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Friday 17 July 2026 Dunoon IT Firm Grew Turnover by 25% After One Decision: Outsource the Sales BC Technologies went from £3m to £3.75m in a single year, and is now pushing towards £5m. The lever they pulled wasn't a new product or a bigger team. It was a structured sales partnership. That's worth understanding. Thursday 16 July 2026 Scottish Greens Push to Pause Data Centres, and Why That's the Wrong Answer for Scotland The Scottish Greens want Holyrood to follow New York's moratorium on new data centre development, citing energy demand and environmental concerns. It's a well-intentioned call. It's also the kind of policy that could hand Scotland's AI infrastructure opportunity to someone else, permanently. Thursday 16 July 2026 Chancellor's Mansion House SME Package: What Scottish Small Businesses Can Actually Claim Rachel Reeves used her July 2026 Mansion House speech to announce a fresh round of SME funding support across the UK. The details matter. Here is what is in it, what Scottish businesses are entitled to, and where the gaps still are. Thursday 16 July 2026 50 Varieties, Half of Them Nowhere Else in Edinburgh: The Big Cheese Opens on Broughton Street in August An Edinburgh couple are opening an independent cheese shop on Broughton Street on 1 August. The Big Cheese will launch with 50 varieties from Scotland, the UK, and continental Europe, with around half reportedly unavailable anywhere else in the city. It's the kind of genuinely local, genuinely specialist retail that Broughton Street does well. Wednesday 15 July 2026 West Lothian's Tourism Economy Hits Nearly £300m, Outlander and Retail Lead the Way A TV show filmed partly on Scottish soil and a busy shopping centre have helped push West Lothian's visitor economy close to the £300 million mark. It is a textbook case of cultural assets doing serious economic heavy lifting, and there are lessons here for every Scottish SME sitting on something people would travel to see. Tuesday 14 July 2026 £1.64m, three Scottish sites, zero upfront cost: the fully funded solar model reshaping industrial energy bills Two Blues Solar has completed 1.8 MWp of commercial solar installations across industrial sites in Perth and Arbroath, with a combined investment of £1.64 million it put in, not the businesses. The projects will generate roughly 1.39 GWh of electricity annually. If you run a Scottish business with a roof and a decent energy bill, pay attention. Monday 13 July 2026 McGill's Takes Scottish Bus Contracts to Court, and Every Business That Relies on Public Transport Should Pay Attention Scotland's largest independent bus operator has launched legal action over public bus contract awards, in a dispute that cuts to the heart of how Scotland procures its public transport. The outcome could reshape routes, costs, and commuter reliability across central Scotland for years. Friday 10 July 2026 Forty jobs gone as Glasgow electrical contractor folds after nearly two decades, a warning shot for Scottish construction supply chains A Glasgow electrical contracting firm has collapsed into administration, taking around 40 jobs with it and putting another name on a growing list of Scottish building services businesses that couldn't survive the current squeeze. Joint administrators from Interpath Advisory are now picking through the wreckage. If you work in construction, trade services, or supply into that sector, this one is worth paying attention to. Friday 10 July 2026 Leith Lands £60,000 as One of 15 UK Town of Culture Shortlistees, Here's What That Means for Local Business Out of nearly 400 applications, Leith has made the cut for the UK Government's Town of Culture 2028 competition, securing £60,000 to develop its bid. For Edinburgh's creative businesses, traders, and venue owners, this is not a background story, it's a live funding pipeline with your name on it. Friday 10 July 2026 Fife's anti-tank cubes held a secret for 80 years: the names, slogans, and cartoons of the men who built them Archaeologists recording WW2 coastal defences at Tentsmuir in Fife have found something the official record never captured: the soldiers themselves. Carved names, a slogan, and a cartoon etched into concrete anti-tank cubes are now being formally documented for the first time. It is a small discovery with a quietly enormous human weight. Thursday 09 July 2026 3,000 Nationwide Staff Anchor Glasgow's Biggest Office Block, What It Means for Scotland's Commercial Economy Nationwide is consolidating around 3,000 colleagues into 177 Bothwell Street, Glasgow's largest office building and the former Virgin Money headquarters. The mutual is also rebranding the building later this year. For Scottish businesses