Speaker 1 00:00:05 Hey there, thoughtful listener. Are you looking for introductions to partners, investors, influencers and clients? Well, I've had private conversations with over 2000 leaders asking them where their best business comes from. I've got a free video you can watch with no opt in required, where I'll share the exact steps necessary to be 100% inbound in your industry over the next 6 to 8 months, with no spam, no ads, and no sales. What I teach has worked for me for over 15 years, and has helped me create eight figures in revenue for my own companies. Just head to up my influence. Com and watch my free class on how to create endless high ticket sales appointments. Also, don't forget the thoughtful entrepreneur is always looking for great guests. Go to up my influence. Com and click on podcast. I'd love to have you. With us right now, it's Alistair Sanderson. Alistair, you are the CEO of aperiodic Group. You're found on the web at Opera Imperio Group. Com Alistair, it's great to have you.
Speaker 2 00:01:18 Thank you very much. Josh, it's really good to join you.
Speaker 1 00:01:21 Well, you have been through some exceptional growth over the past few years. And, would you mind maybe just sharing a little bit about who a period group is, what you do and, and how you've experienced this, rapid growth?
Speaker 2 00:01:34 Yeah. So, a period group, it's actually Latin to cover. And we really feel that we cover the pharmaceutical and nutraceutical manufacturing industry. the moment a tablet is made is a really magical dance. It's this dance between the chemical and the mechanical. And, when that dance goes wrong, there often becomes a finger pointing issue. You know, the mechanical guys are pointing at the chemical guys, and the chemical guys are pointing back at the mechanical guys. And what we like to do at a period is bring everybody under the same roof, because oftentimes we find that when our customer has a challenge, they don't really care where that problem is coming from. They only care that we're able to address it for them.
Speaker 2 00:02:12 And so by bringing those different disciplines in-house, we've really positioned ourselves to be the market leader and the market expert on that moment in time.
Speaker 1 00:02:21 Yeah. Well what is tell me a little bit about your industry and, and kind of how you stepped into that, that work.
Speaker 2 00:02:29 Yeah. It's a really interesting industry, actually. About 50% of Americans wake up every day and take a daily med or a daily supplement. And so we're able to provide a lot of people a lot of benefits, right? a lot of those people take life saving meds, and we're really kind of the backbone of that. what we do is we provide the machinery predominantly, but also the tooling and sometimes the ingredients to help in that manufacturing process. So when you take a look at the pharmaceutical or nutraceutical industries, there'll be those big names that you're very familiar of, right? The Pfizer's and the Glaxosmithkline's. They'll do some of their own manufacturing. But then there's also a massive plethora of, contract manufacturers Co-packer co manufacturers, generic generic manufacturers, and they actually make up the bulk of the industry in the background.
Speaker 1 00:03:21 Yeah. Well, what has been going on in your world? So for those of us who are not in the kind of the pharmaceutical nutraceutical manufacturing space, which is the vast majority of us. yeah. Tell us what's been going on in your world over the past couple of years. And, you know, what have been the headlines this year? And what do you see coming down the pike?
Speaker 2 00:03:40 Yeah, I think when we take a look at our industry in general, we just see a really consistent growth, like a 4% year over year, year in year round. we've obviously got an aging demographic, not just in the United States, but kind of globally. And we see that really kind of driving demand, right? As people age, they tend to want to take care of their health a little bit better or they start moving on to those daily meds. And so we just kind of see this really kind of consistent growth. Obviously, some of the really big things that have happened recently are around some of the kind of hormone replacement stuff.
Speaker 2 00:04:11 So the Wii Groovy or that kind of those things for weight loss, that that's not really inside our space because we're really solid dose manufacturing. So tablets and capsules, although, we are starting to work on a number of products to bring those into a tablet because, let's be honest, who likes having to do a weekly injection? Right? Let's make it much easier to wake up and and take a tablet. And so I think that's kind of some of the big things that are going on in our market. Like I said, just really kind of consistent, solid growth, with the demographics changing as they are. But then these new and interesting things, kind of what I would describe as lifestyle drugs coming to the market, particularly over the last. Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:04:49 So, so as I understand, so a a company, do you mind maybe just sharing a little bit about how this works? So. Right. They may have a formula and they are going to go to you and say, right, so we want to bring this to market.
Speaker 1 00:05:04 Here's our formula. And then they supply you with the raw ingredients. And then you make it all or we.
Speaker 2 00:05:11 We will not manufacture a tablet. Actually there are a bunch of people that have to come together to deliver a tablet to market. So the first team that you have is the R&D, the development team. They'll tend to be embedded inside a large pharmaceutical company or inside a university, and they'll come up with a drug or a concept. Right. And then they take that into an R&D situation where they can start doing their trials. And at that point they'll make the first tablet, and that's where we'll start to engage with them, because we'll start looking at tablet design shape. we can do some really interesting things with tablets, like we can put a tablet inside another tablet so we can get it to break down at the exact moment you want it to inside the body. So we might start engaging with the R&D guys at that stage to have those kind of conversations, and then it goes quiet for about 3 to 5 years for us.
