Small Business Survey Scotland: 2022-2023
Findings for Scotland from the Small Business Survey 2022-2023
Methodology
The survey for Scotland is part of a UK-wide large-scale telephone survey of 7,718 SME employers, commissioned by the Department for Business, and Trade (DBT) and was conducted between the 1st November 2022 and the 30th April 2023. The survey is the latest of a series of annual and biennial Small Business Surveys dating back to 2003. From 2015 onwards, the survey introduced a longitudinal tracking element and is now carried out on an annual basis. The longitudinal element of the survey established a ‘panel’ of businesses that might be resurveyed in subsequent years. This is to allow for analysis of how combinations of factors affect business performance over time.
This report provides a snapshot of the state of SMEs with employees (defined as businesses with between one and 249 employees) surveyed in Scotland between November 2022 and April 2023. Enterprises with no employees have been excluded from the dataset on which this report is based. This is consistent with the reporting of the survey from 2015 onwards.
In 2022-23, 750 SMEs with employees took part in the survey in Scotland. 403 businesses in Scotland had taken part in prior year surveys (“panellists”) and 347 businesses were new to the survey in 2022-23 (“top ups”). The survey sample is stratified by business size (micro businesses with 1-9 employees, small businesses with 10-49 employees and medium-sized businesses with 50-249 employees) and by sector (defined by Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) 2007).
The data has been weighted to ensure that the results are representative of the overall Scottish SME population. Because of changes in terms of sampling and changes to the questionnaire in 2022-23, data cannot always be compared with previous editions of the Small Business Survey Scotland.
This report contains selected findings. The accompanying data tables show the full findings for Scotland across the following themes:
- business demographics / characteristics
- trade activities
- business practices
- access to finance
- performance and outlook
- energy efficiency
These are broken down – where sample sizes allow – as follows:
- business size (micro, small, medium)
- sector
- location (urban or rural)
This survey differs from the Business Insights and Conditions Survey (BICS) in that it includes firms with fewer than 10 employees, thus is more representative of the Scottish SME base as a whole. While BICS is published fortnightly and provides the most up to date results, this annual survey generally asks for more details and a longer-term view with its questions.
Table 1: Sample Breakdown by Sector, Longitudinal Small Business Survey 2022, Scotland
Sector (SIC 2007) |
Micro (1 – 9 employees) |
Small (10 – 49 employees) |
Medium (50 – 249 employees) |
Total |
ABDE Primary |
29 |
12 |
3 |
44 |
C Manufacturing |
18 |
40 |
25 |
83 |
F Construction |
38 |
26 |
8 |
72 |
GHI Transport/Retail/Distribution |
117 |
112 |
26 |
255 |
J Information/Communication |
12 |
6 |
1 |
19 |
KLM Business Services |
59 |
33 |
15 |
107 |
N Administrative Services |
29 |
15 |
9 |
53 |
PQRS Other services |
44 |
50 |
23 |
117 |
Total |
346 |
294 |
110 |
750 |
In order to reduce the average interview length and therefore boost response rates, three cohorts (A, B and C) were utilised for the LSBS 2022 survey (Table 2). Some of the respondents were randomly assigned to one of the three cohorts and specific questions were only asked of one cohort, although most questions went to all survey respondents. Throughout the report, it is made clear where questions have been asked to one of the cohorts only or the full sample.
Table 2: Sample Breakdown by Cohort, Longitudinal Small Business Survey 2022, Scotland
Cohort |
Scotland |
UK |
No cohort |
172 |
1943 |
Cohort A |
177 |
1909 |
Cohort B |
203 |
1959 |
Cohort C |
198 |
1907 |
Total |
750 |
7718 |
Comparisons drawn between sub-groups (e.g. Scotland vs. UK; 2022-23 survey results vs. 2021 survey results) in the report are displayed only when the difference with the overall finding is statistically significant at 95 per cent confidence level. Due to smaller sample sizes for sub-groups, the survey's estimates may be affected by sampling errors and therefore apparent differences of a few percentage points between sub-samples may not reflect real differences in the population.
Contact
For enquiries about this publication please contact:
Jan Tomasik
Office of the Chief Economic Adviser
e-mail: jan.tomasik@gov.scot or industrystatistics@gov.scot
For general enquiries about Scottish Government statistics please contact:
Office of the Chief Statistician
e-mail: statistics.enquiries@gov.scot
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