-
Privacy and Data Protection
Our digital risk team is made up of a combination of subject matter experts and technical specialists who can help your business comply with the GDPR.
-
Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC)
While business goals and strategies evolve, our services support you wherever you are in your business cycle. The digital economy is simultaneously increasing the magnitude of new business opportunities while increasing the difficulty of getting it right.
-
ISO 27001 and ISO 27701
Grant Thornton’s ISO 27001 and ISO 27701 specialists will arrange and oversee the formal audit process.
-
SOC 1,2,3
As a service organization there are many ways to provide assurance to your customers and in turn other stakeholders over your control environment. One of the most effective and cost-efficient ways is to issue a Service Organization Control (SOC) Report.
-
Incident Response
Grant Thornton’s Cyber Incident Response Team can support your business in the event of a cyberattack or data loss event. We work alongside your existing IT and Legal teams to provide a co-ordinated, timely and efficient investigation and remediation.
-
Hacking Services
At Grant Thornton, our cyber security experts can develop a bespoke penetration testing plan to meet your business needs and unique IT environment. We can undertake the full suite of testing or conduct individual assessments, as required.
-
Cyber Health Check
Approximately 54% of organizations report that they have experienced at least one cyber-attack during the past year. Grant Thornton’s cyber health check provides you with an objective, jargon-free assessment of your current cyber security, drawing on both qualitative and quantitative elements.
-
Dark Web Threat Intelligence
We use a variety of dark and deep web monitoring tools that continuously scans illegal sites to discover any mention of your data, ranging from breached security credentials such as usernames and passwords to leaked confidential documents of your company.
-
Digital forensics and electronic discovery
We offer a full suite of digital forensics and data acquisition services in investigations related to cybercrime, disputes, fraud and regulatory investigations.
-
Insolvency
If you're facing a time of personal or corporate financial crisis you need advice from someone who listens, who understands your specific issues and deals with them in a supportive and sensitive manner.
-
Crisis stabilisation and turnaround
In periods of financial distress, management teams often face considerable challenges, with many directors having little or no experience of similar conditions.
-
Operational and financial restructuring
Companies challenged by underperformance often need support in identifying options for financial or operational restructuring. Tapping this type of advice helps them create a stable platform for business turnaround.
-
Accelerated M & A
Even fundamentally sound businesses run into difficulties. Cash flow can come under pressure from the loss of a big client, or a dip in performance can threaten a breach of banking covenants if there is insufficient headroom.
-
People Services
Our HR Outsourcing solutions are designed to provide you with the flexibility and expertise needed to manage your people effectively and efficiently.
-
Relocation made easy!
We bring to the table our in-depth understanding of Cyprus immigration legislation and policies, coupled with long experience supporting corporate clients relocating non-EU staff to Cyprus, as well as entrepreneurs and executives moving with their families.
-
Family Office Services
In an era of rising digital threats, protecting the sensitive information and assets of high-net-worth families is paramount. In collaboration with our dedicated strong Cybersecurity and Data Protection team, we can help ensure the data security and privacy of your Family Office (employees and c-suite), family members and any staff supporting them, and also trusted associates.
-
Indirect Tax
Our experienced VAT specialists are available to assist companies and entrepreneurs of all industries and sizes in meeting their obligations.
-
Direct Tax
We can help you ensure a bespoke balance between tax compliance and effective tax planning for your special circumstances.
-
Ημερίδα Γνωριμίας με την Grant Thornton Κύπρου
Σας προσκαλούμε σε μια μοναδική ευκαιρία να γνωρίσετε την Grant Thornton Κύπρου! Την Τρίτη, 5 Νοεμβρίου 2024, θα έχετε τη δυνατότητα να συναντήσετε την ομάδα μας, να ενημερωθείτε για επαγγελματικές ευκαιρίες και να εξερευνήσετε πιστοποιήσεις όπως ACCA.
-
Life at Grant Thornton
At Grant Thornton Cyprus, we are taking a holistic approach and reimagining the way we work, continually assessing it and making necessary changes to better support our people.
-
In the community
Unlocking the potential for growth in our local communities.
-
Diversity and inclusion
Diversity helps us meet the demands of a changing world. We value the fact that our people come from all walks of life and that this diversity of experience and perspective makes our organisation stronger as a result.
-
Global talent mobility
One of the biggest attractions of a career with Grant Thornton Cyprus is the opportunity to work on cross-border projects all over the world.
-
Learning and development
At Grant Thornton we believe learning and development opportunities allow you to perform at your best every day.
-
Our values
We are a values-driven organisation and we have more than 56,000 people in over 140 countries who are passionately committed to these values.
Being entrepreneurial and delivering mid-market sized turnover need not be mutually exclusive. Sweden’s Fontana Food has achieved the best of both worlds
When Frixos Papadopoulous arrived in Sweden in 1974 as a refugee following the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, the entrepreneur spotted a gap in the country’s unadventurous food market. He started selling exotic Cypriot fruit juices to small retailers out of his car boot, and by 1978 Fontana Food was born.
