74. How to grow a business fast and exit successfully | Andrew Hulbert
60 min
•Apr 13, 20265 days agoSummary
Andrew Hulbert, founder of Pareto Facilities Management, shares his journey from a council estate in Oxford to building a £50 million workplace services business and exiting for £100 million at age 37. The episode covers his early life challenges, entrepreneurial mindset, business scaling strategies, and his decision to step back and prioritize family.
Insights
- Building personal brand while employed in your target sector significantly accelerates business launch success and customer acquisition
- Customer-centric flexibility and adaptability (e.g., supporting 11 different CAFAM systems) creates competitive advantage in commoditized service sectors
- Sustainable growth requires intentional leadership succession planning and hiring your replacement before exit, not during
- Early entrepreneurial success often requires unsustainable work patterns (4-5 hours sleep, 5am-midnight schedules) that eventually damage personal relationships and health
- Post-exit purpose and identity crisis is real for founders; redefining success beyond business metrics (fatherhood, sustainability, community) is essential for fulfillment
Trends
Hybrid workplace occupancy patterns: Monday/Friday near-empty, Tuesday-Thursday peak occupancy driving office quality over quantityGenerational workplace expectations diverging significantly; Alpha generation expected to reverse work-from-home trends post-COVIDESG and sustainability becoming competitive differentiators in B2B services; carbon footprint transparency now a sales pitch toolNet Promoter Score gap widening in facilities management (industry -10 vs. Pareto +60), indicating consolidation opportunity for customer-centric operatorsFacilities management sector fragmentation: 125,000 service providers in UK, £100B+ GDP opportunity, consolidation through acquisition acceleratingOffice space evolution from desk-centric to experience-centric (amenities, quiet zones, social spaces) to attract talent and justify occupancyFounder burnout and work-life balance becoming critical exit decision factor for mid-market business owners in their 30s-40sSEIS investment structures emerging for social enterprises (children's homes, nature reserves) attracting impact-focused entrepreneurs post-exit
Topics
Facilities Management Business ModelStartup Customer Acquisition StrategyEntrepreneurial Personal BrandingBusiness Exit and M&A Due DiligenceHybrid Work Occupancy TrendsESG and Sustainability in B2B ServicesLeadership Succession PlanningFounder Work-Life Balance and BurnoutNet Promoter Score as Competitive MetricCouncil Estate Social MobilityFamily Unit and Community ValuesPost-Exit Founder PurposeWorkplace Experience DesignGenerational Workplace ExpectationsImpact Investing and Social Enterprise
Companies
Pareto Facilities Management
Andrew Hulbert's company, built from bedroom startup to £50M turnover, exited for £100M in 2023
Bulgari Hotel
First major customer won by Pareto; luxury London hotel providing credibility and £200k+ annual contract
London Zoo
10-year Pareto customer; £2M+ annual contract that drove 300% growth in year two; 700 acres, 20,000 animals
Yahoo
Second customer of Pareto; early brand-name win that helped establish credibility in tech sector
Candy Crush (King.com)
Pareto customer; example of high-quality office space design with amenities driving employee experience
Twitter
Early Pareto customer; part of initial portfolio of brand-name clients won from bedroom startup
Reed
Recruitment agency where Andrew worked as temp (dustbin lorry job); host James Reid is Chairman/CEO
University of Essex
Andrew's university; admitted by exact points threshold after Glastonbury essay in general studies
Chowell School
Andrew's sixth form in Oxford; turning point where he transitioned away from council estate peer group
Rollwright
Six-year employer before Pareto; property services business where Andrew was ops director at age 24
Barclays
Temporary employer via Reed Agency; Andrew worked through agency in call center on Market Street Oxford
Oxford Brooks University
Where Andrew lectures on real estate course; previously stole bikes from this location as teenager
Activision
Acquired Candy Crush/King.com; now owned by Microsoft
Microsoft
Current owner of Candy Crush/King.com following Activision acquisition
Sainsbury
Employer of Andrew's mother; she sold bonds/shares to fund his university education
Institute of Workplace and Facilities Management
Andrew currently chairs this organization; discusses workplace trends and generational expectations
PWC
Professional services firm involved in Pareto exit due diligence process
Deloitte
Professional services firm involved in Pareto exit due diligence process
People
Andrew Hulbert
Built £50M facilities management business from bedroom startup; exited for £100M at age 37
James Reid
Podcast host; recruitment and philanthropy company leader; previously employed Andrew as temp worker
Jean Bradley
Andrew's grandmother; moved to Oxford council estate in caravan in 1953; ran community centre; recently deceased at 93
Jeff
First major customer of Pareto; maverick decision-maker with entrepreneurial children; gave Andrew first opportunity
Quotes
"I'd much prefer to work really hard for 10 years and finish working at 37 than bumble along for 45 years"
Andrew Hulbert•Near end of episode
"Your present years of activities will get you much further than the other people who are not there three days a week"
Andrew Hulbert•Office attendance discussion
"In that moment of warmth and embrace, you forget about the money, forget about the success, forget about the bright yellow sports cars, nothing matters"
Andrew Hulbert•Final question about what gets him up Monday morning
"The concept was that the bigger businesses in our sector had completely lost touch with the client"
Andrew Hulbert•Business founding story
"A knife is more likely to be used back on yourself rather than you using it onto somebody else"
Andrew Hulbert•Advice to young people about carrying knives
Full Transcript
Welcome to All About Business with me, James Reid, the podcast that covers everything about business, management and leadership. Every episode, I sit down with different guests of bootstrap companies, mastermind of investment models, the built-up business empire, their leaders in their field, and they're here to give you top insights and actionable advice so that you can apply their ideas to your own career or business venture. What happens after you build and sell a company for 100 million and then step away from the business world before the age of 40? Today on All About Business, I'm joined by Andrew Hulbert, founder of Pareto Facilities Management, a company he built from scratch into a 50 million pound workplace services business employing more than 500 people. In this episode, we discuss building a business from humble beginnings, the realities of entrepreneurship and what happens when success arrives earlier than expected. Well, today on All About Business, I'm really delighted to welcome Andrew Hulbert. Andrew is an entrepreneur and is now chair of the Institute of Workplace and Facilities Management, having built and sold a Facilities Management company called Pareto FM, which I believe you started from your bedroom at the age of 27 and exited for the princely sum of 100 million dollars. That's right. Is it Andrew? Well, that seems like a good place to sit. You are well researched. That's great. Thank you. That's my job. That's my job. But I think let's begin with your early life because I think you grew up on a council estate in Oxford. Yes. So my family units from the council estate, yeah, I think I mentioned earlier, my grandmother moved there in 1953 in a caravan with my grandfather and they built the family unit up from there. So they started in a caravan. Didn't even have a house initially, but they ran the community centre and it was my grandmother's funeral just a couple of weeks ago, which was tremendously sad, but she was 93, so she had a fantastic birth. So what was her name? Jean Bradley. Jean Bradley. So they went to Oxford. Yeah, they went to Oxford. And do you know what was really magical about that funeral? There was also a children's home on the estate at the same time. And my nana grant, they just opened their house to that children's home. They could come and eat in there whenever they wanted to. Food's a big part of my family, which I'm sure we'll explore today. And there were three kids from the children's home at the funeral who are now in their 60s. And they were still referring to my Nan Jean as mum and dad. And because that was like part of the ones that brought them up. And I think children's homes back in the 50s and 60s probably weren't quite as progressive as they are today. When you said family unit, I feel like that's an interesting way of describing a family. It felt, in my imagination, as a sort of compound. I wouldn't say compound, I would say to describe this seat because it was obviously a central place for people to come together. It was, I would sort of describe it as a mafia type group, really. I didn't want to say that. How does that work? What was