Annual Conference 2013 – Martin Gilbert, Aberdeen Asset Management

Martin Gilbert, Aberdeen Asset Management

Martin Gilbert is a founder shareholder and Chief Executive of Aberdeen Asset Management PLC, the holding company of the fund management group that was established in 1983.

Martin is a director of a number of investment trusts, Chairman of FirstGroup PLC and a non-executive director of British Sky Broadcasting Group PLC. He is Adjunct Professor of Finance at Imperial College Business School and a member of the Scottish Government’s Financial Services Advisory Board, the EFAMA President’s Advisory Council and the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland.

In December 2008, Martin was named European Personality of the Year at the Funds Europe Awards. In 2009, he was named Ernst & Young Overall Scotland Entrepreneur Of The Year. In 2011, he was named Scotland PLC CEO of the Year at the Business Insider/PWC Scotland PLC Awards.

Martin was educated in Aberdeen and has an MA in Accountancy and an LLB. He divides his time between Aberdeen, where the business has always been headquartered, and London, as well as overseeing the international operations of the Group.

Martin was inducted into the Entrepreneurial Exchange Hall of Fame in 2006.

Annual Conference 2013 – Mike Clare, Clarenco

Mike Clare, Clarenco

Mike is a passionate and serial entrepreneur, probably best known as the founder of Dreams which he launched – at the age of 30 – with one store in 1987 growing to more than 200 superstores before he eventually sold most of his shares in 2008 and stepped down as Chairman and CEO.

Mike is currently in the early stages of a dynamic new bed retailing venture….called ‘Buzz Beds’…..watch this space!

Mike realised he wasn’t quite ready for retirement in 2008 so he decided to pursue his love of unusual and iconic properties by turning a hobby into a business. Mike formed Clarenco LLP in 2009 and has now built up a considerable property portfolio including towers, castles,forts and monasteries (throughout Britain) under the ‘Amazing Retreats’ division. These properties are let out for exclusive use, weddings, corporate hospitality and themed events.

Clarenco has also invested in many pre-let commercial properties in Buckinghamshire as well as larger residential homes through Beaconsfield Executive Homes. Another division of Clarenco is Country Manor Estates, which as the name suggests specialises in the development of substantial country houses for short and long term lets.

By far the largest part of Clarenco is the Amazing Retreats portfolio which boasts three incredible properties in Scotland – Ackergill Tower in the Highlands, Kinnettles Castle just outside of Dundee and Carberry Tower just South of Edinburgh. There is also Plas Rhianfaa French Gothic chateau in Wales, Stanbrook Abbey in Worcestershire and Solent Forts, a trio of incredible sea forts in the Solent.

The Clare Foundation was created by Mike and his wife Carol in 2009l; the charity aims to support and improve the efficiency of other charities throughout the UK and help them become more commercial and entrepreneurial. Based near High Wycombe, The Clare Foundation also acts as a hub for local charities by offering subsidised accommodation and shared resources.

Mike also supports many other philanthropical organisations including The Princes Trust, the Retail Trust, Worshipful Company of Furniture Makers, Bucks 4C, Bucks Community Foundation and Skidz.

More recently, through a joint collaboration with Bucks New University, Mike helped launch the Clare Business School. This is an exciting new initiative enabling the Education and Business sectors to work together by bringing ‘real live business’ experience to students in Buckinghamshire.

Among all of this, Mike still finds time to help and mentor many local businesses and entrepreneurs and is often heard on the speaker circuit, lecturing and advising students and business men alike to help make their ‘Dreams’ come true.

Mike is a Freeman of the City of London, a Fellow of the Institute of Directors and a winner of numerous entrepreneurial awards. In 2009 Mike was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Bucks New University in recognition of his outstanding achievements in the field of commerce and entrepreneurship.

Annual Conference 2013 – Hermann Twickler, Pressurefab Group

Emerging Entrepreneur of the Year 2012, Hermann Twickler of Pressurefab Group.