Today, the company employs 34 staff, has a £25 million turnover and supplies around 200 product lines, including a variety of Greek cheeses such as feta, olive oil and olives. Despite this growth, Fontana Food has retained its start-up spirit. Employees have a shared passion for what the company does, ideas flow freely and the good ones are followed up and acted upon quickly.
So what can other growing mid-market businesses that want to remain entrepreneurial learn from Fontana Food’s experience? Here are their five top tips:
1) Build entrepreneurship into your DNA
Fontana Food is a typical example of a start-up that has successfully harnessed its entrepreneurial potential as it has progressed towards becoming a mid-sized company. Annika Hall, director of business advisory at Grant Thornton Sweden, describes this as a transition from “individual to corporate entrepreneurship”.
Individual entrepreneurs are typically fast, flexible and action-oriented. They are also good at spotting new opportunities, being completely customer driven and making the best of limited resources. Most notably, they value the freedom and control that they gain from working for themselves.
While these characteristics are positive contributors to growth in the start-up phase, they don’t necessarily remain so. Ironically, an entrepreneur’s desire for control can stifle the creativity of like-minded staff within the organisation, which becomes a brake on growth.
Corporate entrepreneurship weaves the positive attributes of individual entrepreneurs into the fabric of an organisation, allowing entrepreneurial behaviour to flourish.
“Corporate entrepreneurship is embedded within the social relationships, structures and processes of a company,” says Hall. “You need to ensure that these things are set up in a way that encourages people to behave as individual entrepreneurs, coming up with ideas and questioning and challenging things. If you don’t enable this then entrepreneurial people within the organisation – intrapreneurs – will leave.”
2) Include everyone
Hall says there are numerous ways to preserve an entrepreneurial culture as you grow. “Create a culture where people are allowed, encouraged and seen to have ideas, and where there is a constant discussion around what you do, how you do things and whether you do them in the best way,” says Hall. “This encourages people to feel that their individual contribution is valued, which means they are more likely to behave in an entrepreneurial way.”
Corina Papadopoulou agrees. As Fontana Food’s communications director, she helps father Frixos run the company alongside her brother, Loizos, who is the CEO. She says the company is “more entrepreneurial than ever”, thanks largely to the strong relationships that her father has encouraged the family to build with customers, suppliers and staff.
“We’re very inclusive,” she explains. “We always ask for and listen to everyone’s opinion, even if they can’t be involved in all the decisions. For example, we always have proper lunch breaks and sit around a table for an hour. You get great inspiration and input by just talking during your lunch break.”
Corina believes the company’s inclusive approach has helped to drive retention too. On average, staff stay with the company for around 10 years but the longest serving employee joined Fontana 26 years ago.
3) Walk the talk
Corporate entrepreneurship can manifest itself in plenty of other ways: reward systems that encourage the sharing of ideas and opinions; promotion on the basis of entrepreneurial behaviour; and the presence of entrepreneurial people at all levels of the organisation. Hall also suggests introducing clear structures and processes so that employees know what to do when they have an idea and actually have the opportunity to try it out.
However, she warns that companies need to “walk the talk” if people are to truly believe that they can behave in an entrepreneurial way. “Don’t encourage people to put their ideas in an ideas box but only ever enact the ideas of a handful of people,” says Hall. “It sends out a contradictory message.”
4) Build a shared vision
Hall recommends that companies define a shared vision or goal to serve as a guiding light for all entrepreneurial activity. Fontana Food’s goal is to become the most well-known Greek food company in northern Europe, delivering the best products to its customers. It’s a goal it wants to achieve through energy, passion, persistence and honesty.
“We’ve grown up with our father’s vision and values, and it would be criminal not to carry on in the same spirit because it’s taken him 40 years to get the company to where it is today,” says Corina. “It’s a huge responsibility to make sure that it always stays that way.”
The company has already learnt the consequences of straying from the founder’s values. Marketing manager Marie Eklund explains: “There was a growth spurt four or five years ago when some wrong [recruitment] decisions were made. I think we’ve realised that the most important thing for the success of Fontana is the people who are in this building. We have to share the same values, which are honesty, passion and having fun. It’s possible to climb the career ladder here but it can’t be your core focus.”
5) Get the balance right
It’s also important, Hall says, to achieve the right degree of corporate entrepreneurship. She describes it as a balance between exploration – allowing people to try out new things – and optimisation – ensuring you deliver what you already do in an efficient and effective way. Fontana Food understands that need for balance. As it becomes bigger it is beginning to put some systems and processes in place, but it is still in pursuit of growth so that infrastructure will be sparing. “We’re still driven by passion, by finding gaps in the market and by solving problems for our customers,” says Eklund. “Processes should help you to do good business; you shouldn’t have processes for processes’ sake.”
For growing companies that achieve corporate entrepreneurship, the prize, says Hall, is sustainability through constant renewal and development. Ask the Papadopoulous family – they should know. Their entrepreneurial outlook has given them a bright and exciting future in which they hope to become leaders in their core product categories, introduce new innovations to the market and eventually achieve Frixos’s dream of becoming northern Europe’s most well-known Greek food company.
To speak to Annika or one of our other advisory specialists about how you can make your growing business more entrepreneurial, visit our advisory page.