it? What was happening? What I mean by family unit is in my immediate family, there are around 75 people across 75. Correct. And I was on to something. So yes, well, it makes Christmas day a complete nightmare. Because no one has a living room big enough to do it. In my family, everyone lives close by. So everyone's within, say, 10 minutes drive of each other. And when I was 11 and smoking for the first time, even before mobile phones and everything, my mum knew about it before I'd even got home. Because someone had seen me who'd spoken to someone who told her before I got back and I got a clip around the ear with my mulbra gold in my pocket at the age of 11. But yeah, no, what I mean by family unit is a really close group of family members, they're all looked out for each other. And every Sunday, we would get together and eat together, not all 75, but a big group. And yeah, so that's really what family unit means. And community and food and being together, that is my background. And that's what I love. And I'm so grateful for it. But yeah, it all started in that caravan on the Northway Council estate in the 50s. Right. And so there must have been a lot of people at the funeral. Yeah, the funeral, my grandfather's funeral in particular, it was in the crematorium in Oxford, and they were queuing out the door. There were easily 200 people there. It was absolutely huge. My grandmother lived for another 10 years after he passed. So by the time she had passed away, a lot of her friends had died by that stage because she'd outlived them. But I would never forget my grandfather's funeral. And you can have all the money that you want in the world and you can do all those things. But actually, they weren't rich people, but they were brilliant for the community. They were genuine leaders, genuinely helpful. And when they were running the community center, they would raise money to buy bikes for the kids and track suits and all those things. In a time when you didn't have the internet and go fund me and all that, this is when they had to do the hard work. So I really that part of my family unit, that's really where I resonate. And it's where I get my community spirit from. And ultimately, where I try to put place my entrepreneurship and subsequent to that my social activities, because that's really important. So you were inspired by Oh, huge. Yeah. And I really didn't have much choice because it was what we lived every day. And yeah, hugely special. And entrepreneurs, we come from all different backgrounds and places and everything, but helping people and being a good person and having integrity and always being available to support. That's that's the core values for me. But you had a pretty sort of edgy teenage life to know in Oxford. What happened? Yeah, well, I mean, you've got some stories to tell. I mean, there's plenty of stories that we haven't got long enough. Look, I think before the age of 16, I sort of started hanging around with the wrong crowd really. Now, look, I'm 39 now, but when I was 12, I could walk into a shop and buy alcohol and cigarettes, which has a 12 I mean, it's inconceivable now that that would be possible. But I did. And of course, when you start hanging around with that sort of group of people, and you have the council of state mentality, and we were hanging around with other council of state kids as well, you know, having sex early and getting in trouble early and all that sort of stuff. My mum and dad were really worried when I was about 14 that I was going to get someone pregnant. That was the main challenge. And now, of course, that wasn't the vision for myself. But you know, you're a 14 year old boy and exploring everything. So yeah, I got into scrapes. I was a bike thief is one of the ways that I used to make some money. I was very good at stealing bikes and from those Oxford students from those Oxford students. I mean, I mean, I always laugh about this, I probably shouldn't always tell the story, but I lecture at Oxford Brooks University as part of their real estate course. And Brooks is where I used to get the bikes from. It's not far from where you live. No, no, in Heddington. So just down from the old Oxford, the Managrande. That was your first business. It was. And I always laugh whenever I address the students for the first time, I said, don't worry, your bikes are safe. I steal teabags generally now from corporate events rather than anything else. And so yeah, no, I did a little bit of that. And I was, I was just getting in trouble used to start fires and bins and all that sort of thing, just stupid stuff. Yeah, just for fun. Because we were bored and we didn't have a youth club or anything like that. So did you end up with a record? No, no, no, never got a record. I mean, got pulled over by the police many times for not having lights on my bike. That was mainly the worst thing. But you're quite clever about how you do some of these things. It culminated one day, I was hanging around with the wrong people and I was in South Park in Oxford. And when I was about 15, and I did get assaulted, and I did nearly get murdered. Three guys beat me up in the park. They had a T bar scooter handle of those little micro scooters. Two of them held me back. One of them smacked me around the head with the T bar scooter handle about 10 o'clock at night. And I can will never forget this vision of this bar coming towards my head. And I pulled over to the side and it caught my ear and tore my ear off. And of course, in the family unit in the community spirit, I didn't call an ambulance. I called my dad. Dad rushed down, picked me up, all these tea towels, pushed my ear back on the side. I can see it's still there. It's just about. And then we went up to the John Radcliffe and they sewed it back on for me. But I was very angry after that and started carrying a knife. And I found the guy that had beaten me up and nearly went back and killed him. But I decided not to. And that that was the right choice at that stage. But I had the chance. And so this was like sort of gang warfare. That is a bolt of some degree in a three in a three versus one situation. But yeah, the youth is youth is dangerous when they're bored. And also because I was six foot three when I was 15. I was a big guy. So sometimes the real target. Yeah, the young angry small guys, you know, they want something to go and beat up. And I wasn't trying to cause any fuss on that day. So yes, luckily, I had an opportunity to get my own back if you like. And I had had a couple of knives that I carried at that stage. And I didn't take that chance. So what would you say to people now who young guys, because obviously carrying knives is a huge problem? Huge. Yeah. What would I say to people now? I mean, I know it seems like the right thing to do for some people that are very young and angry and trying to protect themselves. But a knife is more likely to be used back on yourself rather than you using it onto somebody else. And if you can somehow get over that red mist and that red anger, not everyone is against you, not everyone's trying to get you. And I think when you're a young man and trying to work it out, sometimes that can feel like what's happening. And you just need to take yourself out of the situation as much as possible. What used to happen to me whenever I went into a shop, I would always be followed by the security guards. Now, I didn't steal from shops, I was just doing bikes and brooks instead. But actually going into the shops, I used to hate it, used to really make me angry about what was going on because I was being targeted. And I dressed like maybe I was going to but that was it. But look, what happened for me was I got into sixth form. And actually, all my friends almost exclusively... Where did you go? To Chowell School in Oxford, just normal school. But it just so happened to be that I got in, my GCSE grades were reasonable, I didn't try very hard, but I got in. And all that life that I just described got left behind. And now I was at sixth form with all my white middle classmates who were all going to go to university. And they had good jobs and good relationships with their family and their dad didn't abuse them and all that sort of stuff, you know, which was the relationships I'd had before. So I think for me, that was the catalyst for change. Very luckily at 16, I got in with the right crowd. If I hadn't have done, I would have had a baby when I was young. I would have gone down a certain route. I like to think as an entrepreneur, I still would have made it somehow, but it would have been very difficult and very different. This Earth Day, your gift can make double the difference. From the 22nd to the 29th of April through biggive.org, donations to environmental charities will be double. EarthRays gives you the power to turn your generosity into real lasting impact. Together, we can protect wildlife, restore habitats and help nature thrive. Visit biggive.org between the 22nd and the 29th of April. Choose a cause close to your heart and make double the difference. Thank you for supporting EarthRays. You went to sixth form and then you went to university. Yes, then I ended up going to university. Yeah, and actually my