The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
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The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
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The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
The presentation was from the Business as Mutual conference held at Anglia Ruskin University on 12th September 2012. To find out more visit www.businessasmutual.co.uk
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Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
The story of a new consumer co operative for the 21st century
1. The Phone Co-op
The Story of a New Consumer Co-operative for the
21st Century
Business as Mutual Conference
Cambridge, 12 September 2012
Vivian Woodell
Chief Executive, The Phone Co-op
1
2. The Phone Co-op’s story
• One of the UK’s fastest-growing and most
successful consumer co-operatives
2
3. Why are we all here today?
• Why do people become social entrepreneurs?
• “You didn’t like the world the way you found it so
you built something different”
• Like it or not, every business changes the world, for
better or for worse
• Yet people are still only learning to see business as
a vehicle for change
• We can make a difference
3
4. Why a co-operative?
• Entirely stakeholder-focused
• Democratic (one member one vote)
• Spreads ownership widely
• Enables “crowd funding”
• Equitable – (i.e. fair) in the way that benefits are
distributed
• National and global community of co-operatives
– Wider support network
4
5. Why a co-operative?
• Co-operatives are quite simply the purest form of
social enterprise
• No owner/beneficiary conflict
• Co-operatives are well recognised and trusted
• Model has been tried and tested for 166 years
5
6. What is The Phone Co-op?
• A telecommunications and internet service provider
• We supply business customers and home users
• Fixed line, broadband, mobile, business services
• 23,000 customers, over 9400 members
6
7. We are different
• A consumer co-operative
• Entirely owned and controlled by its customers
• Uses traditional UK consumer co-op model
• Returns a share of its profits to members through a
dividend based on purchases
• Supports the development of other co-ops through
an investment fund
7
8. And we’re different in other ways too…
• Operates on behalf of its
customers to maximise
buying power
• Aims to operate in an
ethical and
environmentally
responsible way and to
promote co-operative
values
8
9. Where did the idea come from?
• High phone charges working on international
projects
• Looked for an alternative supplier
• Realised that telephone calls bought and sold as a
commodity
• Ideal opportunity for a consumer co-operative
9
10. The original concept evolved
• Original idea: Joint-purchasing by NGOs with high
international bills
• Later widened to all types of customer
• We only found out later that there are telecoms co-
operatives in many other countries
10
11. Getting started
• 2 year trial phase
• Built up traffic in spare time acting as an agent
with two telecoms carriers in order to prove
concept
• It was difficult to persuade a carrier to sell
wholesale to us (nowadays they call us all the time
trying to sell to us!)
• Started trading as a service provider in 1998
11
14. Profit before Distributions
Profit Before Distributions
£400,000
£350,000
£300,000
£250,000
£200,000
£150,000
£100,000
£50,000
£0
-£50,000
-£100,000
14
15. What we did with the profit (2007-8)
• Profit: £338,000
• Dividends to members: £58,000
• Co-operative loan fund: £58,000
• Share interest to members: £92,000
• Taxation: £50,000
• Allocation to reserves: £80,000
15
16. Financially strong
• No borrowings
• Cashflow very strong
• Good trading record
• Financed by members not by external investors or
banks
• Compares favourably with our competitors
16
18. Who are our customers?
• 20,000 Home users
– Joining because:
• they like our approach
• through affinity schemes
• through acquisitions
18
19. Who are our customers?
• 3,000 business users including:
– Other co-operatives
– Charities
– Social enterprises
– Local authorities
– Many other businesses
– Political parties
19
20. Living our co-operative values
• Starts with promoting our membership
– Having an active and vibrant democracy draws on our
members’ energy and enthusiasm for us to do the best we
can
– Member ownership and strong member-led governance are
at the heart of what we are about
– Our members have encouraged us to have a stronger
ethical approach
20
21. Living our co-operative values
• We publish an ethical policy
– Our members approved this at the AGM
– We have an ethical policy committee to oversee it
• We do lots of things to show our support for other
co-ops and the wider community
• Strong environmental policy
• We report on what we do using the Co-
operativesUK framework
21
22. Environment
• Policy is driven by members
• What gets measured gets managed!
