All posts by Nik Rawlinson

How fintech can turn your small business into an enterprise


Nik Rawlinson

23 Mar, 2018

You’ve developed your idea, secured funding and finally launched your startup. Now you need to triage your venture and consider which tools will help you grow beyond a rented desk.

Chief among them will be how you process, track and chase payments. This used to mean a weekly trip to the bank, but now fintech – the technology of storing and moving money – has knocked digital finance into second gear, and left the traditional players looking unwieldy and out of date.

Fintech in the cloud

“The cloud is fundamental to the changing economic model,” according to Chris Wade, VP of product for UK accounting software firm Sage. “It makes success more attainable to more businesses and gives them the freedom to try something at relatively low cost. If it doesn’t work for them, they can change.”

Sage has been transitioning its products from local apps to cloud-based ones for some time. Requiring no capital outlay or investment in hardware and training, Wade believes this shift removes the imperative to persevere with a platform that doesn’t suit or grow with your business.


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“The cloud lets you make better choices about which technology works for your business. The whole collaborative, remote working experience applies in both management and delivery now, so if you’ve got a solution designed with that in mind, it’ll support you in ways a desktop [application] with an embedded workflow won’t.”

But accounting in the cloud does more than track your expenses. APIs open your books to a new generation of fintech tools, bringing to startups the kind of facilities that were once the preserve of the minted multinational.

Disruptors like Stripe integrate with Xero and other accounting apps so that solo and micro-businesses can now accept card payments. Yodlee is bridging the gap between banks and their customers, downloading business transactions and streaming them into cloud-enabled bookkeeping tools. FreeAgent will even reconcile the results – subject to your approval – based on the invoices you’ve sent, bills you’ve received, and what it’s learnt about how you run your business.

“These flows would historically have been on paper,” says Wade, “but no cloud is an island now, and no element of the workflow has to be solved exclusively by one vendor. That means you can make decisions based on what your bank account contains, not what your mistyped accounts suggest.”

Banking across borders

Sooner or later, a growing business will need to consider foreign exchange. Whether you’re buying supplies from China or selling goods to Europe, you’ll quickly discover the cost of doing business through a regular bank.

Why? “[While] the world is now very global, the financial system hasn’t caught up,” says Stuart Gregory, head of business for TransferWise. “It’s still pinned down to single countries with old, clunky ways of doing things. I don’t think that meets anyone’s expectations of what an online banking service should be.”

TransferWise saw this as an opportunity. With funding from an accelerator, it set up a cross-border transfer service, charging low fees and using standard inter-bank rates for every transaction. Seven years on, TransferWise now offers a borderless business bank account that simultaneously holds 28 currencies. With native IBAN codes for the UK, US, Europe and Australia, it lets customers pay in and out as though they were locals in 60 different countries.

“We’ve been focused on solving a specific customer problem, rather than seeing it as an opportunity for margin, which is perhaps where a lot of banks [have been focused],” Gregory continues. “Everyone travels, phones and works across Europe. This is a wake-up call. Banks need to respond to changes in the market – and changes in expectations.”

Regulated by the FCA on a licence that covers the whole of Europe, TransferWise is moving more than $2 billion a month and, at 15%, its share of the UK market for cross-border transfers is closing fast on the largest traditional banks.

Its offering lacks some of the features you’d expect of a regular bank account, such as direct debits and a debit card, but these gaps are plugged elsewhere. Revolut, which handles both international and crypto currencies, offers personal and business borderless accounts linked to prepaid cards. Monzo goes further, with debit cards and direct debits, but as it offers only one account type, it may appeal more to the freelancer or sole trader.

Do I need an office?

If you’re happy with virtual banking, you probably don’t need an office, either.

SlackTrello, VoIP and web apps mean there’s little you can’t do remotely – even if you have colleagues. Hire a distributed workforce and you’re free to choose the best person for each job, regardless of where they live. They’ll be easier to recruit if they don’t need to relocate, and you might save on salaries, attracting higher-calibre candidates who are happy to offset potential earnings against the freedom of working from home.

You can still have a central number on your email footer, though. Answering services such as Lincolnshire-based Miss Moneypenny will pick up a virtual number using your company name and redirect enquiries to whoever is most appropriate. On the rare occasion you need to host team meetings, office-rental services such as Regus lease space for an hour at a time.

Scaling your IT investment

Reducing your capital outlay at the start lets you redirect your limited funds into marketing and hiring staff, so leasing hardware rather than buying makes immediate sense. You’ll preserve as much of your startup capital as you can, and in doing so, sustain your operation through the lean early months.

Birmingham-based Geex offers a standard three-year business hardware leasing option, at the end of which businesses can either buy the leased equipment, or upgrade. It also offers shorter-term leases but, says director Steve Khela, “anything less than two years and the numbers don’t really add up”.

Leases are typically only available to credit-worthy businesses, but Geex will loan to startups if the directors sign personal guarantees. With the era of quantitative easing at an end, and central banks increasing rates to counter inflation, leasing will lock in potential savings, as the repayments won’t go up in sync with the base rate. There are tax benefits, too, as the repayment can be offset against corporation tax.

