With more than half (52 per cent) of Brits planning to shop local and support their rural high streets this Christmas, Virgin Media O2 has announced upgrades to its 4G network and new 5G deployment across more than 55,000 rural postcodes.
It is anticipated that the upgrades will help tackle some of the everyday connectivity headaches that small businesses in rural areas are facing, such as reliably taking card and online payments. This will enable these businesses to ensure they can make the most of the upcoming Christmas shopping period, which is undoubtedly very important to their success.
The upgrades come as economic modelling from Cebr for Virgin Media O2 shows improving rural connectivity could add an extra £16.3 billion to the UK economy and create 108,000 new jobs.
Brits want to shop local in boost for rural business
New research commissioned by the telecoms company shows 52 per cent of Brits plan to spend with a rural small business this Christmas, with almost half (49 per cent) motivated by supporting the local economy and two-thirds (65 per cent) saying that the opportunity to find unique products and services influences their choice.
However, the digital divide between urban and rural areas continues to hinder the rural economy with new polling for Virgin Media O2 revealing that shoppers in rural areas have been unable to buy from small businesses due to connectivity challenges. Common issues include being unable to make card or contactless payments (42 per cent), find a business online (45 per cent) and a lack of online purchase options (23 per cent).
Upgrading rural communities ahead of peak shopping period
To help support rural communities in the key trading period running up to Christmas, Virgin Media O2 has made a host of significant 4G and 5G network upgrades to rural postcodes across the UK. Over the past year, the operator has deployed high-speed 5G network to more than 30,000 rural areas and has also improved its 4G network to boost capacity in more than 34,245 postcodes across the countryside.
Economic opportunity for rural small businesses
Economic analysis for Virgin Media O2 by Cebr shows that improving rural connectivity across the UK could boost turnover for rural small businesses by over 7.7 per cent, adding an extra £16.3 billion to the UK economy and creating more than 108,000 jobs. Of the four major rural economic sectors analysed in Virgin Media O2’s ‘Great Rural Revival’ report, rural small businesses could expect the greatest absolute increase in turnover and employment thanks to improved connectivity.
Fiona Warren, owner of a rural dog grooming business based in Yorkshire comments: “As a rural small business owner, I cannot overstate how important connectivity is for the running of my business. I’m often travelling across the countryside, and if I can’t access the internet or contact my customers, it has a huge impact on my business’ cashflow and my bottom line.”
Virgin Media O2’s commitment to rural connectivity
With “The Great Rural Revival” report showing improving rural connectivity could unlock an extra £65.1 billion for the UK economy, Virgin Media O2 continues to deliver part of the UK Government’s Shared Rural Network (SRN) programme at pace, announcing earlier this year that it had further expanded its reliable 4G network to an additional 50 sites and secured planning consent for work at a further 100 sites.
While Virgin Media O2 is dedicating investment to enhance connectivity in rural areas and address signal not-spots, the company is calling on policy makers, planning authorities and landlords to agree rules that will make it faster and easier to provide the infrastructure needed to deliver vital connectivity improvements.
Jeanie York, Chief Technology Officer at Virgin Media O2 said: “Small businesses are the cornerstone of the UK economy and are vitally important to rural communities. Our Great Rural Revival report demonstrates the transformational power improved connectivity could have for these rural small businesses. This is why we are committed to enhancing connectivity in these areas.
“To ensure the future of rural small businesses, we must establish greater collaboration with industry partners, the UK government, planning authorities and landowners to deliver the network upgrades that underpin reliable and fast connectivity for rural communities.”
Share