parents are proper hardworking, working class, never been to university. They thought university was for rich people and clever people. We were neither of those things and I'd been messing about for 18 years. So we had some really difficult conversations with my mum and dad when I wanted to go. My mum and dad had to sell some bonds and shares and things that they had within Sainsbury where my mum worked, so they could afford for me to go. So when I got there at the age of 19 on the very first day, my mum and dad had always sacrificed for us because my dad was working hard in the factory and my mum working three jobs. But when I got to university, I felt very lucky to be there. And as the kicker, literally as I moved into the halls of residence on day one, I held the door open for this beautiful blonde woman who turned out to be my wife and we were together for 20 years since then. So serendipity, eh? Oh, and if you want an extra kicker, she was also born the day before I was. All right. And so if you believe in fate, there's your little story on the fate side of things. That's amazing. That's right. So what did you study? I studied business. And I got into University of Essex where I went by the skin of my teeth. I got the exact number of points only because I'd been to Glastonbury and I'd watched Oasis play and I was stood in 100,000 people crowd drinking beer and smoking weed and singing champagne, supernova and all that. Came back, did the exam for general studies, which you didn't have to do any classes for. And it said, describe a time that you've been emotional. And I wrote this essay about being emotional at Glastonbury. And I got 100%. And luckily for me, Essex included that general studies as a full A level. And it counted towards my degree. And I got in by the exact number of points. So you were Oasis. Hugely. And I went to Heaton Park twice to see them, to try and thank them directly, but couldn't get close enough to the front. But that was a real moment. And actually, why that was special? Because I'd been earning money since the age of 12. I'd been working in the corner shop stuffing papers, getting up at 4am on Saturday. So you'd done legit work as well. I'd done some real work, rather than just stealing bikes. And yeah, so I ended up, I had money in terms of like relatively small amounts, but it's the first time going to Glastonbury, I spent that money on something. I was just saving, I didn't know what I was saving it for. But that was one of the first times I spent, it was £149 or whatever for the ticket. But that was big for me at the time. Oh, it's a lot of money now. It is. It is. Well, yeah, I think it's £400 now for a ticket. But yeah, my mum really encouraged me to go. And yeah, it's the best thing I ever did. And without it, I wouldn't have gone on this journey. There's many sliding doors moments in early life. It is interesting how some moments that maybe don't seem that significant at the time, when you look back, become pivotal. And how it's so important to get out there and do things, meet people, because you never know when those moments will be. But isn't that still good advice today? Get out there and be around people. In this lecture I did at Brooks, they're all say 21, about to go into the world of work. I was saying, how many days do you want to be in the office to this group? There's about 50 of them, two. I was like, well, my advice to any entrepreneurs in here is go to the office five days a week, because your present years of activities will get you much further than the other people who are not there three days a week. And I think early life is about building your own personal brand and business and understanding how business works to get the skills you need to go and start something yourself in the future. The concept of leaving university, starting a business and being a huge success. There are people that do it, but I think we all need to learn from businesses first before we go and build something else. I really agree. A friend of mine's son recently got a job and he was told by the employers, you only have to come in two days a week. My friend said to me, what do you think about that? And I said, turn him to go in every day. Which he did. And he's been promoted three or four times, had to pay right. And he's doing really well. And I think that's exactly because of the advice you just gave. The people saw he was committed. He cared. It's that basic. It's a tale as old as time. We know academically that this has been the right thing to do since the 80s. I remember in my course, I studied Japanese culture. And in Japanese business culture in the 90s, you'd take an extra jacket and leave it on your chair to make sure that people knew you were there. And if you fell asleep at your desk, it was seen as a great sign that you were working really hard. Yeah, that might be overdoing it. Depends on the time you wake up. But even like go back to Xerox, Xerox knew in the 80s that the engineers coming back from fixing printers at the water cooler and chatting about their knowledge at the water cooler, that tacit knowledge exchange, that was the most precious knowledge they could share. And there's no way Xerox could even make that happen. It was just a fact that they happened to be at the water cooler or the coffee machine. And that was so beneficial. So learning from each other. Absolutely. But that is still key now. And even more so. And there's a big piece of management theory at the moment that the Gen Zs that don't want to go into the office, when the Alphas come in, who are not affected by COVID, or anything like that, this is the next generation now, when they come in, they might go back four or five days a week. And they might out before. I think they are. I see that already. I mean, I think that's really important. And actually, there's only so much entitlement you can have. Yeah. I think that's interesting. So I understand you're a student, you did a bit of work for Reed. We did indeed. And this is how we came. Temporary work. This is very, very temporary. This is how we came to meet. At the end of my first year of university, I'd put on a bit of weight. I'd had a very enjoyable time in the first year drinking with too much. And I went to Reed Agency and I was like, I want to be a dustbin man. And so I thought, great. Now look, at university, genuinely, I was waking up at 5.30pm. And I would watch neighbors at 5.30pm whilst eating my breakfast. For anyone who doesn't know neighbors, it used to be on twice a day, 2pm and 5pm. And I went to... So you were doing a sort of nocturnal course. Well, I was. And I wasn't going to my lectures either, which wasn't particularly good. But back in the day, you could buy the cassette of your lecture. And I had a mini, I had a metro, and I used to listen to the cassette in the metro writing my notes while I was eating my cereal and things. I wasn't particularly good in that first year of university. So yes, I went to Reed and they got me on the dustbin lorries. And I went out. Now, what you should understand is dustbin lorries go out very early. So I had a 3.30am alarm clock on that first day. It was a lovely sunny day. And I went over to Didcot. It was where I did it. And I went out with the team. All five of us on there were temps. So they're all through Reed. And we were just trying to work out what we needed to do. We had a route and we had a plan. And the driver, he was really keen because on those jobs, you got paid the same regardless of what time you finished. So he wanted to do it quick. And we were all running around and sweating and everything for him. And I probably hadn't showered either because it was so early in the morning. So yeah, we went round his brilliant camaraderie. And on the way back, he stopped off and he bought us a pack of fosters. And we all had a beer, apart from him, on the way back to the depot. And I got back and I got home at maybe 11.30am. And I just went back to sleep. And then the next morning when that alarm went off again, I was like, no, this isn't for me. So you worked for Reed for one day? That's pathetic. I did. I actually, I did actually also work for Reed separately because I did over one of the summers, I worked for Barclays. And Barclays use Reed as a, they were a big client. Yes, as an agency. So I was also through them doing some stuff for them in Call Market Street in Oxford. But yeah, the, the dustbin lorry was a great experience because the characters on there were brilliant. And I, I remember just getting in the bus to go over to the depot and the guy was like, oh man, should have seen the color of my excrement this morning. I had four Guinnesses last night. We don't need to hear that on the podcast. These are formative experiences for young people who can do the jobs. And it's hugely formative. And actually, I wouldn't change it. And I don't care. And don't care what background you're from, what form of life you're from, stick yourself in the middle of that situation and see how you get on. Some people think some people swim and I was just too lazy ultimately, physically at that stage. And I, I was so bad with my sleeping pattern that it was just never going to work for me. But as