Smarter money management is vital in the launch phase of any new venture, whether it’s through leasing, or leveraging fintech to reduce your exposure to fees and commission. While your ambition may be unlimited, your funds aren’t, and every penny held back – as well as each minute saved through automation – will help your business along the road to becoming a fully fledged enterprise. 

Sooner or later, a growing business will need to consider foreign exchange. Whether you’re buying supplies from China or selling goods to Europe, you’ll quickly discover the cost of doing business through a regular bank.

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Your data backup could be a disaster waiting to happen


Nik Rawlinson

22 Mar, 2018

Does backup get your back up? It shouldn’t. A robust backup routine ought to be fuss-free and transparent – because if it isn’t, you’re far less likely to keep your archives updated. That means that when things go wrong and you need to recover a lost file, the crucial documents you’ve been working on may not have been backed up.

Even if you’re trying to do everything right, your chosen backup method might not be as comprehensive or bulletproof as you thought. And that should be a big concern: small businesses can’t afford to have things go wrong when it comes to backup, and home users stand to lose irreplaceable documents, photos and videos if their backup system lets them down.

Sync versus backup

Let’s clear one thing up right away: synchronisation isn’t backup. Cloud-syncing services are an easy, effective way to keep vital files updated across several machines. But if you’re relying on a service like this to save your skin in the case of an IT emergency, you’re running a serious risk.

Take Dropbox as an example. Not only does Dropbox duplicate your files onto every computer you own, it also keeps its own set of backups – so you can roll back to an earlier version of a file, or bring deleted items back from oblivion. This feature can be a real life-saver: to recover a deleted file, you can just log in through the browser, click Files, then click Deleted files in the sidebar. Find the file you want to resurrect and click restore.

Dropbox keeps copies of deleted files for 30 days as standard and 120 days in the Professional version

Dropbox keeps copies of deleted files for 30 days as standard and 120 days in the Professional version

The catch is that changes and deleted files are only stored for 30 days, after which they’re purged. So while Dropbox can rescue you from short-term problems, it’s no use when you need to restore a document that was changed or deleted a few months ago. You can extend the window to 120 days by upgrading to a Dropbox professional account, but it’s expensive: it costs £199 annually, or £19.99 per month.

It also still doesn’t count as a proper backup solution. A dedicated backup service should allow you to recover files that were deleted years ago, or step back through a complete history of changes to a document, from its original creation to the present day. Not only is this essential for data security, it also provides a helpful audit trail so you can track the development of your projects. Some backup services even offer an authentication service that can be used to prove that a certain file was created or edited on a certain date.

Although we’ve picked on Dropbox here, it’s by no means an outlier. Similar issues apply to Google Drive, iCloud, OneDrive and so forth. Syncing services should be used for just that – syncing – and backup left to tools designed with that task in mind.

The 3-2-1 strategy

When it comes to backup, the standard advice is that you should keep three copies of anything that matters, in two different formats, with at least one of them off-site – an approach known as the 3-2-1 strategy. The last point is particularly important: no matter how diligently you backup your system, if you store your media right next to your PC then it will be equally susceptible to fire, flood and theft – another reason why your backups might not be as safe as you’d hope.

The good news is that offsite backup is easy: there are plenty of cloud-based backup providers who will, for a modest subscription, handle everything for you. However, this is normally on a “best-effort” basis; for safety, speed and convenience it’s a good idea to keep local backups as well.

At least one of your backup destinations should be off-site

At least one of your backup destinations should be off-site

Ideally, you want your local backups to be updated in real time, so that every time you update a file the backup gets updated too. You can get close to this using Windows’ File History feature, as we discuss below (or Time Machine on macOS), with a NAS or a USB drive as your destination.

If you’re serious about backups then ideally you should also keep a second regularly updated set, to provide an extra layer of robustness against glitches and disasters. Ideally, this would be on a different medium to your primary backups: using a pair of hard drives is much safer than using two folders on one drive.

This is another place where it’s tempting to rely on cloud services, but here’s a cautionary tale: Apify founder Jan Čurn lost 8,000 photos after he uploaded them to Dropbox, then tried to remove them from his local hard disk, to free up space. In theory, he should have been fine. He used Dropbox’s Smart Sync feature (only available on Professional accounts), which is supposed to store your files in the cloud, and download them on demand.

However, writing on Medium, Čurn recalled that the Dropbox client crashed during the initial sync operation, so he unsynced his photo folders by hand. “Everything worked well, the directories disappeared from the local hard drive, but they were still available on Dropbox’s website. All good,” he wrote.

But all wasn’t good. Two months later, Čurn discovered that the photo folders were empty on the server, too. “[It] seems that the Dropbox client first deletes files locally before it informs the server about the new selective sync settings,” he noted. “Consequently, if the client crashes or is killed before the server is contacted, the files remain deleted without any trace. After the client restarts again, it only sees there are some files missing and syncs this new state with the server.”

Dropbox’s engineering team managed to recover 1,463 of Čurn’s files, but the rest were lost for good. It’s a reminder of another important principle: a backup is a copy. If you only have one copy of something, it’s not a backup.

