Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - The Billionaire Case for Small Bets
Episode Date: May 11, 2026I help founders & executives generating more than $10M in revenue find their Easy Mode. Start here: https://ryanhanley.com/subscribeWatch this episode on YouTube: https://youtube.com/ryanmhanley---You...’ve been lied to.Open up any business podcast and you’ll hear the same tired advice: Burn the boats. Swing for the fences. Bet it all on a moonshot.According to Sir Richard Harpin, that’s a fantastic way to bankrupt your company.In 1993, Richard took £50,000 and started a home emergency repair business called HomeServe. Thirty years later, he sold it to Brookfield Asset Management for £4.1 billion. He didn’t do it by being a cowboy. He did it through ruthless discipline, small bets, and a willingness to admit when he was the bottleneck in his own company.In this episode, Richard breaks down his exact 9-step playbook: why you should copy your competitors, how to buy a "boring" business with vendor finance, the 15% rule for global expansion, and why hiring your replacement is the ultimate Easy Mode.If you want to build a massive business without the ego, this episode is your blueprint.This is the way.— Ryan HanleyConnect with Sir Richard BookBook — How to Make a Billion in 9 Steps: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/how-to-make-a-billion-in-nine-steps-richard-harpin/1147872744?ean=9780349445403Website: https://www.richardharpin.com/Business Leader: https://businessleader.co.uk/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rharpin/This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think that's the wrong discipline.
My magic model was hiring people that were better than me.
Entrepreneurship is a high-risk activity.
I have always struggled with goal-setting.
Don't set any goals.
Don't try and become too big.
Keep it small, prove it out, and then go big.
Copy what others are doing because it's working.
We need to be very protective of our mental energy, attention, focus.
They can either spend more quality time with their kids,
or they can put in five or six hours of extra work a week and earn more money.
Sir Richard Harpen, you, I have so many things that I want to talk to you about.
I'm so excited for this conversation and I just, I appreciate you making the time, my friend.
And do just call me Richard, Ryan.
I did think that my knighthood would help me get a better seat in a London restaurant,
but then somebody told me that they make a surcharge.
Like any true, any too good deed, you know, it comes with a price, right?
You get the, you get to serve, but now you got to pay more for your next cheeseburger and pint.
Absolutely.
Well, I want to get into something that I saw actually on your Instagram channel that fascinated me.
And it was just a snippet, but the topic, I just, I'm really interested in hearing the more expanded version of this idea,
which was the idea of big bets versus small bets.
And if anyone listens to business podcasts, entrepreneurial stuff,
you know, Peter Diamandanis, who is phenomenal,
has the Moonshots podcast, everything's about big bets,
burn the boats.
And you had some really interesting takes on small bets
and the value that small bets make and how they play a role.
And I'd love to start our conversation in big bets versus small bets
from someone who's built a billion-dollar company.
Yeah, I'm a big believer that you need to prove things out small.
And I learned that the hard way because a great example was my original plumbing emergency
business called A1 Fast Fix, started it with my life savings,
my business partner's life savings, 50,000 pounds.
And we grew it, and the business model didn't work.
and we ran out of money.
We then managed to get half a million pound investment
from a UK water company,
and I thought, right, I'm going to grow the business even bigger,
it will get to economies of scale,
and of course it didn't,
because it was the wrong business model,
the business got bigger,
and the losses went from 10,000 a month to 50,000 a month.
So my learning was stay small,
bootstrap your business, test,
learn, copy, pivot, and make sure you get the right business model.
When you have, then press the accelerate button.
And that might mean going and getting investment to really scale the business,
but don't do that until you've absolutely categorically proved your model.
So why then do you think there is so much moonshot, swing for the fences,
pornography out there?
Is that just clickbait to sell stuff?
and behind the scenes all these entrepreneurs are kind of thinking the way you are,
or is this just a philosophical difference that people have in business?
I think it's a message from some people that says,
oh, you've got to go big at all costs.
Venture capital in some periods have said,
well, we'll give you loads of money to test and prove your business,
but just go big and throw loads of money out it and eventually it will work.
and I think that's the wrong discipline.
Keep it small, prove it out, and then go big.
Jim Collins, in his book Good to Great,
would call it firing bullets,
and then when you hit the target, then fire the cannonball.
If you fire the cannonball at the beginning,
you run the risk of busting your business.
Yeah, I was listening to kind of startup-oriented podcast the other day,
and a very successful investor was on.
