SME profile: Contractor鈥檚 chairman aims to increase repair and maintenance work to beat downturn
Stuart Black knows a good business opportunity when he sees one.
So he should. The 44-year-old former chief executive of social housing group Mears took a year鈥檚 advanced management course at Harvard when he left the company in January 2007.
Five months later he walked into the Essex office of public sector contractor Lakehouse. He was there on behalf of a private equity client that was running the rule over the 拢50m-turnover firm. The deal never materialised, but Black hit it off with Steve Rawlings, Lakehouse鈥檚 chief executive, so well that he became its chairman on 1 August.
Black recalls: 鈥淚 felt Steve鈥檚 real passion for driving the business forward, which was backed up by what I could see around me.鈥
The fact the company ended the year to September 2007 with 拢2.5m in cash helped. After three further meetings over coffee at the company鈥檚 Romford offices, a deal was struck and Black took an undisclosed stake in the firm.
By holding stakes, both men knew they could put a wad of cash into their own pockets one day. 鈥淚n brutal terms we felt if we sold, we would leave too much money on the table for any private equity investor coming in,鈥 Black concedes.
Now he鈥檚 plotting to quadruple turnover in three years and muscle onto the repair and maintenance patch of his former employer, Mears.
Having a big hitter as chairman is one thing, but reaching 拢200m turnover within three years is quite another. The target for 2009 is 拢80m. So how does Black plan to get there, given the downturn?
鈥淲e鈥檙e targeting organic year-on-year growth of 20% for the foreseeable future, which will take us to 拢140m in three years鈥 time,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檇 look to acquisitions to top the figure up.鈥
We鈥檙e trying not to complicate the business. Nothing we鈥檙e doing is rocket science
Stuart Black, Chairman
The company gets half its turnover from social housing and the rest is evenly split between education, health and local government community jobs.
The plan is to boost the social housing element from 50% to 60% of turnover but the real change will be the increased emphasis on repair and maintenance. It currently accounts for 15% of turnover across all sectors but Black wants to see that grow to 40% in three years.
So no prizes for guessing what sort of business it would like to buy. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking to a number of repair and maintenance businesses, but I don鈥檛 anticipate concluding anything in 2009.鈥
Lakehouse is only looking at companies with a turnover of below 40% of its own. 鈥淚t would have to be in our geographical area and in the region of 拢15m to 拢30m,鈥 Black says.
Talk of repair and maintenance specialists raises the obvious comparison with Mears. It is understood Black鈥檚 shock resignation was prompted by a disagreement with current chairman and chief executive Bob Holt. Sources close to Mears say Black was upset when Holt tried to get too hands-on.
But Black denies there is piquancy in moving onto Mears鈥 patch. 鈥淚 moved on a long time ago,鈥 he says.
Black is understandably vague on whether he has an exit plan from Lakehouse in mind, but doesn鈥檛 rule out private equity involvement. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 got a preferred route. We could also look at the capital markets or bank investment.鈥
He adds: 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying not to complicate the business. The beauty is that it鈥檚 fairly straightforward. Nothing we鈥檙e doing is rocket science.鈥
Lakehouse in numbers
200 Number of staff
拢250尘 Forward order book
拢18尘 Turnover added in last three years
1988 Founded by chief executive Steve Rawlings
4% Operating margin
拢203,422 Pay of highest paid director in 2007
5 Number of shareholders
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