MokeyUK: Welcome to 2+2; I am sure we would all like to hear more from you in the future. Start posting hand histories and start posting replies in threads.
Here are my thoughts on your stats:
Your sample size is too small for a meaningful review, really. But I will assume that it is perfectly representative of your play and say:
18.8/6 is bordering on loose passive. Tighten up and play more aggressively. Your position stats show the biggest leak in your game is UTG and UTG+1, where you are limping about half the 11% of the hands you are playing from those positions.
A typical Tag would be folding a lot of those hands you are limping and raising with others. It depends, really, on which hands you are limping. When I was limping a lot in EP it was with hands like 22-55, AQo, KQs. Now I fold them or raise them, depending on the table conditions; if the table is aggressive, with most pots being raised or reraised, I generally fold the small pps UTG and UTG+1; if the table is passive, which hardly ever happens anymore, I raise with them. At first I started folding AQ and KQs in EP, until I started feeling more confident in my postflop game; now I raise with them in EP 100%.
In general, you should not be limping from EP--you are out of position, you have a vulnerable hand and you have not taken the initiative. Basically, how do you expect to win the pot? The answer is you are hoping to flop a monster, but with 22 or 55 this will only happen 12% of the time or so, and with AQ, you flop a hand maybe 1/3 of the time or so. So you have to raise these hands and try to win with postflop aggression, or you have to fold them and save your 1bb.
The one change that made the biggest difference in my winrate was I stopped limping in EP and playing fit or fold.
This is crucial to playing solid Tag style. If you limp, you have to make a hand to win the pot most of the time. If you raise, you can often win with a c-bet regardless of whether you make a hand.
I am sure you can make other adjustments, but this is by far the biggest leak in your stats, imo.
Again, welcome to the forum, and good luck at the tables. Let us know how your efforts to improve progress!