And I don't think he meant anything negative about this,
but he said, you know, I want to see two or three failures, you know,
before I invest.
Like, I want to know they've run into a wall before.
And I, in a broad stroke, I can kind of understand what he's saying.
But at the same time, as the actual operator, like, that is devastating.
And it is oftentimes you don't survive the first major miss, especially if you're doing it, you know, kind of counter to what you're suggesting, which is you fire a cannonball and you miss.
That bounces back with almost just as much, you know, negative impact on you, your emotions, your relationship, your bank account, you know, all this kind of stuff.
So I guess what I'm trying to get at is, like, I'm trying to break this down because I'm in your camp.
Like, I'm more in your camp.
This is what really fascinated me is you're one of the few people that I've heard who's at the level.
of success that you're at preaching this type of philosophy and I'm trying to kind of wrap my
head around why so this is so pervasive this constant and maybe it's more of a and I could be wrong
you're pushing me maybe it's more of just an American cowboy you know shoot the big gun first
always kind of philosophy or is this just like talking point fodder and because the businesses that
I've seen be successful and the entrepreneurs I've seen
consistently be successful, have more of the philosophy that you are preaching?
Yeah. And I think that entrepreneurship is a high-risk activity. I don't know the numbers in the
US where quite often Americans would say that failure is a stepping stone on the way to success.
It's frowned on here in the UK. Therefore, I think you get more caution. And there's two bits of
advice that I would give to people that want to be entrepreneurs, and that is don't be afraid to copy
somebody else's idea. If a business is already working, then that means it does work,
copy their model and improve it. I did exactly that with HomeServe in the UK, copied somebody
else's model and improved it, and that was the magic model, AAA for the home.
And then secondly, don't be afraid to go on buy a business.
There are lots of retirement sales out there.
And those are existing businesses that are making profitability.
And the big objection might be, well, I haven't got a lot of money to go and buy a business.
Where would I raise the money?
And the answer is vendor finance.
Somebody that's selling the business, particularly if it's a retirement,
sale. If they really like the person that's buying the business and think they're capable,
will say put down a small amount of your own money, maybe a bit of bank debt, because a bank
will lend against a profitable business, and then the seller of the business will agree to
repayment over maybe a three-year period. So that's another smart way for people to get
into business is to do it by acquiring somebody else's already profitable existing operation.
Yeah, I love the recommendation of buying an already operating business. I don't know if you're
familiar with Cody Sanchez's work, but she's been popularizing this idea as well. She calls it
buying boring businesses. So she advocates for buying plumbing shops and HVACs and, you know,
pressure washing businesses and stuff like that. And what I like about it is,
I think for too long, there was almost like an ego trip around.
It had to be like this, and nothing against Peter Thiel,
because I'm a fan of him in the way he thinks,
but he kind of has this, you know,
be a category of one type mentality.
If you can't, you know, which I think I get what he's going for,
but I also think it shuts a lot of people down
who are sitting at home going,
I really would like to run my own business.
I feel like I had the chops to do it,
but I don't have some idea that,
It's a category of one.
And I think it shuts them down where what you've just presented are ideas of,
hey, maybe you see something working in like you said, AAA cars,
but now we can move that and say, okay, we can take this idea and maybe apply it to home
service or we can apply it to, you know, insert another business.
But if I'm, but I want to go into the buying of business.
So I know you also have a venture fund.
So you're very familiar with this entire game, bought businesses, et cetera.
So if I'm listening to this and I'm saying, you know what, I've always wanted to go off on my own.
But I've never had that idea.
That's been maybe a big blockers.
I just didn't feel like I had that original idea to start.
But geez, man, I'd love to own a plumbing business.
My dad was a plumber.
I used to help him.
And I get that like in this AI world, these types of physical human businesses are going to be, have real traction.
How do you start to go about that process?
How do you evaluate your opportunities?
How do you think about purchasing an already existing business if you've never done it before?
Yeah, I would take a listing.
So maybe go to Entrepreneur magazine and look at the listings of every franchise business.
I'm a big believer of van-based service businesses,
particularly those are businesses that are going out and doing something in a home
or in a business environment.
And those are most likely the businesses that can be made more efficient
through the use of AI, better scheduling, better routing of the vehicles.
But unlikely that a skilled technician going out to the home or the office
is going to be taken away through AI.
And certainly in a use of the home.
UK, we've got a real shortage of skilled tradespeople, what you would call pros.
