The news that a British entrepreneur has transferred his company to an Employee Ownership Trust is being presented as a feel-good story. It is not. It is a strategic pivot in the war for human capital.
The threat vector here is not hostile state actors directly. It is the slow erosion of our industrial base through talent attrition. By selling to employees, this owner has immunised his firm against hostile takeovers and, critically, against the talent raids conducted by foreign intelligence services disguised as private equity.
Every worker now has a direct financial stake in the company's security protocols. This is a hardened target. The logistics of maintaining an employee-owned enterprise are complex.
But in an era where intellectual property theft is a primary weapon of state-level aggression, this model offers a perimeter defence. The lesson is cold: our adversaries exploit disenfranchised employees. Give them a share, and you remove the vulnerability.
This is not philanthropy. It is a defensive deployment.