• We report on business travel – 86% by public
transport
• We provide free bikes for staff, and pay mileage for
cycling and walking
• We also report on emissions from our buildings
22
23. Environment (continued)
• We offset what we can’t reduce – includes supplier
emissions
• We have launched a Sustainability Fund – each time
a customer switches to electronic billing, we put
some of the postage savings into this fund.
– It is used to improve our environmental performance in
other ways
23
24. Investment in renewables
• We have invested in several co-operatives that
produce renewable electricity
– Westmill Windfarm Co-operative (£20,000)
– Torrs Hydro New Mills (£7,500)
– Westmill Solar (£20,000)
– Drumlin (£20,000)
• We invested in the Energy Prospects Co-operative
– spreads the risks of getting local renewable electricity
projects off the ground.
24
25. Investment in renewables
• In the last year we’ve invested £450,000 in solar PV
on 5 sites
• We’ve formed a joint venture (a co-op), called Co-
operative Renewables Limited with two other
organisations
• CRL installed 4 of the 5 sites for us and has also
installed 4 sites for Midcounties Co-op.
• Now looking at other technologies as well
25
26.
27.
28. Employee stakeholding
• We are a consumer co-op, but our employees are
recognised as partners and as a key stakeholder.
We have:
• An employee council to act as a forum for
employees
• A profit-sharing scheme which pays 11% of profits
to employees based on hours worked.
• A sales-related bonus scheme operating across all
staff
• 11% pension contribution – no employee
contribution required (invested ethically).
28
29. Ethical business
• Ethical purchasing where possible
– Fairtrade products
– Recycled and from other co-ops/social
enterprises
– We don’t use high pressure techniques
– Transparent pricing
• Marketing – where we spend money
– Affinity partners make up the majority
– We have contributed £600,000 to charities and
NGOs over the years in revenue-share
29
30. Community and co-operative
investment
• Co-operative and Social Economy Development
Fund
– In most years the board has recommended the same
amount as dividend is allocated to this fund each
year
– Total value now over £165,000
– Provides loan finance for new and developing co-ops
– More recently we have invested in co-op share capital
30
31. Why do customers join The Phone
Co-op?
• They like the fact that it’s a co-operative
• Ethical stance
• All about trust - not there to “rip them off”
• Like to support an alternative to privately owned
businesses
• Good value
• Dividend
• Affinity schemes
31
32. Acquisitions
• Main focus is on organic growth, but we have also
made 10 acquisitions since we started
• Consolidation in our industry means we need to
grow fairly quickly
• Issues:
– Acquired customers are not people/organisations who
chose us
– Potential for higher churn
– Integration/cultural
32
33. Acquisitions (continued)
• In September 2010 – the telecoms business of
SAGA.
• Adds around 8,000 customers
• As part of this deal we have a marketing partnership
with SAGA under which they promoted our services
to their 6m customers over 2 years.
33
34. Mobile
• We are now an MVNO (Mobile Virtual Network
Operator)
• “Phone Co-op” as network name
• Major area for expansion
• Currently over 2,000 handsets but growing fast
34
35. Major surveys conducted in 2
different years
• 1500-2000 non-business customers received survey
forms with their bills
• 40% of them returned forms - a very high response
rate
• Very high customer satisfaction rates
35
36. Reasons customers choose The
Phone Co-op
28.3%
24.0% 22.0%
30%
25%
Percentages
20%
9.7%
15%
4.0% 2.3% 2.0%
10%
5%
0%
more ethical prefer to buy low cost calls simple pricing 0845 number for receiving other
supplier from a co-op my incoming members
calls dividend The reasons
36
37. External Recognition
• Overall winner, Enterprising Solutions Award (Oct
08) for best Social Enterprise in the UK, 2008
• Winner, the Green England Award for Customer
Service, December 2008
• Winner the Federation of Communications Services
Green Award, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012
• Winner Co-operative Excellence Award, for
reporting to members, June 2009
• Finalist, National Business Awards, November 2009
• Honourable mention, dotCoop Global Awards
37
38. External Recognition – most recent
• Finalist in Midlands Entrepreneur of the Year
Award, 2012
• Winner, in 2011 of the FCS Reseller of the Year
Award
38
40. Future growth plans
• The Phone Co-op’s Board wants to see co-
operative model make a real impact in
telecommunications, and perhaps more widely
• Acquisitions – ready for more
• Growth of the mobile model – potentially
through new channels
• We’ve looked at expansion in other European
countries
40
41. Challenges/issues we faced
• Started with very little money (£35k) made up of
loans from members, retained revenue share
and a loan from ICOF.