And so I see AI shutting down call centres and releasing a lot of people's lives that have been doing,
boring, tedious answering of customer calls that a voice bot can very easily do more efficiently and cheaper.
and releasing those great human lives
to go and work in people's homes and offices
and do worthwhile things that are offering great customer service.
I actually just signed my very first traditional book publishing deal two weeks ago,
and it's around this concept that I call Easy Mode,
which is essentially that thing that you do
that looks like cheating to everyone else.
What is that thing for you?
and then how do we build your life around that idea?
Not, you know, how do we use AI outsourcing or automation, et cetera,
or just simply removing something from your life
to get you more into the thing that is your easy mode
and out of these transactional zero value tasks
that, you know, were part of the job
and took us away from that thing,
which could be twisting a wrench, right?
You might just love being under a sink,
under, you know, in the basement, fixing pipes,
you know, just what you enjoy doing.
but if half your time is scheduling and, you know, follow-ups and, you know, AR and or, you know,
accounts receivable, et cetera, like those things are taking you out of what's your easy mode.
So, again, where are some of the easy wins in that place, you know, having built, you know,
home service and being a big part of this service-based thing?
Like, when you're looking at this and examining, you know, and there's a lot of, I'll tell you,
there's a lot of SMB owners, a lot of service owners that listen to the show, like,
where are some of the places that?
that you're seeing some easy wins for these guys and gals
that they can start to implement in their business
and get some of their time back?
Yeah, I would say it's all around AI applications
that would do the quotations
that would do the invoicing
and chasing those invoices and the payments
would be doing the routing and the scheduling of work.
I think that's going to make a tremendous effects on the efficiency of a business
so that the major cost will be the cost of the technician going out to the customer home.
And we all want to be able to get somebody out to do all of these repairs
to assemble our flat-pack furniture rather than trying to do.
it ourselves. So releasing more people to get them into doing services to the home is going to
is going to really help. Where do you fall on AI with this is I get this question quite a bit is
should I be learning Claude Code or Codex or cursor and and building these applications
myself or should I be looking at some of these off the rack AI tools like in today's terms,
I think in the future, I don't know where the future is going to go.
But I think in today's terms, I'm kind of caught.
I tend to be a little nerdyer.
So I love, like I tore my entire site apart and rebuilt it from scratch using Claude Code.
So replaced WordPress, replaced all this stuff and built it myself.
But I'm nerdy.
Like, that's a Friday night for me.
I don't know that many people are going to want to do that.
So when you're looking at return on time, where do you think a service performance,
professional, you know, in particular, where should they be spending their time?
So they should be looking for off the rack stuff or should they be really digging in
and trying to understand what a Claude Code could do from them or build from them from
scratch?
Yeah, I would recommend second mover advantage.
So look for AI applications that other business owners are using where it's a proven case
and it's working, it's efficient, it's low cost.
don't be bleeding edge and take AI applications or try and develop your own versions.
Copy what others are doing because it's working and it's having a big effect.
Jump on the bandwagon, but only where you can see that a similar business is getting a big efficiency game.
Yeah, I like that.
So like if you're a super AI nerd or maybe even a white collar, more knowledge worker base,
maybe it makes sense to get your hands into Claude Code and figure out
you can move some data around.
But if you're out there, like I said, twisting pipes or pressure washing and stuff
or whatever you're doing, there's just that return on time is not worth digging in and
trying to build it yourself.
No.
I'm invested in a business called Checker Trade in the UK.
We have over 50,000 pros on the marketplace.
And we've developed software that is called Trade More.
and it's available for all of our pros.
And it is literally AI as an app
that helps a pro to run the business.
So they can free up some of their administration time
and they can either spend more quality time with their kids
or they can put in five or six hours of extra work a week
and earn more money.
Yeah.
I love that.
I love that.
I think it's very smart advice, guys,
for those you listening at home,
that I think we're all going to be pushed
and it's going to be kind of shiny object syndrome
for a while with AI, certainly.
It may even be in like the first inning
of shiny object syndrome.
But I think more than ever,
and correct me if I'm wrong here,
we need to be very protective of our mental energy,
attention, focus,
because AI in particular seems to,
I mean, you can go down some rabbit holes and not come up for days.
And that's a lot of lost time if you're not kind of protecting your work hours
and protecting your focus.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, okay.
You wrote the book, nine steps to a billion.
My first question was, is a billion, like, should we be shooting for a billion?
