05 December 2023

How Interreg boosts SME growth

#25yearsIBSR
Written by Elena Kolosova

Thanks to transnational cooperation, small and medium enterprises in the Baltic Sea region have got first-hand expertise to develop their business, find new partners and enter new markets. Working beyond borders, they have become more competitive and found new ways of running a business. We take a look back at 25 years of Interreg Baltic Sea Region cooperation for support to SMEs. 

SMEs driving the growth in the region

Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) are crucial to the Baltic Sea Region’s economy, driving growth, innovation, and job creation. Interreg projects have been instrumental in boosting the capacity, adaptability, and resilience of SMEs, and so promoting economic connectivity and cohesion in the region.

Esa Kokkonen, Director of the Baltic Institute of Finland and the coordinator of the policy area Innovation of the EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region

“The Programme is a very important instrument for local and regional actors in Tampere to connect with peers in neighbouring countries in topics like smart specialisation.We were able to coordinate and use the existing policies, policy instruments and innovation assets more effectively. The Programme helped us to be more effective with our innovation investments in the region.”

Enhancing capacity of SMEs

From 2004 to 2007, several projects supported SMEs in all Baltic Sea Region countries, facilitating over 1200 springboard events to help entrepreneurs develop business plans and attract venture capital. Regional development agencies and business support organisations improved their business training schemes and advice to SMEs.

Max Hogeforster, the Hanse Parliament, Germany

“We ended up with an application, and later on, an approved B-SME project, with as many as 39 partners from 10 countries! Although I wouldn’t do it again with that many project partners in one consortium, I must say that B-SME was a very successful project: the networks we created in the years 2004-2006 are still active today. It was the first EU project I managed and a very positive experience. I was very enthusiastic about the common willingness. Thanks to the Interreg projects, we brought tangible results for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the Baltic Sea region for the past 20 years. Unlike universities, transnational cooperation is not very natural to small business support organisations or SMEs. It is difficult to mobilise SMEs to travel and connect with others. This is why our first projects revolved around matchmaking.”

Building support networks for SMEs

From 2009 to 2014, projects linked incubators, chambers of commerce, and clusters to create support networks for SMEs. These networks helped SMEs find partners in other countries and enter new markets. They facilitated access to innovation expertise and testing new products in world-leading research facilities located in different Baltic Sea Region countries.

Max Hogeforster, the Hanse Parliament:

“This would not have been possible without the Interreg support, as many chambers in the region are not that strong financially. We created many solutions for SMEs to help them run their businesses better.

We also created very strong structures that are still intact. For example, in 2009, we realised that SMEs are cut off from the academic world. So, we applied for a project called BSR QUICK and we managed to create the Baltic Sea Academy. The Academy brought universities and SMEs together. At that time, we started with seven universities in six countries in the region. Although this project ended in 2012, the Baltic Sea Academy is more active today than ever with 25 universities working together with SMEs on concrete Research & Development (R&D) tasks. This is something great to see – that a project works just as an incentive for something that grows after the project ends.”

Strengthening the competitiveness of SMEs

Between 2016 and 2021, projects boosted regional innovation ecosystems, networks of public authorities, innovation actors, universities, and companies. They discovered best practices to engage SMEs in innovation activities within regional smart specialisation strategies, a systematic process to make European regions globally more competitive through innovation. Projects also helped boost the competitiveness of SMEs in various sectors, like engineering, electronics, blue bioeconomy, IT, education, audio-visual and gaming, medical, clothing, and furniture.  

 

Ilga Gruševa, the Monitoring Committee member from Latvia, the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Regional Development

“In the project Smart and Safe Workwear Clothing (SWW), the Riga Technical University facilitated the transfer of knowledge about intelligent solutions and integration of innovative IT technologies into clothing. New ideas were tested in production and in real working conditions, also by the national armed forces. As a result, the project increased the competitiveness of companies in Latvia and other countries in the region against cheap imports.”

Supporting SMEs in crisis situations

Projects also supported SMEs in crisis situations, providing advice from business consultants and mentors to avoid bankruptcy and job losses. Further, they helped SMEs transfer their businesses to successors as a change of ownership is a complex process.  

 

Max Hogeforster, the Hanse Parliament

“I am also very happy about INBETS BSR which was about successors in companies. We worked on ways to motivate the young generations to consider taking over a running company instead of setting up a new one. And the topic we tackled is more relevant than before. I just read that the biggest threat for SMEs in Europe is the lack of successors. No wonder we still receive a lot of feedback from the project website and the tools; people keep downloading the guidelines and doing the assessments we created between 2017 and 2021.”

#25yearsIBSR

This year, our Interreg Baltic Sea Region Programme is celebrating its 25th anniversary. For more examples of #MadeWithIBSR project results and testimonials of great people who have helped shape the regions with us,  visit our birthday celebrations page!

Want to know more about the projects that have been helping SMEs? Flip through the project examples below:

Restart BSR

Restart SMEs in the Baltic Sea Region
Restart BSR helped to build the institutional potential to support companies in a difficult financial situation, as well as owners of formerly closed companies, willing to start new businesses.
Read more about the project

INBETS BSR

Innovative Business Transfer Models for SMEs in the BSR
The project INBETS BSR enabled business support organisations to improve consultations in business transfer and ensure continuity in complex handover processes.
Read more about the project

EmpInno

S3-Empowering for Innovation and Growth in Medium-Sized Cities and Regions
The Interreg project EmpInno helped twelve medium sized regions around the Baltic Sea to improve their regional innovation strategies for smart specialisation (RIS3) by providing strategy owners (e.g. public authorities) and strategy implementers (e.g. science parks, universities, business intermediaries) with peer knowledge and by boosting their cooperation with business.
Read more about the project

EcoDesign Circle

Ecodesign as Driver of Innovation in the BSR
The Interreg project Ecodesign Circle successfully introduced ecodesign thinking and acting to design centres and numerous design companies in five countries around the Baltic Sea, as well as to the Bureau of European Design Associations - a strong move towards a circular economy in Europe.
Read more about the project

SWW

Smart and Safe Work Wear Clothing
The Interreg project SWW showcased enterprises manufacturing work wear in the Baltic Sea region how to introduce mass customisation and integrate IT technology into clothing, and by this to increase their competitiveness against new producers and cheap imports from Asian markets.
Read more about the project

BaltSe@nioR

Innovative solutions to support BSR enterprises in product development aimed at raising comfort and safety of seniors home living
In this Interreg project, furniture manufacturers, designers, architectures and other experts gain knowledge about the senior’s needs and preferences in order to win a competitive edge in designing customised and smart products for seniors, and by this to improve their quality of life.
Read more about the project

BalticLSC

Baltic Large Scale Computing
BalticLSC helped smaller innovative businesses, startups, research centers and independent innovators take advantage of complex data thanks to the improved access to large-scale computing.
Read more about the project

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