Scheduling your backup

If your backup routine relies on you remembering to update your archives then it’s liable to fail; dedicated backup tools either run continuously, or update your backups at regular intervals. Most backup tools take an incremental approach, so only new and updated files are stored, which saves time, and keeps storage demands down. It can also save you money, by postponing the day when you need to invest in a larger repository for your backups.

Set the smallest practical interval for each incremental backup. Hourly is by no means too often: ask yourself whether you could afford to lose a morning’s work if a lunchtime power cut corrupted your drive and wiped out several hours of productivity. However, if you’re working with a capped broadband connection, it makes sense to limit your cloud backups to run during unmetered hours (typically overnight), so long as you also have local backups running throughout the day.

Don’t rely exclusively on incremental backups, though. Taking periodic full backups allows you to quickly and easily restore your complete system to a recent state; mixing incremental and full backups is just as important as storing them in several locations.

Using Windows’ built-in backup tools

Windows' built-in backup tools can archive your data on either an external drive or a NAS location

Windows’ built-in backup tools can archive your data on either an external drive or a NAS location

Windows’ integrated tools make it very easy to maintain local backups. Start by enabling the File History tool, which uses a connected drive or NAS as a repository for key files, including your Libraries, Desktop, contacts and favourites. To find it, open Settings’ Update & Security pane, and click Backup in the sidebar (or just search Cortana for Backup). Click “+” beside ‘Add a drive’ and select a connected storage device. This only searches for USB drives; if you want to use a NAS, wait for it to fail, then click Show all network connections and select the volume you want to use.

You can manually specify what folders Windows backs up, how often it backs them up and how long it keeps them

You can manually specify what folders Windows backs up, how often it backs them up and how long it keeps them

It may look like nothing has happened, but click out and back into Backup and you’ll see that the Add drive button has been replaced by a switch, toggled to On to activate the backup. Click More options below this to specify what’s included in the backup set, how frequently you want it to back up (between every 10 minutes, and daily) and how long the backup set should be kept. You can also invoke an immediate backup.

With this done, Windows will start quietly and continuously backing up your modified files. If you need to recover a file or folder, simply navigate to it in Explorer and click the History button in the ribbon to view and restore old versions and deleted files.

Back up your cloud files

As we’ve mentioned above, entrusting your files in a cloud-syncing service doesn’t guarantee their safety – so you should make sure your local folders are included in your backup sets, so that files stored on sync services like Dropbox, OneDrive and iCloud should be backed up automatically. Simply keep their client apps are running the whole time your PC is active to keep the copies updated.

With Google Drive, things are a bit more complicated. Google prefers that you work through the browser, and the documents it stores on your local machine are only web links that launch each file in a web app. This means that the files on the server are your only copy – which is, of course, a dangerous situation to be in.

The solution is a tool called InSync, which downloads the files themselves, not just the links – including files others have shared with you – and converts them to Microsoft Office or OpenDocument formats so you can open them locally. The synchronisation and translation works both ways, too, so any edits you make on your PC will be sent back to the server, effectively giving Google Drive the same offline features as Office 365 enjoys through its association with the offline Office apps. It’s not free, but a lifetime licence can be had for a very reasonable $30.

Back up your website

If you keep a blog, or use a CMS to manage your website, it’s important to think about backing that up too. Even if you’re using managed hosting or a shared server, it’s asking for trouble to keep all your data in one place: hosts can – and do – go bankrupt, disappear or suffer DDOS and malware attacks.

Automattic’s VaultPress is a comprehensive backup tool for WordPress blogs, which backs up not only your database, but your themes, settings, system files and uploads, too. It starts at $39 per year for daily backups with a 30-day archive, uptime monitoring, and protection against brute force attacks, comment and pingback spam.

If you don’t need something quite so heavyweight, check out the free BackWPup WordPress extension, which can back up your site to Dropbox, S3 or an FTP server. To install it, hover over Plugins in your WordPress Dashboard, click Add New, and type BackWPup into the search box at the top of the following screen.

With the right tool, such as VaultPress, you can even back up a WordPress installation

With the right tool, such as VaultPress, you can even back up a WordPress installation

Similar backup tools are available for other CMS platforms, and many hosting control panels feature backup tools for flat-form or non-managed sites. Parallels Plesk lets you schedule both incremental and full backups of your data and configuration; by default the destination is a folder on the same server, which isn’t ideal, but you can send it to a separate FTP server and password-protect the resulting archive.

Backup isn’t exactly an exciting topic, but we’ve seen how easy it can be using Windows’ built-in tools, and user-friendly software like O&O DiskImage Professional and Paragon Backup & Recovery. Throw in a dedicated off-site backup service like Backblaze or Carbonite and you’ve easily satisfied the requirements of a dependable 3-2-1 backup strategy.

There’s just one more thing to say: once you’ve set up your system, make sure you thoroughly test your ability to restore files, before you need to rely on it for real. A subtle configuration error could mean you’re not backing up all the files you thought you were, or you could discover that your connection to the cloud storage server is too slow to bring you back online in an acceptable time frame. If you do find any issues, you’ll be glad you ironed them out while the going is good.

Image: Shutterstock