Is like, what's, like, I guess, take this question however you were, however you were,
however you want.
When I sit down and I'm looking to grow,
let's say I have a business,
but I want to grow.
I'm ambitious,
maybe I'm early 30s and I want to,
you know,
I know I got 30, 40 years,
a good business in front of me
and I want to grow something substantial,
build a legacy.
How do I pick the target?
Like, do I go a billion dollars in revenue?
Do I go 10 million?
Do I go just,
hey, let's just not have a goal,
focus on systems?
Like, how do we pick that initial target?
because, and I'm asking this almost very selfishly,
I have always struggled with goal setting because,
and I'll do last piece of context and then I'll let you answer,
I've always just in my head had,
I'm going to work as hard as I can no matter what,
whether my goal is a billion or 10 billion or 10 bucks,
I'm going to work as hard as I possibly can.
So I struggle with where to set that goal.
So where do you start with goal setting?
And if goal setting isn't even relevant to getting there,
then I'd love to have that.
discussion too. Yeah, I didn't start out saying I want to build a business worth a billion dollars
or a billion pounds. It was really just, I want to run a successful business. I'm not quite sure
what it will be, stumbled into the AAA idea and that works. Once I was running the business,
then we did start having five-year plans.
So we did set some goals.
And if you shoot for the stars and you only get to the moon,
then that's great.
So I am a believer that at some point in the evolution of the business
that you should set some big, hairy, audacious goals.
If you don't, then you won't get there.
So my recommendation would be that entrepreneurs should set some objectives.
But when they've set the objectives, then it's about also saying, what's our purpose?
How are we going to be different from our competitors?
What's our economic engine and how we're going to make money?
And if we focus on running the business and making our customers really happy
and growing the business, then the dollars will be the byproduct of that.
So I do believe in objectives, but it shouldn't just be about saying I'm focused on these big goals and getting rich quick.
If you could go back to your younger self before that first iteration of the business that didn't work,
was there a moment in there that in hindsight, obviously you did the best you could,
that moment. But in hindsight, maybe there was something that you could go back and tell your younger
self, hey, there was a moment here that you missed, or there was a stat or an inflection or something
that had to do in the economy that you could have avoided the first business model not working? Or
is that just part of the process that you had to go through to get there? I think it's going through a
process to find a model that works. And what I would tell my younger self today would,
be don't set any goals.
Don't try and become too big.
Just focus on finding the right model.
Don't worry about scaling and size.
You're in the founder phase and you just need to get a model that works.
Only when you've got the model at works do you press the accelerate button.
And it's in that professionalizing phase that you then say, right, we should set some goals.
We should develop a three-year plan.
We should know where we're heading.
We need to know whether we need to go out and get an investor
in order to fund that growth or not.
We need to start bringing in an experienced team
to help run the business.
How do you know when to make the transition
from founder phase to professionalizing phase?
When you've proved your model
that you're then getting some growth
and you're then saying,
so where are we going to take this business now?
And at some point within that professionalizing stage,
it would be saying,
I wonder whether there's an opportunity to take this business
into a foreign country.
Many American businesses,
it's such a big country that Americans never need
to expand outside of,
outside of America, whereas in a small country like the UK, being able to globalize a business model
is really, really important.
Yeah, I was working with a company a couple weeks ago that is, I was thinking about entering
the U.S. market, and they're a UK company.
And what was interesting to me, and I don't have as much international experience,
most of my business career has been inside the states for the most part,
a little bit Canada as well.
But what was really interesting was listening to them to describe the process of,
you know, in their words, kind of conquering the EU, you know what I mean?
So like they had expanded out of the UK and, you know, hit Spain, I think, first and then France.
And then now they're kind of top three leader in their category in most of the EU.
And then listening to that and then the expansion into the United States and, you know, kind of the,
and I'm interested in your take on this because their take was that dealing with the 50 states,
the fact that it's 50 regulated bodies inside a federally regulated body was fairly unique and a challenge.
not maybe necessarily harder or work,
just barely unique to their expansion
into some of the other countries within Western Europe.
Is that true?
Is that a fair assessment?
And how I'm very interested coming from the United States
looking out what it looks like trying to come
and bring a business in?
Yeah, my dream as a aspiring entrepreneur in my teams
was to go to that big country called America
and copy a business idea and bring it back to Little UK.
And so when I went out to the US for the first time,
and that was on a business trip in 2002,
and utility branded Home Assistance cover,
AAA for the home didn't exist.