supplying into the financial sector, this is a significant signal of where the money is sitting. Wednesday 08 July 2026 Dundee's RADIX hits £9m turnover on 33% growth, low-carbon construction is a market, not a movement A Dundee engineering firm founded five years ago just broke through £9 million in annual turnover, driven by genuine commercial demand for greener foundations. RADIX is proof that Scottish deep-tech manufacturing can scale fast when it solves a real problem. The numbers are hard to argue with. Tuesday 07 July 2026 SNP backs temporary freeze on AI data centres, and Scotland's waste-heat opportunity hangs in the balance The SNP has thrown its weight behind calls for a temporary moratorium on new AI data centre developments in Scotland, citing pressure on the electricity grid and planning concerns. It is a legitimate question about infrastructure management. But pause the wrong things for too long, and Scotland hands away one of the most compelling economic opportunities it has seen in a generation. Monday 06 July 2026 Scottish Financial Services Pulls Back in Q2, What That Means for Every SME in Its Orbit Activity across UK financial services dipped in the second quarter of 2025, and Edinburgh, home to one of Europe's largest financial clusters, feels that more than most. If your business sells into, serves, or seeks investment from the finance sector, the signals are worth reading carefully right now. Friday 03 July 2026 One in Three Small Business Owners Can't Pay Themselves Minimum Wage, The Numbers Are Getting Worse New Federation of Small Businesses data reveals that a third of UK small business owners are paying themselves less than the legal minimum wage floor, with rising employer National Insurance costs and a higher wage bill squeezing margins to breaking point. For Scottish SME owners already navigating energy costs, business rates, and post-pandemic debt, the picture is particularly bleak. This is not a cashflow blip. It is a structural crisis. Thursday 02 July 2026 Hunters of Linlithgow acquired by Farmer Autocare as it begins major expansion across Scotland Farmer Autocare, part of Kerr's Tyre Group, has acquired Hunters of Linlithgow marking the first milestone in its plan to expand across Scotland. Earlier this year Farmer Autocare joined Belfast-based Kerr's Tyres Group, Thursday 02 July 2026 AIM investors urged to tread carefully on 'stick or twist' tax relief dilemma Wealth management experts are reporting a rise in enquiries from investors in Scotland worried about a cut in valuable tax relief typically used to plan for later life. The Chancellor's decision to halve Inheritance Tax Wednesday 01 July 2026 LHV Bank Plans to Double Its Scottish Loan Book, and That Is Good News If You Need Finance Estonian-founded LHV Bank is making a serious move into Scottish commercial lending, appointing Glasgow-based Harper Macleod as its primary Scottish legal adviser. If you have been watching the lending market with one eye, now is the time to open both. Tuesday 30 June 2026 Scotland's Planning System Is Pricing Out Growth, and SMEs Are Paying for It Housing costs are no longer just a residential problem. They are compressing labour supply, pushing up wage demands, and making it harder for Scottish businesses to recruit and retain the people they need. Planners, says a growing chorus of voices, need to stop pretending otherwise. Tuesday 30 June 2026 Government-Backed Finance Is Available for Scottish SMEs Right Now, Here's How to Get It The Growth Guarantee Scheme quietly reopened to UK businesses looking to borrow for investment and growth, with government backing reducing lender risk and widening access to finance. If you run a Scottish SME and you've been told no by a bank, or you've not asked at all, this is worth five minutes of your time. Monday 29 June 2026 Westminster's 10-Point Digital Playbook for SMEs: What Scottish Small Businesses Should Take From It The UK Government's SME Digital Adoption Taskforce has published its 2026 update, setting out ten concrete recommendations to accelerate how small businesses take up digital tools. For Scottish SME owners still running payroll on spreadsheets or quoting jobs by hand, this is worth twenty minutes of your time. Monday 29 June 2026 James Watt's Post-BrewDog Move Points to a Community Ownership Model Scottish SMEs Should Know About The founder of BrewDog is backing a business structure that puts community stake ahead of investor return. It's not just an interesting philosophical shift, it's a model with real funding and legal architecture behind it, and Scottish entrepreneurs can access it today. Friday 26 June 2026 £29bn Grid Upgrade Could Create 10,000 Jobs Across North Scotland, and the Supply Chain Opportunity