your life progressed, you became quite dynamic as it turned. Well, yes. So you started a business from your bedroom. Is that right? That's correct. So I tell us that story. Yes. So I went to university, I studied business and I finished my degree and I got linked up with a property services business, a six million pound one. And I went and joined them for about six years. And I, So what sort of work were they doing? So imagine a nice commercial office in London, nice tall building. We looked after all of the maintenance, the statutory compliance, the leases, everything that it took to deliver statutory services to buildings. And that's what facilities management is from our perspective. I did that for, So what, just so people understand what sort of statutory things we talk about. Water management. So literally taking the tap temperatures, checking for Legionella, doing the fire alarm testing, checking the emergency. So making sure it's all compliant and safe for the people who work there or use it. Exactly. And mainly for insurance purposes. Because fires do happen and when fires happen and you get investigated from an insurance perspective, you can evidence that you had control of the building. So that's what facilities management is principally looking after the assets. And what we know in most businesses, people costs is usually the first cost and property cost is usually the second. So managing property cost effectively is really important. But you've also got how sustainable is the building and what are the energy and utility management pieces, all the changes in compliance and law, which is significant. So yeah, we delivered all of those services on a self delivery model and actually used agencies. This was the company you were working for. That's who I worked for to start with. And you used agencies to supply staff. Absolutely. Because we work with facilities. Yes, I would have thought so because we employ 1.2 million people in this sector in the UK. It's worth over 100 billion in GDP. And so we know it's a critically important one. And interestingly, there are 125,000 service providers in this sector, according to the Office of National Statistics. So starting one was an interesting one because there was 125,000 other people doing what you were doing. I did four years with Rollwright and I was an ops director when I was 24. I had a team of 250 people under me at that stage. I was working hard. And then we got bought out by a big business and I did two years for that big business. Didn't like the big business mentality. It wasn't for me. I've gone from being the king of this very small castle to being nobody in the big business. So when I was 27, it's literally true. I went home to my wife one day and I said, I'm going to leave. I'm going to start my own business. She wasn't entirely on board with the idea to leave a well paid job. We just got a mortgage. We didn't have at that stage. And she was working as well. Yeah, we were sort of starting to plan the rest of our life really at that stage. And yeah, no, I literally just gave my three months notice and I started Pareto from my bedroom in August 2014. And when I say I started with nothing, it was literally me in a laptop. So I didn't have partners, didn't have processes, didn't have any funding, any investment. It was just me and an idea. So what was your idea? How did you do that? The concept was that the bigger businesses in our sector had completely lost touch with the client. And actually, they were so big that they were too rigid and they didn't treat staff very well, and they didn't care about things like sustainability and people and social. And I wanted to start this modern version of what a facilities management and property business could be. And I was 27. So all of my ideas were pretty sort of new and different. So there were really three concepts. Put people right back at the heart again, because we just lost touch with the staff. And I mean, pay them on time, pay their expenses on time, give them a decent allowance for their boots, give them the tools that they need. They sound really basic, but that wasn't practice, common practice in the sector. Make your processes completely flexible. So a lot of these big companies, they had really rigid IT processes that if the customer wanted to work with you, the customer had to change their processes to fit yours. I was like, no, no, no, let's turn it round. Let's have really flexible cloud brace processes so that we can do it the way the customer wants to do it. And then the final one is what I would call ESG, so environmental, social and governance, which really means doing brilliant sustainability initiatives that are very real. So we were carbon neutral on scope one and two, for example, and we'll be net zero by 2027, still going today. But also to have a brilliant social heart, so to be a good business, to help people out, to do lots of initiatives around charity and making our own honey and all that sort of stuff. We had Pareto honey made in Market Harbor as well, which I know is a passion of yours. Yeah, no, I think that's very good. Yeah. So in the end, that's what we started with. But what made us special was we went for the big brands right from the very beginning. I was trying to be a £20 million business out of my bedroom from day one. So the first four or five customers, Bulgari Hotel, which is obviously an amazing jewelry brand, Yahoo, Candy Crush, Twitter, London Zoo. So you obviously went out and won them as customers. Correct. Yeah. So you went and sit to see them and presented to them and you're obviously good at that. I think so, hope so. We must have been. I went on. What was your pitch? I mean, my good. So, okay, talk us through Bulgari Hotel. This is in Nitesbury. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a glittering sort of posh place. Six star hotel, they say. Yeah, that's what they say. So this is an amazing hotel. So why did they pick you at 27 out of a bedroom in Oxford? Yes, good question. Now look, for the six years prior to starting the business, I'd been networking my arse off. I'd been writing articles. I've been winning awards. I've been doing my LinkedIn. I created a brand for Andrew as myself. So when I started on day one, it wasn't like I'd come out of nowhere and I just entered the sector and no one knew who I was. They knew who I was because I was good and what I'd been delivering previously. So I knew Bulgari Hotel from the networking and from being around. And I called Jeff. Jeff is the guy who gave me my first opportunity. And Jeff was a bit of a maverick, which in entrepreneurship, you need maverick sometimes to say yes. And it was an engineering contract, a couple of 100,000 a year. And I called him up and I said, look, Jeff, I've started this business, I'd be really interested in helping you out. I knew Jeff was getting frustrated with the big business that was serving him in that organization. And I was just right place, right time. And the reason I targeted Jeff, he had two kids that were in their thirties that also ran their own businesses. So I was like, look, Jeff, if I hit you, I know you've got kids similar age to me. I know that you love entrepreneurship. And I know that I can deliver services to you in this space. Oh, so find an entrepreneur friendly client. It was. And that's a good idea. Yeah. And actually, look, that's good networking. Because the fact I even knew he had kids and what they get was going to be sympathetic to you. Yes, that's the idea. And you also need someone who's a little bit unhinged. That's going to say yes. Your first yes is the hardest one, because you've got nothing to say. Exactly. That's what I'm thinking. Yeah. And you just have to convince them. But also look, I'm a good salesperson. I genuinely went on to sell a quarter of a billion pounds of services personally over the next nine years. So you were really leading from the front? Absolutely. All the way through. Too much so. I was all in as an entrepreneur. But as soon as you get your first one, and when it happens to be Bulgari Hotel, which is 15,000 a night to stay in the suite, and they claim to be one of the most expensive hotels in London, it was a brilliant name to sell from. And then we started to gain a bit of attention. So what was the engineering you were doing for them? So that was maintenance of all of the, say, heating and air conditioning system. So you want that to work when you've got 16,000 pounds? One of the challenges in that location is the quality of the guests is very high, perhaps the most famous people in the world. And their expectations are very high. That's what I'm thinking. So temperature control is an important one. It has to be precise. It does. And you know, especially when you have like people from Saudi and Middle East who are coming there and they want it to be very cold. And then there were certain people that were there that wanted it to be very warm. And it was all about changing yourself. But you had to provide the facilities management that would make that deliverable to your client. Correct. And it wasn't just the heating and cooling. It was things like the swimming pool. So obviously, when you have public