint a very clear picture of the future for your team, even if that is not certain, even if that is something that is cloudy, and help them understand that there is a path to get there.

So, enjoy every step on that journey. And actually, if you can engender that sense of excitement in your team, then you’ll be the one to change, not have change forced upon you.

Q3. What are the key ingredients for global brand growth?

Jon French: When we ask that question, it’s really about how global brands can be resonant locally. There are very few brands in the world that actually exist and are the same everywhere around the world.

Essentially, a brand is an insignia for your business, but more than that, it is designed to create an emotive response. That emotive response, like cultural differences, varies region by region.

What you have to do is create a global brand ethos and then adapt that ethos to every region that you are part of. Look at some of the most successful brands in the world. You’ll see them everywhere, from every airport where you land, but the people that represent that brand or the messaging that surrounds that brand will be different.

So don’t try to replicate global success. Be humble, be open, and translate the ethos of your brand to speak to consumers in different parts of the world in different ways.

What This Means for UK SMEs

French’s insights underline a consistent theme for small and medium-sized businesses: success is less about predicting the future perfectly and more about leading decisively through uncertainty. Curiosity, clarity of direction, and a willingness to act early are increasingly defining how organisations compete.

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