Emerging Entrepreneur of the Year 2012, Hermann Twickler of Pressurefab Group.

A master engineer and ship builder by trade, Hermann worked in the shipyards of Northern Germany and North America before taking an internship with Boeing. Hermann moved to the UK in 2000 to take up the role of operations director of the VT Group in Portsmouth where he was responsible for 2,000 employees. In 2008, as the VT Group merged with Babcock and despite being offered employment with a number of FTSE 100 companies, Hermann decided to leave and start his own business.

Hermann saw an opportunity to establish an offshore transport and development equipment business manufacturing products in the UK. However, as a newcomer to the market with no proven track record, Hermann encountered challenges in securing credit from both suppliers and lenders. As a result Hermann invested his life savings, including the sale of his house and car, into creating PressureFab Group.

Hermann placed his focus on building a world class workshop using the best equipment he could source and brought prospective clients to the facility to demonstrate its engineering capabilities. Herman has focused on implementing ‘big company’ procedures and philosophies from the outset – always using the best equipment and only settling for the highest quality workmanship.

Despite setting up in 2009 with no customers, no products and no staff the Group now counts some of the largest operators in the oil and gas sector among its customers and employs 85 staff.

One of Hermann’s key challenges is sourcing and engaging a workforce committed to the same high standards. PressureFab operates a peer to peer training programme to encourage employees to share best practice. Hermann has also aligned himself with one of Dundee’s universities to provide work placements for graduates.

PressureFab Group is entirely self funded and, despite being in its infancy, has been profitable since inception. Hermann believes in “not buying business” but instead offers quality design and engineering with his products priced accordingly. Hermann has no desire to grow the company for exit, but instead has set his sights on wealth creation and achieving long term growth with plans to expand into new facilities, scheduled to complete in 2013.

Annual Conference 2013 – Tom Cross, Parkmead Group plc

Entrepreneur of the Year 2012, Tom Cross of Parkmead Group plc

Entrepreneur of the Year 2012, Tom Cross of Parkmead Group plc

Tom began his career as a petroleum engineer and economist with various oil and gas companies including Conoco, Thomson North Sea and Louisiana Land and Exploration. So far, he has worked on oil projects in more than 20 countries.

Tom became founding chief executive of Aberdeen’s Dana Petroleum plc, listing it on the London Stock Exchange in 1996, where the company was grown strongly to eventually trade just outside the FTSE 100 index. Tom built Dana from an initial investment of around £200,000 to become one of Scotland’s top 10 largest public companies which, with 12,000 global shareholders, became a significant catalyst for direct and indirect investment into Scotland. Tom went on to sell Dana to the Korean National Oil Company (KNOC) for $3 billion in late 2010, when the company had delivered annual revenue of £598 million and net profits of £78 million. The sale price achieved for the company was a massive 60% premium to its market capitalisation.

Having successfully sold Dana, Tom immediately established the Parkmead Group as a new British oil and gas company, launching the new business in Spring 2011. As executive chairman he has again led from the front and brought together an exceptional in-house technical and commercial team. The Parkmead Group has already built significant momentum, announcing four acquisitions within a seven month period of its first year, adding substantial UK oil and gas reserves to the Group’s portfolio as well as generating its first production and revenues from assets in the Netherlands. Parkmead was one of the top awardees in the UK Government’s most recent (27th) licensing round, winning 25 blocks offshore.

The business of exploring oil and gas is notoriously difficult and high risk, however, Tom has never been faint-hearted in identifying reserve opportunities. Tom acquired the reserves required to seed Dana by travelling and living extensively in Siberia in the early 1990’s, around the time of the break-up of the Soviet Union, in order to capture as many licences as possible with limited resources. This did not come without challenges – including positioning a proposal to the Russian authorities that de-risked their decision to grant an, at that time, unknown small western company, an exploration licence.