– Had to keep costs low
– Operated from a spare bedroom for 2 years (it got
crowded as we grew!)
– Took time to develop in embryonic form before it
became a full-time job
41
42. Our financing model
• We are 100% owned by our members
• Members invest in withdrawable share capital
• We tell members if they invest 1-2 months’
phone bills we won’t require external finance
• This has been the case since very early on
42
44. Next steps
• Our co-operative identity has helped us grow
• Customers trust us and we retain them
• We have better customers
– Low bad debt ratio
• But we sometimes struggle to get recognised
• This led us to consider a new approach
44
45. Next steps
• We have watched how the Co-operative brand has
transformed perception of the “traditional” Co-op
• This brand isn’t just used for food, pharmacy, travel
and funerals
• We now have:
– The Co-operative Legal Services
– The Co-operative Childcare
– The Co-operative Energy
45
46. The Co-operative brand – the way
ahead for us?
• We carried out extensive research using focus
groups
• We found:
– People hate their telecoms providers
– They trust The Co-operative brand
– They have a pretty good idea what a co-op is and stands
for, and they identify with that
– They haven’t heard of The Phone Co-op and when they are
prompted with the name they aren’t sure what we do
– They understood what “The Co-operative Phone and
Broadband” would be all about and liked it.
46
47.
48.
49. A difficult decision
• There were many reasons to adopt the brand
• But we also had to consider some risks
– Would it be hard to communicate that we are an
independent co-op people could join?
– Would it undermine our governance in the long-term?
– Would people think we had been taken over?
– Would people see us as another non-core offering from a
supermarket?
– Would we be lose our operational independence by
through over-tight controls we couldn’t live with?
49
50. In the end we went for it
• The brand has a very high level of trust
• A great deal has been invested in it (remember the
Bob Dylan adverts?)
• Cross-selling opportunities via retail co-op
societies
• Size perception will help us to sell to larger
organisations such as local authorities and larger
charities
50
51. At the heart of the Co-op Movement
• In less than a month, we will be moving our
Manchester office into Holyoake House, Co-
operativesUK’s HQ
• Puts us at the heart of the Co-op Complex in
Manchester
• Combined with the new brand, this places us in a
good position at the core of the Movement, from
which we can grow
51
52. Getting even
• Since before The Phone Co-op started, I was an
active board member in the co-op movement
• A lot of co-op managers at the time saw the co-
operative identity as a hindrance and had no vision
for how it could support growth
• I wanted to prove them wrong
• Now with the adoption of the brand and the move
into the heart of the movement, it feels like
“closure” on that particular battle!
52
53. Conclusion
• The success of The Phone Co-op shows how a
new consumer co-operative can start up in a
highly competitive area of the economy and can
build mass membership
• Consumers are looking for a different model of
business at a time when trust in established plcs
is at a very low ebb
• “We’re doing it ourselves”
53
54. Be part of the story!
• We hope you will join The Phone Co-op and help us
grow
• You can be part of it!
54
55. How to contact The Phone Co-op
• Contact details:
• www.thephone.coop
• Tel 0845 458 9000
• Fax 0845 458 9001
• enquiries@thephone.coop (general)
• Vivian@thephone.coop (Vivian Woodell)
55