logo
Place and Shipshape.vc Announce Strategic Partnership to Support Scaling Founders

Place and Shipshape.vc Announce Strategic Partnership to Support Scaling Founders

Place, the Cardiff-based talent partner for high-growth businesses, and shipshape.vc, the free investor search engine, have announced a strategic partnership aimed at transforming how founders approach growth.
Kieran O'Connor, founder and managing director of Place, has placed more than 1,000 candidates and advised founders on 'how to grow with intent, not just speed'. Daniel Sawko, founder of shipshape.vc, has built a platform that surfaces national and international funding options for founders, with tens of thousands of investors indexed and made discoverable.
The pair said that startups often face a knowledge gap when it comes to people strategy, which they described as 'a critical yet overlooked component in long-term success'.
While financial modelling, go-to-market strategies, and pitch decks receive most of the attention during fundraising, founders are often left in the dark about how to build teams that truly deliver, said Kieran and Daniel.
The partnership aims to combine Place's expertise in strategic talent acquisition with shipshape.vc's real-time investor insight and startup intelligence.
Whilst the long-term vision for the collaboration is to offer it globally, it is launching by supporting the South Wales startup scene.
Daniel Sawko, founder of shipshape.vc, said:
'The partnership between Place and shipshape.vc is a statement of intent that we are here to support startups. It's great to be joining forces with another Welsh founded business which shares a passion for supporting entrepreneurs, founders and early stage start ups on their journey to success. We're excited to grow both locally and internationally, and support others along the way too.
'We're delighted to be working with Kieran and the Place team to empower emerging tech companies globally with the knowledge on human capital they will need to succeed. It's fantastic that this initiative brings together two Welsh companies to do so.'
The partnership has marked the launch of their collaboration with the release of The Strategic Founders Hiring Guide a free, practical resource for founders currently raising investment.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AI firm launches platform to cut waste and boost UK steel industry
AI firm launches platform to cut waste and boost UK steel industry

South Wales Argus

timea few seconds ago

  • South Wales Argus

AI firm launches platform to cut waste and boost UK steel industry

Nightingale HQ's an AI-powered platform, has been purpose built for the reinforcement steel industry. It has already been used by manufacturers like Midland Steel to use digital tools to address challenges such as automating data extraction, optimising reinforcing bar production planning, and monitoring environmental impact. Steph Locke, head of product for NHQ, which is based in Cardiff, said: 'For us as a Wales-based tech scale-up, we're excited about the opportunity to support local steelmakers during this transformative time. "Investment in Tata Steel's transition to electric arc furnace technology at Port Talbot represents a major turning point for the sector and opens up long-term opportunities to apply new technologies to old challenges. 'Looking wider, under the UK's new Infrastructure Strategy, steelmakers will face increased pressure to be more efficient and sustainable, yet the majority lack the digital tools required to meet these expectations. 'That's why we feel now is the perfect time to officially launch which can deliver powerful, no-code AI directly to production teams without expensive software or technical expertise. "We're already working with some of the biggest manufacturers in Europe, and our ambition is to have a wide-reaching impact on the UK steel industry.' Globally, the rebar market is set to reach £325 billion by 2031, driven by infrastructure growth and government investment. At the same time, ongoing UK/US tariff uncertainty highlights the importance of innovation and cost-efficiency for maintaining competitiveness.

Four Cymru partners with Wales Tech Week to champion innovation
Four Cymru partners with Wales Tech Week to champion innovation

South Wales Argus

timea few seconds ago

  • South Wales Argus

Four Cymru partners with Wales Tech Week to champion innovation

The event, at Newport's ICC Wales in November, is set to bring together tech innovators, investors, policy-makers, and leaders from across all sectors. As part of the international Four Agency, Four Cymru will be supporting the event with strategic communications, brand storytelling and audience engagement. Nan Williams, group chief executive of Four, said: 'Cymru is building a special place in the international technology ecosystem. "Small enough to be connected, ambitious enough to deliver worldwide innovation and with the passionate, hardworking 'DNA' to build the future as we built the past. At Wales Tech Week that all comes together as nowhere else - you can experience the innovation, talent and ambition that make Wales a rising force in global tech. "From world-firsts in compound semiconductors to cutting-edge cybersecurity, this is where international opportunity meets Welsh ingenuity.' Four's Difference Makers initiative has previously recognised Avril Lewis, managing director of Technology Connected, as an influential figure shaping the future. Avril said: 'We're thrilled to have Four Cymru on board for Wales Tech Week 2025. Their expertise in strategic communications and international reach will be invaluable in helping us tell the story of Welsh innovation to the world. "This partnership strengthens our mission to position Wales as a global leader in technology and innovation.' Wales Tech Week 2025 will bring together entrepreneurs, investors, academics and policymakers to explore the future of technology and its impact on society, business and the economy. The event is free to attend and will explore themes including Tech for People, Tech for the Planet and Tech for Performance. For more information and to book your place please visit

