Close Menu
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing & Mental Health
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
Trending
  • Growth against the odds: How to seize new opportunities in challenging times
  • Background Screening Expert Warns Energy Sector To Review Screening Processes As Projects Accelerate
  • What Business Leaders Demand from the Incoming Burnham Government
  • The hidden productivity leak inside SMEs
  • Six Figured Females launches franchise model as part of UK expansion
  • Terror Attack Prevention: Swindon Health And Safety Expert On Martyn’s Law
  • Is ISO Certification Worth It for Your Small Business?
  • Burnout Deadline Day: Experts warn “holiday hoarding” is fuelling burnout 
X (Twitter) LinkedIn YouTube
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • News
  • Home
  • In Profile
  • Finance
  • Legal
  • Technology
  • Events
  • Features
  • Wellbeing
  • Marketing
  • HR & Recruitment
  • Travel
SME Today
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Events Calendar
  • Business Wall
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • 0843 289 4634
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • RSS
You are at:Home»Features»Growth against the odds: How to seize new opportunities in challenging times

Growth against the odds: How to seize new opportunities in challenging times

0
Posted By Greg Robinson on July 15, 2026 Features, Finance

For UK small and medium-sized businesses, growth has become something of a paradox. Ambition remains high, but the conditions for achieving it have shifted faster than most leaders can plan for.

From rising costs and geopolitical tensions to supply chain disruption and shifting customer expectations, business leaders are being asked to make critical decisions against a backdrop of constant uncertainty. Yet while 78% of UK SMBs say they want to grow, fewer than half have managed to turn those ambitions into reality.

The difference often isn’t ambition or even opportunity. Many SMB leaders already know where growth could come from. The challenge is turning those opportunities into action amid the competing demands and operational pressures of running a business.

Simon Worsfold, In-house Economist, Intuit, looks at how small businesses are identifying opportunities for growth despite continued economic pressures

Ongoing external pressures

External pressures continue to weigh heavily on UK businesses. Even before the recent oil price shock, rising Simon Worsfold, In-house Economist, Intuitcosts were a concern. For many businesses, this is shaping day-to-day decisions around hiring, investment, pricing and expansion.

Research from Intuit QuickBooks has shown that 51% of SMBs see rising costs as their biggest challenge, a pressure that is directly shaped by external circumstances and one that leads to complications such as reduced profit margins, cash flow constraints, hiring freezes or rising borrowing costs.

Internal frictions

Yet despite these difficult circumstances, external pressures tell only part of the story. These challenges are compounded by the accumulation of everyday operational friction, with fragmented systems, operational overload and decision fatigue consuming time that could otherwise be spent pursuing new opportunities.

As a result of these internal pressures, our research shows that around three in four UK SMBs have abandoned growth-generating ideas multiple times in the past year. For many, survival has taken precedence over expansion.

In fact,  the same research shows that UK SMBs are leaving 58% of potential growth unrealised each year, equating to at least £121,272 per business every year. In a period of rising costs and economic uncertainty, the impact of these missed opportunities is significant.

How SMBs can capitalise on growth

It’s therefore likely that identifying opportunities is not necessarily the issue. Many SMB leaders already know where growth could come from, but operational pressures often prevent them from acting decisively enough to capture it.

Intuit’s own research indicates that the businesses most likely to convert opportunity into growth share a common characteristic: readiness. They are more likely to have connected systems, access to reliable data and leaders with the time and visibility needed to make rapid informed decisions.

This readiness enables businesses to move beyond reactive decision-making. Instead of losing valuable time switching between systems or managing routine administrative work, leaders can focus on their priorities: evaluating opportunities, allocating resources and responding to changing market conditions.

Building readiness through technology

Growth opportunities often require rapid action, whether responding to changing customer demand, identifying new revenue streams or making investment decisions. To meet the needs of SMBs, technology is emerging as a way to cultivate this readiness. By connecting systems, reducing manual processes and providing greater visibility across operations, it enables leaders to spend more time focusing on growth.

This matters because leadership bandwidth has become a scarce resource. Many business owners remain deeply involved in day-to-day operations, which leaves limited capacity for planning and innovation. Those that instead demonstrate high levels of readiness are the ones that have adopted technology which brings together fragmented tools, minimises low-value work and automates routine analysis to reclaim strategic capacity.