Starts Now SSEN Transmission has published hard numbers on what its decade-long infrastructure programme means for Scotland's economy. For businesses in construction, engineering, logistics, and professional services, this is not a distant government promise, it is a procurement pipeline opening up right now. Thursday 25 June 2026 Hundreds of New Leith Homes Approved: What the Harbour 31 Green Light Means for Edinburgh SMEs Edinburgh City Council has approved the next phase of the Harbour 31 regeneration on the Leith waterfront, unlocking hundreds of new homes on the former docklands. For construction firms, retailers, and hospitality operators in the Leith corridor, this is not background noise, it is a pipeline. Wednesday 24 June 2026 East Lothian Businesses Sound the Alarm: Parking Charges Could Gut High Street Trade Dozens of town centre businesses across East Lothian have come out publicly against proposed parking charges, warning that paid parking will drive customers straight to out-of-town retail. With the local Provost standing firm, this is shaping up to be a fight with real stakes for every independent trader in the region. Tuesday 23 June 2026 North Bridge Reopens: What Edinburgh's City-Centre Businesses Need to Know Now One of Edinburgh's most commercially critical routes is set to fully reopen following repair works, and for businesses in the Old Town, Southside, and along the Royal Mile corridor, that is genuinely good news. Reduced disruption means better footfall, faster deliveries, and staff who arrive on time. Here's why it matters and what to do with it. Monday 22 June 2026 Asbestos in China-Sourced Turbine Parts: Scotland's Renewables Supply Chain Has a Problem Worth Naming Wind turbine components imported from China have tested positive for asbestos, raising serious questions about procurement standards across the UK's energy supply chain. For Scotland, where offshore and onshore wind is the backbone of the energy transition, this is not an abstract concern. It lands on the desks of developers, contractors, and the SMEs who supply them. Friday 19 June 2026 Scottish Red Meat Hits £3.5bn Record, But the Industry Says It's Running Out of Time Quality Meat Scotland's latest research shows the sector at its highest-ever economic value, with consumer loyalty to Scottish beef, lamb, and pork genuinely strong. The numbers look good. The warnings underneath them are serious. Friday 19 June 2026 Google's Bite-Sized AI Training for Teachers Is Exactly What Scottish Schools Have Been Waiting For Professional development for educators is chronically underfunded in time, not just money. Google's new AI Educator Series tackles that head-on with short, stackable modules teachers can actually fit into a real working week. Scottish schools should be paying attention. Thursday 18 June 2026 The UK-India Trade Deal Goes Live on 15 July, Here's What Scottish Exporters Need to Do Before Then A £4.8 billion trade agreement between the UK and India enters into force next month, and the window to prepare is shorter than it looks. Scottish SMEs exporting goods or services to India stand to benefit directly, but only if they've done the groundwork. Here's what that groundwork looks like. Wednesday 17 June 2026 Graduates walked out of their Fort William ceremony and straight into job interviews, because the Highlands needs £100 billion worth of engineers UHI North, West and Hebrides just sent its third cohort of civil engineering graduates from ceremony to interview in the same afternoon. Employers were already waiting. Scotland's infrastructure pipeline is so large, and the skills gap so acute, that the formalities of graduation are barely keeping pace with demand. Wednesday 17 June 2026 Dumfries Mental Health Archive Joins UNESCO's Memory of the World, and Scotland Should Be Proud The records of the Crichton Royal Institution, a former psychiatric hospital in Dumfries that pioneered humane mental health care, have been added to UNESCO's Memory of the World Register. It is one of the most significant heritage recognitions a Scottish institution can receive. Here is why it matters beyond the archive itself. Tuesday 16 June 2026 SpaceX Hits Nasdaq at $1.75 Trillion, and Edinburgh's Baillie Gifford Was There From the Start SpaceX's long-awaited stock market debut is shaping up to be the biggest IPO in history, and Edinburgh's own Baillie Gifford is sitting on one of the most significant early-backer windfalls in Scottish financial history. This is what happens when patient, long-term capital bets on the future and holds its nerve. Monday 15 June 2026 UK-Japan £18bn Deal: What Scottish Exporters and Tech Firms Should Do Next Britain and Japan have signed an £18 billion investment agreement that opens