Speaker 2 00:06:00 Well, they work through their clinical trials, phase one, phase two, phase three, and ultimately phase four, which is where we'll start to reengage again, because that's when they're getting ready to scale up and really go to manufacturing. From that point, there are really kind of two paths that a farmer might take. They'll go in-house or they might go with a contract manufacturer. And so we have relationships on both sides. We provide the machinery predominantly, but also sometimes the ingredients either to the pharmaceutical companies so that they can manufacture it in-house or to the co manufacturer or co-packer so that they can manufacture it on their behalf. Obviously, all of the regulations around manufacturing, pharmaceuticals and to a lesser extent nutraceuticals. So vitamins, minerals, those kind of things. Yeah, it's a lot of paperwork, a lot of traceability, a lot of kind of human power. So we kind of stand back from that and really just support those individuals on executing on on that drug manufacturing or that nutraceutical manufacturing.
Speaker 1 00:06:57 Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:06:58 So I'm curious about these, similarities and differences when we're talking about pharmaceuticals versus nutraceuticals, because my suspicion would have been that those those are going to be two very different standards. But I don't know.
Speaker 2 00:07:11 Yeah. Yeah. Completely different standards. So the the same kind of licensing that you need to open a restaurant will actually get you there on nutraceuticals, which can be shocking because I'm sure you're aware of some of the restaurants that you've walked into and just gone, I'm not going to eat here, but obviously you don't often see that online, right? A neutral company is able to present themselves in a really kind of clean fashion. Fashion if you're buying nutraceuticals. My one top tip would be really look for an accreditation like an NSF or, British Retail Consortium or an ISO 22,000 that's accredited by SGS, like you're looking for like some form of Ucas accreditation that goes with that nutraceutical supplement that really shows that what they're doing is to a standard above and beyond, like that minimum threshold, because a lot of nutraceutical stuff is just dumped in with food.
Speaker 2 00:08:01 When the FDA and the DEA and those kind of bodies take a look at it. Right.
Speaker 1 00:08:07 Yeah. And so, Alister, obviously, I think one of the big headlines with the superior group or period group is your growth.
Speaker 2 00:08:17 Yes.
Speaker 1 00:08:18 So you've gone to a couple of hundred employees very quickly. Yeah. Looks like obviously some of that is done through acquisition. But do you mind maybe just sharing a little bit about what the past couple of years have been like for you? Yeah.
Speaker 2 00:08:33 So the majority of it's actually been done through acquisition, you know, and I think what the best phase to describe us in at the moment is that digestion phase where we're really starting to get everything to work together. So my brother and I started a company, LFA machines, and we found ourselves inside this space, this really interesting space. And, what we realized was this relationship, like I said earlier, between the mechanical and the chemical. And so we started trying to bring different parts of that equation in under one group.
Speaker 2 00:09:03 And that's really how a group formed. We did, three really quick acquisitions. We actually executed three acquisitions in 12 months, which is amazing, fairly rapid considering we're not PE backed, we're not venture capital backed. we kind of did a lot of that internally, which was a which was a significantly I would not recommend it, unless you dislike sleep. so we kind of got those acquisitions done, and now we feel like we've got all of the pieces together. So we're going through what I again, what I would describe as a digestion phase. Like, about 24 months ago, we had 13 panels on nine different ERP systems. Now we're down to two ERP systems. So we're slowly starting to consolidate the back office, really try and get those Efficiencies, drive efficiencies and learnings from different departments to each other to just kind of be the best version of ourselves we can be.
Speaker 3 00:09:57 Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:09:58 so, you know, obviously when you bring together that many people, I mean, that's that that's got to create some operational stress, you know, especially if you've got a, a smaller team that's been working together for many years now.
Speaker 1 00:10:13 They're kind of slammed together with another team. And I know that that can sometimes, you know, again create some turbulence. Do you what advice would you give those of us who are in that process right now, either we're getting, gobbled up by a bigger fish or, you know, there's an opportunity to kind of grow through acquisition ourselves.
Speaker 2 00:10:35 I think it needs to be really considered. Right. I think that growth through acquisition can be right, but it's not always right. And I've certainly seen right and wrong on some of my transactions, right? a lot of people say, hey, look for cultural fit, look for cultural fit, look for cultural fit. My experience has been a little bit different. Well, cultural alignment helps. What you'll find is that there might be a rapid turnover of headcount anyway who aren't aligned with that culture. I would make sure that your initial culture, the culture that you want to keep, is very, very strong. Otherwise it can be diluted, right? Like as you start to bring in those headcount.
