British Made Awards 2026/ 12 Bullet-Proofing Your Finances: How Manufacturing SMEs Can Tackle Cash Flow Issues SMEs (Small-to-Medium-sized Enterprises) make up 99% of the firms in the UK and are the “lifeblood” of our economy. In 2023, the UK had over 250,000 manufacturing businesses which can be characterised as SMEs, highlighting the manufacturing sector as a key contributor to our economy. SMEs in all sectors have faced a number of challenges in recent years, from COVID-19 to rocketing inflation and plenty more. Now, however, cash flow issues are amongst the most common problems facing SMEs in the UK. With cost-of-living issues continuing to affect payment cycles, nearly half of small-to-medium-sized businesses list cash flow as the single largest issue they’re confronted with. For the manufacturing sector, where invoicing is common practice, this is a serious issue, increasing the risk of insolvency for SMEs that rely on timely invoice payment to survive. We caught up with invoice finance specialist Stuart Wilkie, Head of Commercial Finance at broker Anglo Scottish Asset Finance, to discuss some of the ways manufacturing SMEs can protect themselves against cash flow issues. Key findings • SMEs make up 99% of the firms in the UK. • There are 245,000-262,000 manufacturing SMEs in the UK as of 2025. • 48% of SMEs list cash flow issues as the biggest problem they currently face. • UK SMEs are owed an average of around £250,000 as a result of outstanding invoices. • The UK’s small businesses collectively waste over 56 million hours each year chasing late invoices. • Average times for construction businesses to be repaid dropped from 45 to 32 days between 2017 and 2023. • The government has extended the Recovery Loan Scheme, rebranded as the Growth Guarantee Scheme, which offers a 70% government guarantee on SME loans up to £2m in Great Britain. The current outlook for manufacturing businesses 48% of SMEs in the UK highlight cash flow issues as the biggest issue they’re currently facing, though this figure doesn’t quite reveal the extent of the problem. Research from 2023 indicated that SMEs in the UK are owed, on average, around £250,000 as a result of outstanding invoices – an amount that threatens to cripple SMEs. Manufacturing businesses may be more susceptible to cash flow issues than other sectors, particularly accounting for seasonal payment cycles, and high overhead costs. And, with the UK’s economy now officially in a recession, these issues could pose further problems without contingency measures in place. “Rather than traditional forms of finance like a standard commercial loan, manufacturing SMEs in this position are more likely to benefit from less rigid forms of finance, such as invoice finance,” comments Wilkie. “However, there are plenty of other ways that SMEs can insulate themselves against slow payments and cash flow issues…” Embrace automation Intuit Quickbooks estimate that the UK’s small businesses collectively waste over 56 million hours every year chasing late invoice payments. For the average manufacturing business owner, this means more than a week each year wasted – time that could be spent on more productive project-based matters. Investing in automated invoice processing could reduce the time wasted chasing these outstanding invoices, enabling your business to focus on the tasks that really matter. Reducing overheads Rising overheads are another key issue for manufacturing businesses, with fixed costs often posing a barrier to further investment. Though energy prices have begun to dip again in recent months, skyrocketing costs through 2022 and 2023 made fixed costs a serious barrier to business growth and even survival in many cases. It can be difficult for SMEs to get a handle on which areas of their business are costing them money – without end-to-end visibility over your operations, it can be a challenge identifying which fixed costs to tackle first. “Take the time to interrogate your overheads”, advises Wilkie – “Could you save money by switching energy providers? Can you cut down on freight or storage costs? This could help give your business a degree of flexibility once more.” Invoice finance Invoice finance is another valuable facility which is being accessed by a growing number of manufacturers looking to create more sustainable cash flow practices. By working with a third-party funder, manufacturing SMEs gain the opportunity to leverage unpaid invoices to instantly receive up to 90% of the invoice’s value. “From a forecasting perspective,” says Wilkie, “invoice finance makes life far easier. Rather than dealing with different customers or suppliers who pay invoices with varying degrees of urgency, invoice finance lets smaller businesses get a handle on the money they’re owed, without being hamstrung by other businesses dragging their feet.” Renegotiating terms For many manufacturing companies, previously agreed invoice repayment periods are hamstringing current business. Elongated repayment terms could be benefitting your partners and suppliers to the detriment of your business.
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