new trade corridors well beyond the EU. For Scottish businesses that have been quietly rebuilding their export strategy since Brexit, this is a door worth walking through. Here's what it means on the ground. Friday 12 June 2026 RBS Launches IP Lending Scheme Offering Scottish Startups Up to £10m Against Their Ideas, Not Their Assets For years, the hardest thing about being an IP-rich, asset-light Scottish business was convincing a bank that your patents, trademarks, and software were worth lending against. Royal Bank of Scotland has just changed that. Loans from £250,000 to £10 million are now available to businesses whose most valuable collateral exists in their heads, not their warehouses. Friday 12 June 2026 From Greyfriars to the Big Screen: Edinburgh's Sean Dunn Makes His Debut with Peter Mullan A cape-wearing stranger, a famous grave, and a spark of dark comedy. Edinburgh director Sean Dunn has turned a chance encounter in Greyfriars Kirkyard into a feature debut starring one of Scotland's finest actors. This is what Edinburgh creative ambition looks like when it gets off the ground. Thursday 11 June 2026 Scottish Hospitality Chief Left on Read: VAT Reform Plea Gets No Reply from Holyrood The Scottish Licensed Trade Association has hit out after its request for a direct meeting with First Minister John Swinney on VAT reform for hospitality went unanswered. With pubs, restaurants, and hotels across Scotland still paying 20% VAT on food and drink while their counterparts in France and Germany pay half that, the silence is costing operators real money. This is not an abstract policy spat, it is a structural cost disadvantage hitting Edinburgh's high street every single day. Wednesday 10 June 2026 £172,000 Fine After Livingston Worker Loses Arm Function: The Real Cost of a Machinery Audit You Keep Postponing A West Lothian packaging firm has been fined £172,000 after a worker was left with a permanently shortened arm following a machinery entrapment at their Livingston factory. For Scottish SME manufacturers and employers, this is not a tragic anomaly, it is a balance-sheet warning. The Health and Safety Executive doesn't negotiate. Wednesday 10 June 2026 Edinburgh bans phones in schools from August, what it means for EdTech, parents, and the classroom AI debate Edinburgh's Education, Children and Families Committee has approved a 'bell to bell' mobile phone ban across city schools, effective from the new academic year. It's one of the most sweeping school phone policies in the UK, and it lands right in the middle of a fast-moving conversation about digital tools, AI in education, and who gets to decide how young people learn. Tuesday 09 June 2026 Scottish Businesses Can Now Donate Goods to Charity Tax-Free, Here's What Changed A quiet but significant VAT rule change means SMEs can give surplus stock, equipment, or goods to registered charities without the tax bill that used to come with it. Edinburgh accountancy firm Azets is urging businesses to act now, particularly as charity sector donations are falling at exactly the wrong time. Monday 08 June 2026 NHS Scotland's Bank Staff Bill Runs to Billions, and the Fix Might Already Exist Scottish Labour is calling out what it describes as 'eye-watering' spending on agency and bank staff across NHS Scotland, money that leaves the frontline without going through it. The numbers matter well beyond Holyrood: workforce strategy in public sector procurement is broken, and the private sector has tools that could help fix it. Sunday 07 June 2026 Scotland's Back at the World Cup, Here's How Not to Botch the Sickies Season FIFA World Cup 2026 kicks off in June with Scotland appearing for the first time in a generation. For Scottish SME owners, that's brilliant news, right up until Monday morning when half the team mysteriously has food poisoning. Edinburgh employment lawyers are urging employers to think before they act. Saturday 06 June 2026 Scotland's Back at the World Cup, And Your Absence Policy Needs to Be Ready Before Kick-Off FIFA World Cup 2026 runs from June into July, with matches kicking off at awkward times for a UK workforce. Glasgow employment law firm Holmes Mackillop is warning Scottish employers not to react badly to a spike in sick days, but to get ahead of it now, before it becomes a disciplinary headache. Friday 05 June 2026 £2 Billion A9 Dualling Contracts Hit the Market, Scottish SMEs, This One's for You The Scottish Government is opening nearly £2 billion worth of construction contracts to complete the long-delayed Perth to Inverness A9 dualling. Five remaining sections are going to tender under a new contractor framework. If you're in construction, engineering, civils, or supply chain anywhere in Scotland, the window is open.