swimming pools, there's lots of risk around Legionella and illness and those things that you have to demonstrate. And then even down to things like the electrical system that's running the building, electrical systems in London, we have spikes quite a lot. So making sure that if we have a spike or the power goes off for like seven seconds or so, that the building still functions. And because the expectations are very high. But we were good. And we were on it. And what the one way I can... So you need a good network of engineers. Hugely. Yeah, yeah. Who you have in your... Yes, your network. I'm thinking of your family unit. Yeah, well, yeah. The lessons of that sort of connected group. It's almost recreating that. You are so right. The strength of an organization. Yes, it was me. And yes, it was the engineers that we hired directly into those teams. But it was the specialist service providers outside of this that if I called them at 11 o'clock on a Friday night, because there was a problem, then they could come. And of course, the thing with property services is, especially in a hotel or in a zoo, it's not as if that five o'clock, everything gets turned off and everyone's all okay. That's a 24 seven business. And expectations even at three in the morning are still very, very high. And if you have water coming through the ceiling at three in the morning, which happens invariably in property, you want to make sure you're going to sort it out. So it was that personal assurance like early on, which I was able to give. And also they knew that I would just give my all and it would happen. It would work. And I was able to prove myself from there. So yeah, that's that's how it started. And then we started just to build out from there. So the likes of Yahoo and Candy Crush and London Zoo and things. You said the zoo. So you looked after the zoo still do today. Yeah. Been a 10 year contract. And so what was the most challenging thing that's happened down at the zoo? I can't say some of the things on camera. No, London Zoo and Whipsnade Zoo. So there's not responsible for escaped animals. There are some stories around those that some made the press. The working in 700 acres with 20,000 animals and over 250 buildings is a phenomenal undertaking for a small business to take on. So that's the that's the footprint of London Zoo. London and Whipsnade Zoo. Yeah, the two. Yeah, we've made over in in Woburn. And we we built systems for them. We built their compliance. We built their structure. And we've been there for 10 years. And it's been through competitive retender. And it's a really successful customer. Animals are a completely different thing. Because of course, you have something called a category one animal, which is something that can kill you. Now, of course, a spider, a snake or gorilla or an antelope can kill you for one reason or another. So the health and safety protocols and the security there was really important. And London Zoo, they love animals. I hope so. Yes. But that but that is what they do. And like, that is the most important thing, human safety, animal safety, and they would never want to get that wrong. And that was so important there. So again, Bulgari may seem nice and shiny. And there's lots of rich people there. But in the zoo, if you got it wrong, animals could be harmed. And you didn't want to do that because they were a zoological service. And a beautiful client, amazing relationship and something that really helped propel us at the start. Because when Pareto was about 1.5 million turnover, they we brought them on as a customer. And it was a couple of million pound a year contract. And we grew 300% in one year off the back of that contract. So you have a wide variety of clients. Yes. And that's how you scale the business. Yes. So what was the moment when it really took off? Was it winning that zoo contract? Yeah, I think so. So at the end of year one, we were run rating at 1.5 million. At the end of year two, including the zoo, we were run rating at 5 million. And at the end of year three, we were approaching 10 million. So we had some really quick growth going off the back of those. The best thing about facilities management contracts is their long term contracts. So they're five to seven years long. They are hundreds of thousands, if not millions on an annual basis. And they're tied in. And actually, they're linked to various SLA service level performance and key performance indicators and things. But they're good. And you know that if you win a contract, you can continue to build. But Pareto, so from the standing start, every quarter for 10 years straight, Pareto grew 10 years straight, every quarter. And some years, we grew 300%, as I mentioned. So trying to keep hold of that growth was really quite difficult. And I'm just an entrepreneur who started from my bedroom. I didn't necessarily know what I was doing. But it really took off after the zoo. And then we quite quickly got to 20 million turnover. And then after a remarkable record, every quarter was ahead of the previous one for 10 years. 10 years. Yeah. And it included in COVID, if I can add. And in COVID, all the offices were empty. So basically, in COVID, it was a very challenging time as it was for all businesses. And most of our clients sent everybody home as they had to by law. So we work with all our customers to say, right, we can furlough the staff, we can send our staff home, we can claim the furlough credits, we can give it back to you, all those different things. And we retained all of our customers in that time. If I go back to big business for a second, what didn't work in COVID is the large providers generally were saying to customers, our notice period is six months. If you want to change anything, you need to give a six months notice. And of course, that upset customers quite significantly, we'd said to all of them, we'll change it tomorrow, as long as we can mutually agree what we're going to do. And so we went into COVID on 16 million, came out around 18 million turnover. And then off the back of COVID, we'd won a lot of customers who were disillusioned with the big businesses. And we grew from 18 to 32 million organically in one year. And then we did 42 million the year after, and then nearly 50 million the year after that. So we had a huge growth off the back of it. So looking back, for what I've just heard, you credit some of that growth to being sort of customer oriented and flexible. Yes, hugely. Because other other competitors in the sector, they weren't. And actually, we were gaining a reputation that if you wanted to do it your way within services, you came to Pareto. But we also had a brilliant social heart, and we were a great organization and great marketing and stuff that came with it. But that is what you did, you came to us and we would build something that had been broken for a long time. And in a facilities management business, you generally have one central computer system, which we call a CAFAM system, we had 11. Because customers wanted to do it differently. So we just changed ourselves every time. And what was really unique about us is if their customer had their own system, we would just operate inside their system, IT permitting and IT is one of the biggest challenges to facilities management. So yeah, that worked. That worked really well for us. Very, very adaptable. And it sounds really simple, but the sector hadn't seen an organization like that before. And because I was still in my early 30s, this was also very new and exciting. And I was talking about things that people weren't talking about. And that's where the environmental and social stuff came into. So you had this great run, but in 2023, you decided to sell a business. Yes, that's right. So how did you come to that decision? Yes. Look, the truth is I've been running hard for nine years. And we've made great growth. And it was a point where if I didn't sort something out, my conversations with my wife and divorce were going to get very difficult, because I was just all in. And I'd had two kids by that point and my daughter in 2019 and son in 2021. So what that meant to me was I now had this biological pull that I hadn't had before with the children. And I wasn't getting the balance right to start off with, because I would come home just before seven o'clock, bath my daughter, give her back to my wife, then I'd carry on work until midnight or whatever I was doing. Just for context, I was an entrepreneur that was up at five and went to sleep at midnight, and then did that for every day. And even on Sunday. You're now talking five in the morning. Five in the morning. Yeah, I was I was switched. Yeah, yeah, I was four or five hours a night sleep. And you know, taking a lot of caffeine and things to keep going. So that's not sustainable? Absolutely not. No, no. And I do believe in entrepreneurship. There are times when you need to be unbalanced because you need to outperform your competitor, doing things quicker, doing things more detailed, doing things better. I think you should do. But there's only so long you can run at that before you ruin all your personal relationships. My wife, your own health, probably. And your own. Well, yeah, I'll