The businesses that have adopted technology strategically are therefore better positioned to act when opportunities emerge. As seen in Intuit QuickBooks’ AI Impact Report, amongst the 70% of UK SMBs that now use artificial intelligence in their daily operations, 77% report productivity gains, 43% say it is helping to drive revenue growth and one in five have increased employment as a result. Digital capabilities enable businesses to thrive in spite of uncontrollable circumstances.

The path to growth

Economic uncertainty is unlikely to disappear any time soon. Geopolitical tensions, rising costs and shifting market conditions will continue to test the resilience of UK businesses. However, while leaders cannot control external conditions, they can control how prepared their organisations are to respond.

The businesses that outperform in the coming years will be those best equipped to identify opportunities and act on them quickly.

Technology, and in particular, AI, has an important role to play in that journey, empowering leaders to reclaim time and focus their attention where it matters most.

Ultimately, growth is about more than pure ambition. It is about readiness. And in an increasingly uncertain environment, readiness may prove to deliver the most valuable competitive advantage a business can build.

Simon Worsfold, In-house Economist, Intuit

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

What Business Leaders Demand from the Incoming Burnham Government

Face-to-Face Banking Still Matters to Millions

Not Every Dog Is an Office Dog

Comments are closed.

Follow SME Today on Linkedin and share all the topics you find interesting
Porsch Reading – Find Your Perfect Business Partner
Mastermind9
Events Calendar
    November 26, 2026 10:00 am

    South West Expo Swindon

    October 14, 2026 10:00 am

    Thames Valley Expo Reading

  • Marketing
June 25, 2026

How Brands Can Rank in AI Search Without Buying Ads

June 23, 2026

How To Market A Restaurant

  • Finance
July 15, 2026

Growth against the odds: How to seize new opportunities in challenging times

July 10, 2026

Face-to-Face Banking Still Matters to Millions

  • People
July 8, 2026

A Champion of Business, Networking and People

June 20, 2026

It’s Award Season For The Fd Consultant!

  • Health & Safety
July 14, 2026

Terror Attack Prevention: Swindon Health And Safety Expert On Martyn’s Law

July 13, 2026

Could Your Workplace Save A Choking Colleague Before The Ambulance Arrives? 

  • Events
June 29, 2026

Great British Expos Postpones South West Expo Due to Extreme Heat Forecast

June 16, 2026

Why Every SME Needs an AI Strategy — Not Just AI Tools

  • Community
June 19, 2026

Founders charity dinner set to raise funds for epilepsy care

June 17, 2026

Award-Winning Charity Launches New Initiative To Connect Local Organisations

  • Food & Drink
June 23, 2026

How To Market A Restaurant

June 23, 2026

From Corporate Comfort to Cultural Opportunity: The Bunta Beer Journey

  • Books
June 2, 2026

Build a Business So Good You’d Be Mad to Sell It

January 21, 2026

The CEO Mirage: Exposing the hidden traps that take smart leaders down

The Newsletter

Join our mailing list for the best SME stories, handpicked and delivered direct to your inbox every two weeks!

Sign Up
About

SME Today is published by the same team who deliver The Great British Expos’. We have been organising various corporate events for the last 10 years, with a strong track record of producing well managed and attended business events across the UK.

Join Our Mailing List

Receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday.
Read our Latest Newsletter:


Sign Up
X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Categories
  • Books
  • Business
  • Community & Charity
  • Education and Training
  • Environment
  • Events
  • Features
  • Finance
  • Food and Drink
  • Health & Safety
  • HR & Recruitment
  • In Profile
  • Legal
  • Marketing
  • News
  • People
  • Property & Development
  • Sponsored Content
  • Technology
  • Transport, Travel & Tourism
  • Wellbeing & Mental Health
Magazine Information
  • About SME Today
  • Editorial Submission Guidelines
  • Advertising
  • Privacy
  • Contact
Copyright © 2025 SME Today.
  • About SME Today
  • Editorial Submission Guidelines
  • Advertising
  • Privacy
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Subscribe Now!

Sign up for a FREE subscription and receive the latest news, features and updates from SMEToday:

I am interested in:
 

Thank you for subscribing to SME Today! We're thrilled to have you join our community. To complete your subscription, please check your email and click on the confirmation link. If you don’t see the email in your inbox, be sure to check your spam or junk folder. We look forward to sharing exciting news, updates, and exclusive content with you!

Join our mailing list to receive the latest news and updates from SMEToday
Read our Latest Newsletter: