The importance of network for SAF and
Swedish companies
Olof
Erixon, Region manager for SAF, Växjö
- A company or an
association is an organised network, as well as
other actors in public or private sectors. The
networks for companies can be business
associations (employers, chambers of commerce,
industrial), business co-operative ventures
(industrial, R&D, EU projects) or social
(Rotary, religious).
- SAF and its member
associations are a part of these networks, and
SAF is lobbying for companies in a network form.
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Why
networking? The answer is money! Networks...
- ...give increased
trust.
- ...reduce cost of
transactions.
- ...spread the cost of
risk.
- ...speed the
decision-making process (trust!).
There are, however, some
weaknesses in networks between SMEs:
- Too little
cross-business interaction
- Too little
cross-border interaction. The word
"transnational" implies that there are
no more borders, but mental borders do exist!
- Too few women in
companies, they are too loath to give access to
the boardroom. Why? Because SMEs tend to have
weak boards of directors.
- Too little competence
The structure of the
members in SAF: 30 000 companies have less than 10
employees, only 890 companies have over 200 employees, 12
000 have 11-200 employees.
- The big companies
like Volvo give SAF authority to
speak for all enterprises. They are members, but
they do not themselves need SAF.
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