talk about my health as well, because I went on a big weight loss journey in between all this too. So I think, yeah, for me, that that become quite difficult and quite strained. And I'd said to my wife in about 2020, about 2020, in the middle of COVID, I said, I just need three years. Just give me three years. And I got three huge wallcharts showing the next three years. And I drew a big red X on three years from that moment. And I said, I'll be done by this point. And luckily, it only took two and a half years from there. But but I got out. So it became to a point where I knew it wasn't sustainable. I knew that the business was valued at a level that I would make a significant return so that I was very happy in my late 30s to turn. So were you the sole shareholder? I would know. No, there's various shareholders, we'd split it between us, we'd given 20% of the business to the team as well, because we had that senior leadership team too. So no, there was a wide cap table on what we were doing that was split between us. But I like that, because we were even though we made, say $100 billion in total value, it was split across many people. And that was brilliant from my perspective. Lots of winners. Lots of winners. And also, for anyone who does ever go and sell a business and you get eight figures in your bank account one day, you feel a lot less guilty when there's people around you that are also jumping up and down, because they're paying their mortgages off or they're buying a new car or whatever it is that they wanted to do. About a year before the exit, we hired a new C suite of the whole team, because I knew that at exit, I couldn't be the center of attention, because that wasn't going to be sustainable for the longer term. So we hired a brilliant C suite, and it was a really diverse group of people, about 15 people in total that we had across the senior and director team. And that was the team of the future. That was the future team. And actually, for any entrepreneur who goes to try and hire their own replacement as CEO, that's also an interesting endeavor to go down. What advice would you give me? They'll never be as good as you are, and try and see the best in them. But also, you don't have to be their best friend, right? If I may be crass, they're there to perform a function so you can exit. So whether you entirely agree with what they're doing, and whether you think they're absolutely perfect, your opinion is sort of irrelevant now. What's relevant is how are they going to be seen to investors in the future so these things can work. That is a really important piece of advice, it's difficult to take. Because especially with men, men being men, it's difficult for us to think other men might be able to do what we do in a different way. So yeah, we did that. And we hired a great team. And I agreed to stay on as a non-exec as part of the deal. So I didn't want to leave entirely. Who's your vice chair? Is that right? I'm vice chair, yeah. So still non-exec today. And so I go to the board meetings, and I don't have any operational day to day now, I just advise. Which is great. And I also chair the Institute of Workplace, as you mentioned at the start. So those roles really go hand in hand very nicely. So yes, we managed to get our exit. And for anybody who's ever sold a business, the due diligence process to sell it is very, very challenging. You have about a million pounds being spent on fees to exit the business and PWC come in and Deloitte come in and the banks come in and ask you all these difficult questions, you have no idea what they mean. When we sold in 23, there were 856 questions we had to answer as part of the due diligence process. And we did that in just over three weeks. And we managed to execute the deal in that. It's one of the fastest deals I'm aware of that's happened within the sector. And then that was it. And then that was in November 2023. And then I took my step back at that stage. And that's when I would say I semi retire. You're a young man now. You were younger then. You were 37 when I finished. Yeah. So what are you going to do now? I'm a bit mystified. Yeah, I'm still working it out. Look, I it really weighed heavily on me that I wasn't a good enough father. Because I wasn't there enough. I was not prioritizing my kids. And I wasn't prioritizing my wife and even my family go back to the family unit that I mentioned at the start. In my family, doesn't matter how much money you've got, it matters that you're part of the unit and you're part of the group and you look after each other. And if someone needs taken to the airport at three in the morning, there should be three of you put in their hand up to do it. It's that sort of environment. So the last two years, I've literally just gone back to being a dad. I'm just doing my kids were two and four when I finished. So taking them to school, making their lunches, cooking dinner, going swimming, doing the homework, going to play out in the farm, which I'll come on to. But being a dad has been the most magical thing. And the money is wonderful. And the money gives you time back to go and enjoy all of those things. But there is nothing more precious than being with your kids and not having an alarm clock and having a cuddle and them holding your hand as you go into school. I love it. And they grow up fast. They grow up. And I do you know what my wife's my daughter just turned seven. And my wife's like, wow, that's flown by. I'm like, no, it hasn't. This has been this has been a long seven years. I wouldn't change anything because our daughter still doesn't sleep today. So we have a lot of sleep issues. And but actually, like for me, money, I got so many stories for you. But I did go and buy a bright yellow sports car, McLaren 570s with the doors that go up on the side. All right. And you still got it? No, no, so I felt like a total fraud. Total fraud. I was driving around in this thing thinking, who am I trying to impress? And also look, my I'm a six foot four guy with big old rugby legs when I say I went into a showroom and bought it without even driving it. And when it got delivered to my house, I sat in it and I didn't fit in the bucket seat because my ass was too big. But you still bought it? Well, I'd already bought it by that stage. I was 100k in the hole. All right. So don't buy McLaren unseen. No, not unless you're a little bit smaller. They turned it on in the showroom and that was it. I was absolutely hooked. But no, I felt in the McLaren you drove around and people took pictures of you and they were waving at you and all that. I didn't like that. There were I love the anonymity. So you thought you might like that, but it turned out you didn't. So what do you drive now? I have like 10 cars these days. So you still like cars? I still like cars, but they're all different ones. So the car I love at the moment got an old AC Cobra. It's got like a six liter Chevy engine. People still look at that. They do, but I don't take it out too often. But no, got an old 1959 Series 2 Land Rover with an automatic gearbox and a V8 engine in it to drive around on the farm. To be honest, flashing around wealth with cars is not what I'm about. I'd much prefer to have, but I sometimes take the old Volvo out, which we use on the farm, which is like a 2009 Volvo that's got 175,000 miles on it. It's great fuel efficiency actually on there. They just keep running in this car. They do. They just never fail. My jaguars have definitely been the ones that have had to replace engines and stuff in that haven't been so good. So yeah, really, it sounds like you're a fan of British cars, which we should applaud on this podcast. Absolutely. So you've got a lot of brands there that I haven't bought an Aston Martin yet, but I will do. I recommend that. Yeah. One years ago, I still have it. I really love the new shape of the advantages and everything, but if you're not careful, you're spending 220 grand on a car. Kind of second hand one. Well, you, yeah, you can do. But I like the racing green and driving in and out of London from Oxford, there's an Aston Martin garage on the left hand side as you come into London. And yeah, I often think as I go past there. But right now, I don't want to be drawn away by things like cars because I want to be at home and doing the stuff with the kids. So this is a big change in sort of speed for you and focus. An enormous change. But you're happy with this. What's that sort of inner entrepreneur doing? In entrepreneur now. So getting sort of bit sort of twitchy. Well, no, setting new challenges for myself. So I just go back to my health. In the lead up to selling the business in 23, I went on a diet and I lost nine stone in seven months. Wow. And in totally no manjaro, no nothing. No, I wake up one day and I go, right, I'm going to just have 500 calories a day. I'm going to eat at one time a day. And I just did it came off sugar, caffeine, alcohol, literally nothing. And yeah, lost a load of weight in that time got down so low. My wife was saying, I'm not attracted to you at this physicality. So put a cobblestone back on. But that was a challenge for me. And now right now, my challenge is making sure that generally I'm doing things between nine and three, because I can take the kids to school. I can come and have conversations like this. And I can grow my profile. But the reason I want to grow my profile is I am nothing special. I didn't come from a special background. I didn't have any support along the way outside of the norm. With the right mindset, I believe people can do the same thing. But I also think you have to be ready to go all in at some times to actually sacrifice other things to be a success. So it's not as if someone gave me a million quid and then I started a business off the back of it. I was there on day one. And the advice I want to give to people is for when you come out of your apprenticeship or university or however you come into the workforce, go and work somewhere for a few years, learn how business works, what's good and what's bad, and then start to build your personal brand on someone else's time where they're paying your salary and then get ready to go and then get ready to start something yourself. Because I think a lot of people, what you don't want to do is wake up when you're in your 50s or 60s and go, ah, should have taken my shot when I was back in my 30s. And I'm quite philosophical these days about business, because I think your 20s is a great time to start and fail because maybe it works, maybe it doesn't. You've got nothing to lose really. 