And I thought, wow, fantastic operations.
opportunity. It's the, we speak the same language. It's going to be really straightforward to take
the business model and put it across every state in America. And of course, it wasn't. Many
British entrepreneurs fail in America. And I was there for six years. I sent a really good guy
that worked for me and ran the UK, sent him to America in 2003.
Six years later, and the business was still really small, we were making less than $10 million
annual profit. And I'm a great believer in the power of mentors. There was a guy that I came
across that was Americanized, but he was a Brit who founded Capital One in the U.S.
A guy called Nigel Morris. He was a co-founder. And I thought,
but he can help me to crack America.
So I emailed him, no response.
I sent a direct mail letter,
then a D.H.L.
Urgent, important, still no response.
And one evening, 11 o'clock UK time, 6pm, East Coast, Washington, D.C.,
which is where he lived.
I didn't have his cell number,
but I did have his landline office number.
And I called it.
and lo and behold, he answered the phone himself.
And I said, you don't know me, I'm a struggling British entrepreneur,
trying to make it big in America,
and I just need an hour of your time.
And he said, oh, I do remember your letters and your emails,
and I'm sorry I didn't respond, persistence pays.
Next time you're over in America, I'll give you an hour of my time.
I said, it just so happens, Nigel.
I'm in Washington, D.C. tomorrow afternoon.
And of course I wasn't.
I got on the first flight out of London, and I was in his office 2pm the following afternoon.
And he gave me two hours of his time.
And he said, where are you based over here?
I said, oh, we're in Miami.
I said, absolutely not.
Shuck his head.
If you want to be a serious American business, hiring serious American business people,
you need to be based between Boston, New York, Washington, D.C., five-hour time, different.
for the UK. And he was right. All the people that we hired into Miami and home serving the early
days either wanted to go to the beach at 4pm or smoke dope. That is not how you build a serious American
business. His second question was, who have you got running your US business out here then?
Said, oh, fantastic guy, I sent him out six years ago. He's a Brit. Shook his head. Absolutely not.
Americans buy from Americans, you need an American chief exec, otherwise you won't be taken
seriously. And we were struggling to sign up all the big American utility companies where we
wanted to use their brand name and the customer base to sell our AAA cover.
So I brought my Brit home, we left Miami, we moved to Norwalk, Connecticut, an hour north of New York.
I had a guy called Tom Rusen in 2010.
16 years later, Tom is still with homeserv as the chief exec in North America
and the business paid $300 million of EBITDAL last year.
Wow, that's an incredible story.
I mean, I love the idea of calling, you're at me, 11 o'clock your time calling him on the phone.
I mean, that's brilliant because he's last one in the office, you know, the receptionist or, you know,
whoever's his gatekeepers probably already gone home for the night.
That's absolutely brilliant.
So the learning is, I call it step number six, go global with locals.
If you want to build a big business in a foreign country, have people on the ground, establish a presence, doesn't need to be all the team, you've got to hire a local chief exec.
And then I call it my 15% rule.
Don't change your business model by more than 15%.
because if one day you're in 20 different countries around the world,
and if you imagine that every country was 25% different
in the way that you'd change your model,
recipe for complexity and disaster.
So change the bare minimum.
One of the guys that I really admire built Belron,
which in the US is called SafeLight,
and he turned the business from worth 200 million euros to 24 billion euros in only 23 years
and the model was identical in every single country.
They went and they acquired businesses and that was safe light in the US.
They ran, it was called autoglass in the UK, car glass in Europe.
But the operating model was the same.
The only difference was the brand name.
Everything else was the same.
So keep it really simple.
Keep it as far as you can the same in every country.
I think that's fantastic advice.
And I think it completely applies to the states as well.
So my home industry is the property casualty insurance industry.
I exited in 2024 from a commercial insurance.
agency that I founded and sold.
And it's very similar.
A lot of, I'll use insurance as a microcosm, but being that every state operates
differently, has different regulations, different rules, I mean, really, Montana to Connecticut
to Texas, it's in some cases, insurance is only a name?
Is it similar in the way that some of these policies operate?
and, you know, when budding insurance entrepreneurs in particular will come to me and ask me about that, you know, it's funny.
I had never framed it the way you have, which I love that, around the 15%, and I don't know what that would be for insurance.
But, you know, that's one of the things that I tell them is do not run into states that force you to do things too much differently too fast.
