How Snowdon Timber has gone from strength to strength.

“The Business Wales Accelerated Programme helped us develop our competitive edge”

Jody Goode launched his business, Snowdon Timber, in 2019. Having spent a decade trading timber internationally, he decided it was the right time to go it alone and set up his own company sourcing quality timber to sell to large national outlets.

The company started trading in Mochdre and recently opened a second base in Bangor.

Snowdon Timber has been supported through the Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme (AGP). The AGP provides targeted support for ambitious growing firms. The programme is part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government.


Here Jody Goode shares his business journey and explains how the Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme has helped the company develop its competitive edge.
 

Tell us about Snowdon Timber?
The business was born from my passion for sourcing the finest timber to sell to trusted national retailers. After a decade of doing that for big international companies, I decided the time was right for me to branch out alone. Since we launched, we have gone from strength to strength. We have expanded our product range, and now we offer everything from timber decking and garden furniture to top-of-the-range rooftop tents for wild camping. We have opened two sites in Mochdre and Bangor, and business is booming. With more people investing in their homes and gardens, there has been a real surge in demand for quality timber products, so we’re reaping the benefits.
 

What are your proudest moments in business so far?
I’m proud that I started the business with very little capital outlay. Instead, thanks to my network of contacts and industry knowledge, I could rely on goodwill and trust to purchase our initial stock. So I’m proud that I took a leap of faith, which has certainly paid off. I’m also very proud of our new base in Bangor, which is proving popular with customers.
 

What challenges have you faced in business?
See above! Starting with limited capital was a challenge, certainly, but I was able to overcome that with careful planning. Unfortunately, COVID also threw us a huge curveball. Suddenly we had to adapt quickly to all the challenges it brought, like social distancing, sickness absence and the rising cost of stock. I’m proud of how we navigated that and became stronger as a team and a business.
 

If you were starting again, what would you do differently?
I would think more carefully about where we located our first site, and I would have spent more time thinking about staff training and how to empower them to make difficult decisions. But we didn’t know what was coming down the line with COVID, so it’s easy to see those things differently in hindsight!

How has support from Business Wales AGP helped your business?
The Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme has been hugely helpful to us. The programme has supported us with financial planning, HR, equality and diversity, recruitment and diversification. Our Relationship Manager Idris Price has also been a fantastic source of advice, guidance and support over the last few years. I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend the programme to ambitious businesses looking to grow.
 

What advice and guidance would you give other businesses starting out?
Do your research: Before you start planning your business, research whether there is a demand for your products or services to determine whether it is viable.

Take a reality check: I found it helpful to balance my optimism with regular reality checks.

 

To learn more about Snowdon Timber, visit here.

Click here for further information on the Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme.

 



The Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme is a pan-Wales programme part funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government.

CPR Global Tech teams up with Swansea University for innovative digital healthcare project

Innovate UK Knowledge Transfer Partnership will evaluate the potentially transformative impact of wearable health devices on the health and social care sector in Wales.

A Swansea tech firm has teamed up with the All-Wales Intensive Learning Academy for Innovation in Health & Social Care (ILA IHSC) at Swansea University to research how wearable devices could transform digital healthcare by allowing NHS and social care staff to monitor patients remotely.
 


CPR Global Tech, based in Lakeside Technology Park, has paired up with Swansea University for an Innovate UK Management Knowledge Transfer Partnership, which connects forward-thinking businesses with academic partners to deliver business-led innovation projects. The two-year project, funded to the tune of £143,000 by Innovate UK, will see the firm evaluate the potential impact of wearable health devices on Wales's health and social care sector.

CPR Global Tech was founded in 2010 and has a strong track record of developing products that innovate for everyday life. The firm's product range includes call-blocking technology used by over one million customers worldwide.

More recently, the team have developed and deployed the CPR Guardian, an SOS personal alarm with a fall detector alert. The CPR Guardian offers accurate fall detection, a personal alarm, location tracking, heart rate monitoring and a 24/7 monitoring service. Designed for vulnerable adults, lone workers and those living with Dementia and Alzheimers, the CPR Guardian will form the basis of the Knowledge Transfer Partnership with Swansea University. Experts will evaluate how the technology could be deployed by the NHS and social care departments to monitor vulnerable patients in their homes, improving care and patient outcomes.  

 

Chief Operating Officer Chelsea Davies explained:

"At CPR Global Tech, we are proud to develop products based on our ethos of caring, protecting and reassuring. So we are incredibly excited about our new partnership with Swansea University, which is about harnessing the power of wearable health technology to improve patient outcomes - not only in health and social care settings but also in patients' homes.

"For example, falls amongst older people are a significant public health concern in Wales, with a third of people over 65 and a half of those aged over 85 falling every year. Falls have a substantial financial impact on health and social care services, costing the NHS approximately £2.3 billion every year. Our technology alerts emergency contacts via text message with a precise location update whenever a fall happens, ensuring more severe injuries associated with longer waits are avoided.

"Working with the Innovation ILA team at Swansea University, local health providers and patients, we will set up trials and collect detailed stakeholder feedback. Through this work, we aim to gather a robust dataset that will help inform how wearable tech can help improve care and patient outcomes.

"This project is strategically important to us as a business and Welsh society as a whole. Our project has the potential to make significant improvements to the way the NHS deals with falls, achieving better outcomes for patients and vital cost savings for our health service."

 

CPR Global Tech, who employs twenty people across sales, technical support and product development roles, scooped a prestigious Queen's Award for Enterprise in 2018 and 2020.

CPR Global Tech has been assisted by the Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme (AGP), which provides targeted support for ambitious growing firms. The programme is part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government.


 

To find out more about CPR Global Tech, visit here.

Further information on the Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme

 

 

The Business Wales Accelerated Growth Programme is a pan-Wales programme part funded by the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Government.

Export Programme Accepting Applications to Support Wales’ Fastest Growing Tech Firms

Following the successful launch of the Technology Export Cluster (TEC) Programme in March, applications are again being sought from ambitious Welsh technology firms who want to expand their global reach and build their export business.

Read the full story on Business News Wales.
Tech-based businesses interested in joining the programme can apply here: https://tecwales.com/register/