30s and 40s, life gets busy. Probably going to get married, probably have kids, probably going to have a mortgage, all those things. I think, and I'm just about to turn 40 now, but I think into my 50s when the kids have grown up, they've fled the nest and I've got a load of time back again, I think I'll be a really good entrepreneur again at that stage. And because I've learned it all, you've already made some money, there's not too much risk around it. And that may be what I'm aiming for. But right now, I am holding myself back. So you're not doing a bit of investing with the process? Oh, I do a little bit of investing. That can lead you into new entrepreneurial ventures. The investing, I'm trying to invest into a children's home at the moment. So I care about kids and looking after people and building good homes. And there's a brilliant couple of entrepreneurs that want to start a children's home, a couple of hundred thousand to get it off the ground, under SEIS investment, which is brilliant as well for anyone looking at investment. So that sort of thing. But the key is I'm not involved. I don't want to be doing anything day to day. I'm not trying to get dragged in because I know what I'm like. But you're very interested still, I understand in sustainability, social enterprise. So the other thing I've done is I bought a farm, so an equestrian facility over in Oxford, and I planted my forest last year, which 86% of it died over the summer because it was so dry, just replanted it now. Shout out to Lloyds. Thank you for helping us with that. And actually, we just bought a nature reserve, just agreed on it yesterday. So it's about a five acre nature reserve with a natural spring pond and 200 meters of stream that goes through the middle of it, completely undisturbed, loads of old trees. That is really interesting to me, because we want our kids to plant their own vegetables or plant trees and see them die and realize that climate change is real. And actually, what I love about my son, he's really picky about what he eats. So give him a fish finger, he won't eat it. But if he's... I haven't heard many parents say that. Well, yeah. Go outside where we planted some carrots. He will pick a carrot out the ground without even washing it and eat it. And I'm like, Luca, how are you eating a muddy carrot, but you won't eat this process stuff that we're trying to give you at the same time? But no, they're... Good for him. Yeah. And he's fantastic from that, but he'll always eat some haribo as well, of course. But in Pareto, one of the tricks I used to use is entrepreneurs, if you're small, when you see big businesses, work out what they're not very good at, or what are they trying to hide that they're not good at. My competitors had a carbon footprint on scope one and two of over a million tons, the big companies did. Our carbon footprint was 169 tons. So quite often, and this worked, I used to take 5,000 jelly beans into a sales pitch in a big old bucket, nearly five kilos, and say, here is the carbon footprint of the competitor that we also know is bidding for this job. Can you guess how much ours is? And ours was one third of a jelly bean compared to 5,000. Also, you had a big jar and then one third... Yeah, yeah. And I'd usually cut it. I'd take a pair of scissors and cut it so they could eat some. And like, if you care about sustainability, which some clients claim they do, who are you going to choose? 1 million or 169 tons. And sometimes that worked, didn't always work. You can look this data up in their reports as well. The data is very easy to find. And so, yeah, for me, little tricks like that. The other trick I used to use, which is, I think good advice, was donuts. So I'm a big food guy going back to that community thing. I always, without exception, would go and get donuts with the branded logos on of the customers that I was selling to. And then when I went into a sales pitch with them, I'd give them the donuts. And the extra kicker on that is always take a gluten-free option and a vegan option, because there are really powerful signs that if I go in to meet someone who I've never met before, and they happen to be celiac or happen to be vegan or dairy-free, I've already thought of their needs before I've met them. It's just so deep on like a level that they're thinking, oh, well, this person is really thinking outside of the box. Really basic stuff. But actually, like, it was just a way that we were able to demonstrate why we were different to the competitors. And whereas our competitors would go in with like eight people into a sales pitch, we'd maybe go in with three. So it was all about quality. And we weren't trying to hide anything. And we were experts in everything. So there's a huge amount of psychology about sales pitching when you're doing tendering. And we were successful at it. And at our height, we were winning eight in 10 tenders when the industry averages like two in 10, that's the level. But the service must have stood up on its own. Well, well, it did. And on the service, we had our net promoter score externally validated on two occasions. The industry average net promoter score in facilities management is minus 10. And ours was plus 60. So we were able to evidence externally validated wise that we were better than most of the sector. And you could speak to our customers because they talk about us. And that's what net promoter score is for. So yeah, we had about a 90% retention rate of customers at our height. And that's how you grow a business, you win work, and you don't lose it. And then you just keep growing from there. And because the contracts were five to seven years long, you had to, it was pretty hard to lose them unless you were terrible. And we weren't terrible. So actually, we were doing a lot better than other companies. Right. So now you're non exec, you're obviously focusing a lot more of your time on family and your forest and fun, which sounds fun. What do you think is happening in the sort of world of offices? You know, this hybrid working two days a week, we mentioned earlier, but what's the future for offices? Yeah, well, as chair of the Institute of Workplace, this is something that we're talking about every day. What I have seen in reality is Mondays and Fridays are almost not work office days any longer. I'm generalizing, of course, but we know large customers that have less than 15% occupancy on Mondays and Fridays, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdays, the twats as they call them, they, they do come in on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdays, and that tends to be a higher thing. So we are seeing the younger generation generally wanting two or three days in the office. We're seeing some of the older generation also want that because where COVID was big for this sector of workplace, people who were in their fifties, who'd been going to a workplace for 30 years, all of a sudden in COVID, they didn't need to go anymore. And they realized that they could do some of their work from home. And that, and there was a lot of retirement earlier than what we'd expected within as a population within the UK. But the middle group, so sort of people between say 25 and 45, we know they do want to be in the office. And that that group is still there because that they call them generation Y and a little bit of X. And those ones want to be there. My other hypothesis is the Alpha generation, which will come after generations there, as we mentioned, I think they will also want to be in the office space. So what we definitely saw a shift from is say, be a Fridays in the office and now be a Thursdays. And because probably people are working from home on Friday, people may stay later and they may do more social activities, because it doesn't matter the next day, because they can sleep in a bit more