Community Business Officer (Trading)
Contract: Permanent
Hours: Full-time
Location: Office based, Woodstock, Oxfordshire
Salary: £27,976 - £36,328 per annum
Our client is looking for a Community Business Officer (Trading) to support a network of community-owned businesses across the UK.
About the employer
This organisation is a national charity supporting people in rural areas to set up and run successful businesses in community ownership. They do this to achieve a UK-wide vision for resilient, thriving and inclusive rural communities.
About the Role
In this proactive, people-focused role, you'll work closely with established community businesses to strengthen their operations, improve sustainability, and maximise social impact. You'll provide direct support, coordinate access to specialist advice, and build strong relationships to understand each group's needs and challenges.
You'll also support membership engagement, contribute to events and communications, and maintain accurate data to ensure high-quality support across the network. Working as part of a collaborative team, you'll help deliver a responsive and effective service to community businesses.
This role is ideal for someone organised, empathetic and confident communicating with a wide range of people, with a strong interest in community business and rural communities.
The successful candidate should have the following knowledge, experience, skills and attributes:
Join this organisation and be part of a national charity supporting resilient, thriving and inclusive rural communities.
Closing date for applications: 5pm on Friday 3 July 2026
Please submit your final application at your earliest convenience to avoid disappointment.
Interview date: During week commencing 13 July 2026
Interested?
Please click the job board apply button to be taken to the next stage. There you can find out more information and complete your application by following the instructions (you may need to scroll down).
This employer is committed to Equity, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) and their approach goes beyond 'protected characteristics' to thinking more broadly about inclusion. Every individual will think and feel differently and this organisation believes that these differences should be embraced, and individual needs taken into account. Additionally, the makeup of the rural communities they work with leads to their own particular diversity and exclusion challenges and opportunities compared to urban areas. Their commitment to EDI, both internally and externally, has been tailored to the organisation and the communities they serve.
No agencies please.