So depending on what state you come from, you know, that kind of dictates which states you can go to first.
because what's funny is like,
and this is all contextual
and probably,
I don't even know,
it's probably not even interesting,
but like if you come from New York,
right,
California,
Chicago,
and obviously I'm just naming liberal states,
that's probably why.
Connecticut, like,
they're very similar in the way that they operate
and your operations will be able to translate.
If you're,
but if you're in New York
and you think you're going to operate the same way in Florida,
you are in,
you know,
you are sadly mistaken.
it's almost a completely different business.
And I think a lot of people,
these are the types of details
that I think separate the entrepreneurs
that seemingly make it and those that don't.
And I guess my question for you there is,
how much of this do we need to have our head out in the future
thinking about brainstorming around,
researching, et cetera,
versus just situational awareness.
in the moment and seeing kind of playing the game on the field as it comes to us,
if that question makes sense?
Yeah, it's really important to spend quality time on the strategic planning of the business.
That's in the four quadrant time management model.
That's the box which is important but not urgent.
And it is about working out what the growth plan is, researching it,
thinking about the options and then making the decision on where you're going to go and in what
timeframe. Many British entrepreneurs decide, oh, right, I'm going to go for global growth
and they start expanding in several new countries all at the same time. They might do that
while there's still a lot of growth to come in the UK. They might do.
that before they've put somebody in charge of the UK. And if you've got the same team that are
trying to run the home country and work on international expansion, there's a big opportunity
cost. The UK growth engine could slow down because everybody in the business wants to work
on the shiny new stuff, which is international. And then entrepreneurs are naturally fox
They want to go quickly. They want to go into lots of countries all at the same time.
And they must not. They need to get a focus plan, do one country at a time, plan it out correctly, get the right resources, hire locals in the country.
Many businesses in the UK go bust by doing international expansion because they got it wrong.
I would like to pivot for a second. And I'd like to learn a little bit more about,
the economy in the UK versus the U.S.
And I'll be very frank,
my understanding of the UK economy
mostly comes from trigonometry
and Constantine and Francis
is a huge fan of their show.
And I know, you know,
I think the entire world is dealing
with, you know, different economic issues
and, you know, the major debate
here in the States is, you know,
where's inflation?
I mean, we've completely lost the ability
to track inflation
because we've been rigging it
for so many years.
And then you have numbers like
trueflation, which seemingly are showing almost no inflation.
Yet if you go to the grocery store and spend more than five minutes there, you know that
inflation is real.
So, I mean, there's all these issues hitting.
And, you know, what is the UK in particular facing that you think are true headwinds
versus maybe what we're just kind of hearing in media?
Like, what are the entrepreneurs in UK really dealing with boots on the ground?
Yeah, it's really tough here right now.
costs are going up, energy prices are at a high, lots of other cost inflation,
the government put a tax on employers' national insurance, which was a tax on hiring people
and retaining people, and that's really difficult.
I think there's no problems in businesses paying taxes when they make a profit,
but there shouldn't be taxes on hiring and employing people.
So that's made it really difficult in the UK.
But I am a great believer that entrepreneurs are optimists.
The very best entrepreneurs take any problem and turn it into a bigger opportunity.
and if you can run a business and you can grow it in a tough time,
then when the times get better, the business is really going to take off.
So I would say there's no better time than to set up a business in the UK right now.
The UK is still a really good place from which to run a global business.
but actually many UK businesses that are operating internationally,
they're doing better in the other countries than they are in the home country.
The idea of taxing, hiring and retaining people seems like the opposite incentive you would want.
I mean, well, I mean, I, well, you know, I, uh,
conservative here in the states, whatever that means.
And, you know, one of the things that we talk a lot about on the show and I talk
with my guests about is like this idea of operating in reality, right?
I think far too often, you know, and this is why I kind of doubled into some of those
questions around big bets versus small bets and kind of some of that stuff is that I feel
like we're given these narratives and biased, trying to get clicks, playing to my audience,
and that it's very hard, particularly for entrepreneurs
and just ambitious people who are trying to carve out good lives,
even if it's not to be some mega successful entrepreneur,
but they want to be successful enough to take care of their family
and their kids and have some protection and kind of live a good life, right?
It's very hard to parse, like, reality,
like what actually produces real results from all the noise that we get.
Like, how do you recommend, like maybe,
you've gone through it, right?
But you're still ingesting,
I'm assuming a lot of different content
and reading stories
and keeping up on the world.