Tom has also used his entrepreneurial flair for corporate social responsibility, particularly evident during his time at Dana where he was keen to ensure that the poorer regions, for example in Africa, where the business was exploring the operating were also benefiting in a social context. One such example included applying on-land drilling principles garnered through oil activities to ensure a simple but effective way of securing permanent water sources for the indigenous population of a desert near where the company was exploring.

Annual Conference 2013 – Kevin Dorren, Diet Chef

Kevin Dorren, founder and CEO at Diet Chef

Kevin Dorren, founder and CEO at Diet Chef

Kevin Dorren is the founder and CEO of Diet Chef, the UK’s leading delivered diet company.

Diet chef was started in 2008 and has grown organically to more than £15m in revenue in the last five years. The company makes dieting easy, tasty and convenient by delivering a month’s worth of chef prepared and calorie counted meals to your door.

The company began after Kevin spoke to a friend about dieting. She said that she wanted to be like a Hollywood celebrity with her own diet chef who would do all the shopping and cooking so she could just sit back and lose weight.

Originally a chef by training – and passionate about food – Kevin thought it was a brilliant idea and decided to create a diet chef that would be affordable for everyone. It was very important that the Diet Chef meals would be prepared by real chefs in a kitchen, not just mass produced on a production line, and he also wanted to make sure that meals would be “healthy with absolutely no nasty artificial ingredients”.

Diet Chef is now the largest diet home delivery company with more than 50,000 customers from all over the UK, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

In 2010 Piper Private Equity bought a minority equity position in the business for £3m and has worked with the founders to expand the team, geographic reach and marketing channels.

Prior to founding Diet Chef, Kevin was a founder of Orbital Software, a knowledge management company that grew in Edinburgh and Palo Alto and was listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2000 before being sold to Sopheon plc in 2001.

Enlight Foundation – Giving Something Back

Work hard, play hard, give something back. It’s the philosophy that Entrepreneurial Exchange members live by, and Enlight is the product of that philosophy.

Enlight is the Entrepreneurial Exchange’s charity, it supports non-profit organisations working with vulnerable young people under 25 in Scotland to enable them to achieve their full potential.

There are currently over 15,000 children in Scotland who are looked after by local authorities. Their futures are bleak;

• 42% leave care with no destination and become a NEET (not in employment, education or training) statistic
• 29% have been in trouble with the police in the last year
• 45% of 5-17 year olds were assessed as having a mental disorder – most often conduct related.
• 30% of young homeless people have been in care
• 1 in 7 are pregnant or already mothers
• 23% of adult prisoners have been in care
• Poor educational attainment – 25% don’t achieve even 1 Standard Grade at Foundation level

Mark’s story illustrates why Enlight’s work is so important.

You can help young people like Mark, by helping Enlight.

Enlight has developed a series of exciting and innovative opportunities to work with local authorities to make a step change in achieving better outcomes for these most vulnerable children. The focus is on improving educational attainment. By ensuring young people have the skills and confidence to contribute to, and be part of, the wider economy we give them the secure footing they need to change their lives and, over time, the lives of their own children.

But they need your support to deliver these programmes to the widest possible group of vulnerable young people.

Work hard, play hard, give something back – please give something back by donating here; Enlight Virgin Money Giving Page

Making Successful Acquisitions

Why is it some acquisitions work while others fail to deliver? It comes down to planning and people, according to experts John Pirrie and Murray Strachan.

Both entrepreneurs have been involved in acquisitions, some of which worked successfully and others less so.

At a recent focus dinner, chaired by Alan Bonner of Pinnacle Telecom, Exchange members and speakers discussed the pros and cons of acquisition, and highlighted the strict attention to detail needed in the process to execute successfully.

But firstly, why would you acquire another business? Maybe for access to new customers or markets (commercial or geographical) or access to new products, technologies or services to sell into existing and new customers. Perhaps for brand enhancement – tapping into the profile and goodwill associated with the brand of the target – or to acquire high quality management and employees.

