Exhibition News June 2019 | Page 18

Feature Rising stars Steve Monnington of Mayfield Merger Strategies continues this series showcasing young talent and fast growth with a look at investment event organiser 121 Group Revenue per annum 2016 2017 2018 2019 3 Events $1.2m 8 Events $4.6m 18 — June 6 Events $2.5m 13 Events $9.8m M ost entrepreneurs find themselves in events by chance and Toby Duckworth, one of the four founders of 121 Group, is no exception. Duckworth started working in events straight from school, selling ladders at consumer exhibitions. Stints with Simon Burton at the Exhibiting Show and with Incisive Media were followed by the failed launch of his own music industry event. Aged 22, and needing work quickly, Duckworth went to the office next door and landed a job with Aspermont Media, working on Mines and Money – a mining investment event where he met Pablo Martin, Aspermont’s sales director. While at Aspermont, Duckworth also worked closely with content director Leo Stemp and marketing director Charlie Hastings, who worked for Hong Kong- based Beacon Events on the launch of the Mongolia Investment Summit, a JV event between Aspermont and Beacon. A move to Hong Kong followed three years later after the two companies formally merged and the four people who would become 121 Group started working together. They debated whether to set up on their own and the deciding factor was that they didn’t believe in the exhibition model for their sector. “The mining companies that exhibited only wanted to meet investors and they were being diluted by service providers. We saw the exhibitors leaving the exhibition floor to go to meetings at the offices of the investors rather than trying to find them within the exhibition,” Duckworth recalls. “We saw a massive opportunity in being different by offering one-to-one meetings rather than having an exhibition.” 121 Group was born in March 2014. The premise of the business was to create one-to-one meetings events where investors meet investment. “We looked for sectors that typically starve themselves of capital – mining, technology, oil and gas and property – where companies need continual funding to exist, guaranteeing repeat business,” Duckworth explains. Hastings had worked at IIR and Stemp at EMAP, so they had multi-sector experience, but they started with mining because they saw the immediate opportunity. The two-page business plan they produced was based on the launch of three mining events in the first year – London, Hong Kong and Cape Town – followed by an Oil and Gas event. “We were surprised by the success of the mining events so the other sectors went on the back burner” recalls Duckworth. Within six months of setting up, the team received an acquisition approach from a major organiser but they felt that it was more of a recruitment exercise than a belief in their vision of the future of the business. “We felt that it was far too early and the three-year plan that we had to produce as part of the valuation process reinforced our faith in what we were planning, so in a way it helped us make the decision to remain independent and not to sell for a fraction of the value that we see four years on.” The importance of the team At 25, Duckworth was around 10 years younger than the other three, but it was clear that the four of them