Like, how do you carve out reality?
Like, what's a useful data point for me
and growing my business or investing, etc.,
versus just the constant noise
that we're bombarded with
from all these different angles?
Businesses need to be aware of that noise.
And entrepreneurs can't just bury the head in the sand
and say, well, costs are rising.
we're going to absorb them.
Really important that they look at how they take costs out of the business.
So AI is a great tool to be able to battle down some of those rising costs
and reduce some headcount that isn't required.
And that's really important.
But equally, I think you've also got to rise above the noise
and say, I've got to focus on my growth.
And despite all that noise, I'm going to follow the nine steps, scale up my business,
and I am determined to turn it into a business that is worth, be it $100 million or a billion
dollars.
How do you avoid some of the societal or political traps that seemingly are set all over business today?
I had a friend who, he was not the only.
but he was a C-suite executive at a business with just over 300 people.
And, you know, good guy, solid guy, probably a, you know, I don't mean, you know, not to bring
politics too much in it, but probably just the center of the road type of guy, you know what I
mean?
Like, didn't really, wasn't very vocal on either side, just kind of lived his life.
And, you know, he was part of a lot of meetings and we talked a lot about it during, especially
during like the kind of major woke push of the 2000 2020 to 2020 of and I'm sure there'll
be another swing and there's right wing versions of this so to take that out but this his particular
case was all this stuff like around you can't say this and you know we need to you know all
these different things that and and this was the conversation they were having you know and again
for the audience I'm not this is not a political statement this is just the situation that he dealt
with was they were looking at some of these things and I think
morally they're going, yeah, we want people to be included.
And yes, we want to be friendly to everybody,
which I think everyone actually really wants.
I certainly do.
But what is being pushed on us doesn't actually seem to align with where we're
trying to go.
And then they made some decisions to placate different groups.
And as you get bigger, that pressure gets much more.
When it's 10 people, right, you can kind of lay the hammer down and go,
no, we're not doing that.
But as you start to get larger, you get a board of,
you get a board that you have to answer to and you have a responsibility to you have investors
you have a fiduciary responsibility to and you're getting downward pressure you know and let's say
you're trying to get to a billion right i guess this is where we're in that nexus point how do you
keep your head clear how do you navigate those things like did you have to ever deal with that
where you felt like there was pressure coming in some capacity that wasn't related to your business
that didn't feel like it actually helped your business how do you navigate these things this is
a major problem, I think, for a lot of people today.
I listed IPOed HomeServe on the UK stock market in 2004, and was a public company chief
exec for 18 years. And I noticed it became harder and harder to run a public company
with more and more red tape, more and more committees, more and more governance. And as a public
company chief exec, you could be focusing on all of that governance and you get to Friday
and think, oh, I haven't thought about how we're going to grow the business this week.
I haven't put enough time into going and listening to customer calls in the call center or
a retailer going out and spending time talking to customers in their stores.
So you needed a real discipline to say, got to make sure you do comply with all of those committees
and all of the red tape and make sure that you've freed up enough time to spend on growing the business,
hire some people that can look after the government and stuff.
I think it did mean that when Brookfield came along,
the big Canadian private equity house with over a trillion dollars under management and made
us an offer of £4.1 billion to acquire Home Serve and we were a top 100 listed company in the UK.
We thought that's an offer that's too good to refuse and the next stage of our life as a company
will be in a private environment where there are different pressures,
but able to get on and run and grow the business
without such a level of short-termism
and focused on the near-term results.
Yeah.
Do you listen to the All In podcast?
Have you heard of that show?
Yeah.
So Chimoth was talking the other day on that show,
and I thought it was really interesting.
And he actually made reference to this
that in previous years of the show,
I think it's like their fourth or fifth year,
they'd talked about where did all the public companies go,
right?
Like at least on the U.S. exchange
or it used to be $8,000.
Now there's only $4,000, okay?
And then he said, what's happened,
and he said, I'm actually not talking about that anymore.
He goes, I'm actually starting to think
that these large private companies,
it's actually a way better way of running a business.
Like if you don't need that public capital,
like make that a last resort.
because you now have the ability to kind of sidestep all of this regulatory
compliance committee responsibility kind of stuff.
And now you're just your customers, your employees, and your investors.
And that's who you're responsible for.
And it's much easier to manage.
And do you see this move almost back to more private businesses away from IPOs?