There could be synergistic savings or additional turnover and profit in the chosen markets or simply to avoid being acquired by the competition yourself – defensive acquisition.

Regardless of the reason for the acquisition, the process is crucially identical.

Murray Strachan

Murray Strachan


Murray (Strachan and Partners) has worked in the oil and gas sector for 27 years, lived, worked, bought and sold companies in more than 30 countries plus set up/closed down Joint Ventures and large projects. He spent five years working with execs and shareholders in various companies, investing, rightsizing, adding value and fundraising and is now back in a corporate strategic development role.

His extensive experience means he’s able to identify what causes more than 50% of acquisitions to fail;

The biggest reasons are poor implementation, poor communication and HR issues.

“Acquiring a business is highly time consuming, costly and distracting from running your business, and
opportunistic acquisitions have a poor history of delivering value to corporate purchasers,” says Murray.

“You should ask yourself ‘will this transaction increase the long term value of the business?’”

The other alternative is organic growth and/or acquiring (recruiting) some of the key management or players of the target instead.

Either way, you need to focus on fit issues and process issues:
• Fit issues – including size, strategic fit, diversification, previous acquisition experience of the acquirer, organisational fit (culture and personnel/administration practices), and the acquisition timing relative to market conditions/cycle
• Process Issues – including negotiation failures/mistakes, inadequate research and diligence, inadequate pre-planning, poor integration plan execution, price paid and form of consideration, poor communications and negative reaction by acquirer’s management and/or employees

“This can be overcome through thorough planning, effective communication, professional and diligent integration and sufficient monitoring within the critical first 100 days,” says Murray.

For Murray, the key acquisition phases are;
• Establishing the strategy and objectives
• Market research – identification, screening, and short listing potential targets
• “The approach”
• Information gathering – initial research and light diligence
• Structuring an offer – acquisition plan, valuation, funding, financial and non financial issues
• Concluding the transaction – full diligence, negotiation, then close the deal including Completion
• Transition of ownership & Integration – transition plan execution and review
• Stabilisation and performing
• Review – objectives, resultant outcomes and lessons learned

His final words of advice? Make sure you “over” communicate and don’t be scared to walk away.

John Pirrie has been in business for 34 years, setting up LCH Generators with his brother James in 1980. He build the fleet to 2500 generators by 2006, becoming the largest fleet in the U.K, serviced from five locations, with the company employing 200.

In part, that growth came from acquisitions; he made his first acquisition in 1995. It was, as he explains, a “very light legal agreement”.

In 2006 John set up Nevis Capital, a private equity firm with a track record of successfully growing businesses that need capital and management support. They invest across the industrial services sector with a specific focus on power.

Since then the company has done hundreds of deals, but the biggest issue throughout has been lack of management.

Says John: “It’s about communication at all levels about your plans and implementation of them.

”Remember, it is your deal. They are your documents – even with the best accountants and lawyers, it is only a job for them – so you need to focus on management, management, management.”

That is why big company deals like Hewlett Packard go wrong, explains John. And he cited the example of Caterpillar, a Chinese company worth $653 and written down by $580 because nobody counted the machines to check they were all present and accounted for.

Attendee Feedback

“My key tips from the evening – ‘It’s your deal’ – keep on top of every legal document – don’t trust the lawyers to do it right, it’s just their day job. Also, maybe ‘buy’ the people away from a target rather than buy the company. Employees in acquisition targets expect ‘a team parachuted in’, they expect to see some action going on, lack of it is disconcerting. Make sure there is a strategic fit.”

“Extensive due diligence is absolutely critical and don’t forget the HR issues.”

“Create a template for acquisitions and stick to it.”

“Key tip – It’s all about people.”

“Some good detail on the nitty gritty of acquisitions – what to insist on, valuations, people issues, non-compete. I will have more confidence in approaching acquisitions now.”

Speaker biogs