because they're not traveling to the office. We are also seeing customers or clients, they want much higher quality space. So although they may not have as many desks, the space that they do have is higher quality. Because when those people are in the office, they need to have a brilliant experience whilst they're there. And that this not not knew that the likes of Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc, had these amazing office spaces, because that's how they attracted talent. But even more now, the office needs to do more for people than just be a place to rest your laptop down. And the quality of the interactions on those Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdays is really important now. And that could be you need more quiet rooms, you need more coffee stations, you need more sofas, you need more play stations, whatever it is to make people interact with each other. I think that's more important than ever. And but it's a constantly shifting thing. And Barclays commissioned a piece of work called five generations in the workplace. And the real challenge, and I don't know the answer to this, but how do you build a workplace that works for a 21 year old and a 68 year old? It's a challenge because they have completely different expectations of the space. But that's what organizations need to continuously adapt and not cut their office desk down too much. If you cut all your desk down, you then get to this point where people don't want to come into the office because they might not have some way to sit. And now the whole thing just gets a bit ridiculous. We're in the process of refurbishing our office at the moment. And that's raised a lot of questions. It's quite interesting. How do people move through it? How are they going to meet? Where are the sort of workspaces? One of the best I ever saw, and this was back in 2016, was Candy Crush or king.com. So Candy Crush was the second most downloaded app in the world at that stage. But they never met their customers. Because their customers was people like my mum at home, spending 99p to go to the next level. But it meant that in the office, it was a stunning place. They had a 3D printing room, they had an amphitheater so you could put on performances, they had a PlayStation room, they had ping pong tables and Flaringtables. It sounds like Dreamland. It was, they had amazing showers, they had an amazing gym, and they still have that space today. But they got acquired by Activision and then Microsoft now. But that environment was like nothing I'd ever seen before as a young entrepreneur going in and delivering to them. And actually, but the quality of what they were delivering, and they were one of the most financially successful businesses that there had been from an app perspective, the brilliant entrepreneurs there. But that's what office space was like. It was about, and it was a destination to go to be with people, as opposed to just somewhere that you were going to do some work. And what they did really early, they did food. So like proper high quality, like you go into a sandwich shop, grade food. And I always remember they had a nut bar. So every possible type of nut that you could imagine in a big jar, which would cost you hundreds of pounds if you were to eat them, just have them for free. Just put them in and do it. And they were trying to encourage people to come in and it was not my introduction nut bar as an idea. If you want to burn some money, that is what I want to do that. Get some warm nuts and all that sort of stuff. That's healthy. But you know, people care about their health. And certainly now, they care about chia seeds and all that sort of thing. So you can do those things. But yeah, nut bar was worked really well for them. Very good. Well, I think we're near the end of the conversation. To wrap up, looking forwards, what would you say to prospective entrepreneurs? Your journey's been a remarkable one, I must say. But what advice would you give prospective entrepreneurs who may be thinking, shall I or shantay? Yeah. For entrepreneurs who are thinking about it, I think, depending on what type of business you have, you can start to build on the side of your desk. So there's this phrase that the internet loves, it's not what you do nine to five, it's what you do five to nine, I buy into that a little bit. You don't have to take the risk of just leaving a business and starting with nothing. You can start to build a website, a brand, get your social media up and start to do that on the side and start to see whether that firstly, do you like working 12 hours a day? Because that's at least what you're going to be doing at one point. Secondly, do you love it? Is that something that those four hours after you've come back from your day job, can you commit to spending time on this? And thirdly, what sort of traction are you getting? Is it working? Is it not? How can you pivot? What can you do? And actually, that means then, you can test a lot of that on the side. So prospective entrepreneurs, for me, firstly, probably go and get a job in the sector that you're trying to build your own thing in and start to build a brand for yourself while someone else is paying your salary. But secondly, build on the side, build on the side and build something that you can test so that when you start on day one, you are not at zero, you may already be at level two out of 10 at that stage, and then you try and promote it and move forward. So but overwhelmingly, go for it. If you think you've been inspired by what I've said today, the story I've given is all true. I don't come from anything special. I am nothing special either. You just have to work incredibly hard and be focused on what you're doing. You will make sacrifices, and you will lose some friendships and things along the way. But personally, I'd much prefer to work really hard for 10 years and finish working at 37 than bumble along for 45 years. And my dad was in the factory for 42 years, until I gave him quarter of a million pounds in cash on a quad bike one day so he could retire. And I didn't want that for myself. And I think entrepreneurs have the opportunity to do that as well. So your message, which I love is overwhelmingly, go for it 100%. Thank you very much, Andrew, for coming to talk to me. I thoroughly enjoyed that conversation. I'm going to ask you two questions at the end, which I ask everybody, all of my guests. And the first one is, because at Reed, we love Mondays is what gets you up on a Monday morning? Well, these days, it's my daughter. My daughter runs in about seven o'clock in the morning if she slept all night, and then jumps on me and gives me a hug. And then my son, who's five, he'll come and start wrestling and tickling. And that is what gets me up on a Monday. Well, it sounds like a lot of fun. I absolutely love it. In that moment of warmth and embrace, you forget about the money, forget about the success, forget about the bright yellow sports cars, nothing matters. Being in that moment is what matters. I think that sounds perfect. And my last question is a question from my interview book. Why you 101 questions you'll never fear again is where do you see yourself in five years time? In five years, I think I still be doing what I'm doing now, which is trying to balance fatherhood, probably understand that my kids don't want to know me as much as they do at the moment as they get a little bit older, but I'm still feeling like I have some purpose. We're planning to get some animals this summer as well. So the farm will start to grow itself out. We're looking at pygmy goats as our first sware. But really, I hope to see myself as happy and content and still spending as much time with my family as I can and really not putting myself under too much pressure. I'm really enjoying where I am at the moment and time flies now because I'm a couple of years into this story and it still feels like last week that I sold the business. And I love that for myself because there's no pressure and it's great enjoyment. And also, I hope to continue on one of the biggest blood donors in the world at the moment and managed to donate 100 times in the last 500 odd days. And actually, I want to continue that and help more people have saved over 1000 lives already and hopefully go on to save 1000s more. And that's an important endeavor for me. You've done that by being a blood donor. Blood donor, yeah. So that's something for people to reflect on. You say you've saved how many lives? Over 1000 lives. As a blood donor. As a blood donor. That's remarkable. I donate every couple of weeks. Yahoo just did an article on me as well last week. It was very funny because they were our second customer, Yahoo, but I was just in the press last week about that as well. Well, good for you. And I hope your family and farm continue to flourish. Thank you so much. Thank you, Andrew. Thank you very much. Thank you, Andrew, for joining me on All About Business. I'm your host, James Reid, Chairman and CEO of Reid, a family-run recruitment and philanthropy company. If you'd like to find out more about Andrew Halbert or Reid, you'll find links in the show notes. Thank you for listening and see you next time.