You see that as a future trend or a trend that continues?
That's certainly what's happening in the,
UK, the London stock market is underperforming. The junior market, which is called AIM,
the alternative investment market, has got less than 700 companies listed. It's fallen significantly
over the last 20 years. And yet, many entrepreneurs in the UK dream of listing their business
on the UK stock market. So I do think that it's really important that we find a way. We find a
way that more companies can join the public markets. I think there is an attraction great for small
investors to be able to invest in those public companies, pick the ones that are the best,
and they're getting a good return on their money. I also think that I'm with you. I believe in
private companies for sure.
But I think philosophically, I would love to see more companies able to IPO for the
reason, the latter reason that you just suggested, which is, you know, a personal anecdote
is I invested in a company.
They're actually on a Toronto Stock Exchange, a Canadian company that is moving into the
U.S. that does licensed psilocybin therapy for veterans specifically.
So PTSD, you know, very, you know, very targeted clinical.
goal, you know, this isn't recreational at all.
This is targeted therapy.
But, I mean, this is like 80 plus percent response rates.
I mean, these are changing, you know, particularly men seem to respond to this a little more
than women, but women just as much if they had the PTSD.
But, I mean, changing lives.
I mean, drastically reducing suicide rates, drastically reducing, you know, things like
domestic abuse and domestic assaults in the homes because these guys aren't coming home,
like just filled with race.
from these situations they've been put in.
And here I am, random guy from New York,
I get to put some money into this company
and help support them.
And look, does my, you know, 10 grand or whatever I put into it?
Does that change?
But, you know, I think there's something to that.
And I think not just financially,
which I think is obviously the primary reason,
but there's also like a cultural component
to being able to support and participate
and follow along with the companies that you believe in.
And I think it ultimately is good for our society.
need to be able to do that.
Yeah, historically, the big news in the UK stock market was around government-owned companies
like British Telecom, British Gas being privatised and a big opportunity for members of the
public to be able to invest in those big institutional companies.
That worked really, really well.
So we've got to find a way as a country to get back.
to that great stock market success.
Yeah.
Richard, I can talk to you about business all day.
I want to close with this question.
You can take it whatever way you want.
You know, obviously I'm working on this book project,
but it's bigger than that.
I'm very interested in, like,
what would you consider your easy mode?
What is the thing that when you show up,
to me it might look like magic or cheating,
but to you, you know,
Not that it's easy for you, right?
But that, man, you could do it all day.
It adds energy to your life.
You're passionate about it.
What is that thing for you?
That is my step number five in my book, which is hiring my replacement.
And that's a really tough thing for us entrepreneurs.
But I worked out after eight years of running homeserve that I was a rubbish chief exec.
that I'd got lots of ideas, that I'd got vision.
My team said, I challenged them and inspired them,
and together we delivered more than we ever dreamt of.
But my magic model was hiring people that were better than me.
And effectively, I hired a guy that became the MD of HomeServe UK,
and that then meant I could work on the business rather,
than in the business.
When that works, and he ran the UK better than I had,
I then thought, right, as we grow into other countries
and I can step up in home serve rather than step out,
I'm going to take responsibility for internationalising our business
and then went and hired great chief execs in each of those nine other countries.
And that was my superpower was hiring people that were proven chief execs,
that ran the businesses better than me,
so I could just focus on the vision and the model and the growth.
Sir Richard Harbin, my friends,
we're going to have the book linked up in the show notes,
whether you're watching on YouTube,
listening on Spotify or Apple,
wherever you listen, guys, scroll down.
You'll have links to the book.
But besides that,
where's the best place for the audience to get deeper into your world
and follow along with you and what you do?
Yeah.
So first of all, the book is going to be published,
how to make a billion in nine steps.
in the US next year.
So not too early to go online to Barnes and Noble
and to pre-order a copy of that book.
And then we've got lots of valuable materials
that sit on a business that I own,
which is inspiring UK entrepreneurs to scale up the businesses.
It's called businessleader.com.uk.
So lots of resources there.
We will in due course be doing webinars that can be run remotely
for any Americans that are interested in scaling their businesses,
then we'd love to help.
And one day in the future, we will be launching business leader,
which is our nine steps growth program with peer groups,
with master classes in America.
I love it.
Thank you so much, sir.
I appreciate you. I appreciate the work. You do. This has been a phenomenal conversation. Thank you.
Thank you, Ryan. I love the conversation. Thanks for inviting me.
