fb-pixel
Skip to content

North West economy set for £242m boost thanks to Made Smarter-backed firms

Aerial panorama of Leeds railway station and surrounding area

A pioneering programme helping North West manufacturers invest in industrial digital technology is forecast to create more than 1,550 new jobs and boost the region’s economy by £242m, new figures reveal.

It comes as businesses across the region mark National Manufacturing Day on Thursday, September 28.

The Made Smarter adoption programme was launched in Liverpool to help businesses digitalise, decarbonise, and drive growth.

So far 2,500 manufacturers from across Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, and Liverpool have engaged with the programme, with hundreds going on to receive support through grant funding, impartial technology advice and leadership and skills training to help transform their businesses.

The Government-funded, industry-led initiative has delivered 334 technology projects in the North West, which are forecast to create 1,550 jobs, upskill 2,772 existing roles, and increase North West GVA by £242m.

These achievements were celebrated at Made Smarter’s Impact 4.0 Showcase hosted at Siemens’ smart factory which brought together industry leaders, stakeholders, and SMEs to explore the success of the programme and its plans for the future.

Speaking at the event, Paul McLaren, production director for BAE Systems, and new Chair of Made Smarter North West’s Steering Group, praised the ‘tremendous’ impact of the programme.

He said: “Made Smarter has demonstrated that targeted support can be a catalyst for growth and a real enabler for change.

“UK manufacturing is moving into a phase where resilience is as important as it has ever been. Made Smarter is helping SMEs create robust plans to deliver impactful results.”

Delegates were also given a special tour of the Siemens factory, in Congleton, which produces more than 1.2m drives and controls each year and achieved carbon neutral status in 2022.

It was an inspiring demonstration of digitalisation and decarbonisation for local SME manufacturers which included Qualkem, Firstplay Dietary Foods, IoT Horizon, Bury Black Pudding Company, Liversidge Windows, Harten Frameworks and Bloom in a Box.

Speaking at the event, Donna Edwards, Made Smarter North West Adoption programme director, said: “Made Smarter has been on an incredible journey over the last four years helping businesses navigate the Pandemic and recover, negotiate supply chain disruption, and labour shortages, as well as focus on solutions to mitigate the energy crisis.

“It is fantastic to bring together so many of the programme’s partners and stakeholders to say thank you, to celebrate our achievements, and to share the message that we have plenty more to do to increase the adoption of digital technologies to improve productivity.”

You may also like...

Jaguar’s rebrand: The claws are out

Plus, all the news you need to know this week, why it's sometimes good to be wrong and why the middle of Lidl has a "big male following".

Graham Ruddick

Male swimmer with eyes closed

Believing in long-term success is vital when facing brutal setbacks

Belief can be a powerful driver but lasting success requires more than optimism alone, says Catherine Baker

Catherine Baker

Forest Holidays Scotland

Building a northern unicorn: The tech-driven rise of Forge Holiday Group

Forge Holiday Group is heading for unicorn status and taking on international tech rivals

Chris Maguire