Trump, taxes and takeovers: Aberdeen's OEG navigates its way to $1 billion sales goal
Trump, taxes and takeovers: Aberdeen's OEG navigates its way to $1 billion sales goal

Scotsman

time30 minutes ago

  • Scotsman

Trump, taxes and takeovers: Aberdeen's OEG navigates its way to $1 billion sales goal

'Anything that increases costs and complexity - tariffs and taxes - can put you off investing' – John Heiton, CEO Sign up to our Scotsman Money newsletter, covering all you need to know to help manage your money. Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... OEG Energy Group, the Aberdeen-headquartered offshore services provider employing 1,500 people globally, remains on the growth trail with further acquisitions set to boost its burgeoning renewables business as it charts a course to $1bn (£750 million) of annual group revenues. Chief executive John Heiton said the 30 per cent growth seen last year was likely to be repeated this year despite volatile trading conditions on both sides of the Atlantic, US tariffs and higher taxes, with April's hike in UK employers' national insurance contributions adding a £1 million burden overnight. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The company, which has roots stretching back more than 50 years, is also having to balance the demands of a pro-oil Trump administration that is pulling back on green investment, with a Westminster government that plays up renewable energy but is 'not so supportive' of offshore oil and gas. OEG's chief executive John Heiton. Heiton, a local to the Aberdeenshire area, who joined OEG in 2008, was speaking just a fortnight after the group sealed its first acquisition since being bought by US funds heavyweight Apollo in March. The takeover of Trinity Rental Services (TRS) - for an undisclosed sum - marks a 'strategic expansion' of OEG's US footprint and capabilities. Founded in 2013, Louisiana-based TRS has grown through acquisition and investment to become a key provider in oil and gas offshore container rentals in the Gulf of America. Its workforce of around 80 skilled employees now becomes part of OEG. 'We expect it to be quite a smooth integration,' said Heiton. 'It was a direct competitor so we expect the integration to happen pretty quickly. There are some common customers. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'We won a major new contract in the US and that led to a drive for more equipment and one way to fulfil that was to buy a competitor. Also, we admired Trinity for a long time and had talked about acquisitions with them for five or six years. This was the right time for them to do a deal.' Part of the business specialises in the supply of containers to the global oil and gas industry. OEG's predecessor companies - Ferguson Seacabs, Containental and Vertec Engineering - were among the pioneers in the supply of equipment to the North Sea oil and gas industry, but the group now derives about 55 per cent of its business from renewables work. That split is expected to remain about the same this year, even with the Trinity deal. During 2023, the group launched OEG Renewables in a move that brought all subsea, topside, cable handling and marine specialist services under one roof to service both the construction and operational phases for offshore wind farms on a global basis. Heiton said the TRS deal, though a milestone one, did not mark a change in the group's strategy. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'If we do one or two acquisitions in containers over five years and probably do ten-plus in renewables, that is the weighting we expect to see in the business,' he noted. OEG's renewables business helps with the construction and operational phases for offshore wind farms on a global basis. Buying a US-domiciled business like TRS puts the group in an advantageous position with regards to tariffs, though the wider business has suffered some fallout amid President Trump's see-sawing trade levies. 'They have caused some delays and issues in terms of our US business and led to a general slowdown in the world economy,' Heiton cautioned. 'That then drives a slowdown in demand for energy. Anything that increases costs and complexity - tariffs and taxes - can put you off investing.' The group's fast-growing renewables business recently won a multi-million-pound contract to support the construction phase of the vast Inch Cape offshore wind farm, which is due to be operational in 2027. Once completed, the development - some ten miles off the Angus coast - will feature 72 giant wind turbines and an onshore substation, generating sufficient clean energy to power the equivalent of more than half the homes in Scotland. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Under the terms of the contract, OEG will supply a package of specialist services including marine coordination, high voltage and ancillary port services. These will all be delivered from the company's new flagship facility in Edinburgh, which is equipped with the latest state-of-the-art technology for round-the-clock monitoring of operations. OEG will also operate up to ten vessels to help support the ambitious project. Heiton said the contract award reinforced the group's position as a key partner in the offshore renewables industry. And, despite the Trump administration blowing cold on wind, the US is likely to be OEG's second largest market this year for renewables, behind the UK. 'These were projects signed off in the Biden era that are in the construction phase,' noted Heiton. 'But in three or four years time that business will probably fall to almost zero as there are no projects coming through. However, we are in pretty much every major offshore energy market.' Headquarters Last year saw the group move into a new global headquarters at the ABZ Business Park in Dyce. The office can accommodate up to 100 personnel across three floors and supplements a number of operational bases in the Aberdeen area. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Some 250 out of the 1,500 people employed by the group globally work out of the North-east and while Heiton said the firm was proud of its Scottish roots, the UK now accounted for just 10 to 15 per cent of its business.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store