Speaker 2 00:11:13 So we had a 30 headcount team. We brought in a 50 headcount team. It was a close. It was a close culture, but it was not quite as dynamic, you know. And so we saw some attrition. We saw some initial attrition like maybe a ten headcount attrition or 15 headcount attrition out of that 50 people, which equates to about a 30%. We kind of target a headcount turnover inside our organization of sub 20. Right. And at the moment we're trending at about 15%. So we had that initial kind of burst of turnover. And that wasn't necessarily a negative thing. It's something that I kind of quite embrace, but you need to be ready for it because it's a lot of work for the HR to find people and replace people. So I would say that I would say, really stick to your guns and stay genuine. You know, not everybody's going to agree with you all of the time. Some people won't like the changes that you're making to their organization, especially some of the organizations with more history.
Speaker 2 00:12:09 So we did an acquisition of a company that had 57 years of history. We did an acquisition of a company that had 120 years of history. And then we did an acquisition of a company that had about 75 years of history. And so kind of on different scales, they all had things that they'd been doing for a very, very long time. But those things were where we saw some of our opportunities to make changes and really bring people together. And so not everybody's going to agree with that. But I think there are amicable ways to go through that. When you notice that somebody is not necessarily agreeing, my personal way of dealing with it. My personal preference is to sit down and have that really candid conversation. Hey, this is where we want to take the organization. This is why we think it's a good thing to do with this organization. It looks like you might not be aligned with that. That's okay. What does transition look like? Does it look like severance? Do you just want to call it quits now.
Speaker 2 00:13:02 And we'll give you some runway to go find your next opportunity. Or does it look like a collaboration where you start to look for your next opportunity, but you help keep some of that institutional knowledge about for the next 2 or 3 months? Well, we find somebody to come in and backfill. So, I would say embrace the change, embrace the challenge. Don't always look for 100% cultural fit. And then when it is rubbing, be really quick to have that very candid, very honest conversation with the individual.
Speaker 3 00:13:28 Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:13:28 Right. Right. Well, and I would imagine again, you know, stepping into it with a bit of empathy, like we have certainly lots of things that we want to advocate for, obviously, you know, making sure that we've got the right people who are, you know, culturally aligned and, you know, and those sometimes those are probably going to be difficult conversations. But again, I agree with you. It's better to have those difficult conversations quickly. you know, and at least kind of figure out a direction for everybody and decide, you know, hey, either this is an alignment or, you know, you know, working out severance or something like that, you know.
Speaker 2 00:14:06 Yeah. It doesn't, you know, not every separation has to be a negative one. It can go right, but because.
Speaker 1 00:14:12 Right. Because it should be in alignment. You know, obviously we don't like it when people have to lose their job and stuff. So again, I would hope that, you know, for the right folks where there is that alignment that that there's that opportunity, okay.
Speaker 2 00:14:22 That's actually one of the things that I do straight off of the bat. I come in and I'm sorry to cut you off, but I know organization and I really like to say, hey guys, everybody's jobs protected, right? Finance, HR, marketing. But we do have a head office in Fort Worth. And as we see that natural turnover, we're probably only going to rehire in Fort Worth. Yeah, right. And that's how I drive. That's how I drive integration. Because like I said, you're going to see that on average people spend about five years in a job nowadays. Right.
Speaker 2 00:14:54 And so over the next 3 to 4 years, you're likely going to see a majority of your head to head count turnover in a regional office happen anyway. So if you're trying to do something like bring two divisions together or centralize in a location, it doesn't have to be so violent. 12 months will pass so quickly. You'll you'll do your acquisition and you'll look up and it'll be 12 months later. Right. And so for me, it's about letting that time happen and trying not to be too disruptive during that moment, but knowing where you want to take the organization and having a firm kind of consistent force behind that to drive it to that. Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:15:29 Alastair, what does growth look like for you at this point? with operations. So, you know, in terms of like market share, landing new clients, I it looks like you have some good leadership on that side of things. But but where does growth come for? For a period?
Speaker 2 00:15:46 Yeah. So, really we see the machinery upside very limited.
Speaker 2 00:15:51 I mean, we're about 55% of the tablet press market as it stands at the moment, right across all of our brands. and that data is kind of available from government entities. So we're really confident about that number. The place where we know that there's a lot of growth is on the ingredient side. Just in North America, the ingredients market for nutraceutical and pharmaceutical is about a $52 billion market. And at the moment we're a we're a rounding error inside that that number. Right. And so I think what you're going to start to see is now that we know where all of the machinery is, we understand what our customers are using that machinery for really trying to drive, to be part of that value proposition for the customer, where we're not just machinery, we're machinery and ingredients. And as I said before, we're that problem solver. Right. And so by bringing it all to us, you make sure that you get success rather than finger pointing when things go wrong. I really think then the future grows.
Speaker 2 00:16:47 I think we're talking 5 to 10 years is all on the ingredient side.
Speaker 1 00:16:51 Yeah. All right. so I'm curious if, there's anyone that happens to be listening right now that that might make a great connection. or, you know, maybe our friend that's listening right now, might know someone that could potentially be a great client introduction. you know, in terms of, like, who they might know, that might make a valuable connection. Or maybe they're researching you. And this listening to this podcast episode is part of, you know, kind of that research. so what does engagement with opera look like? And you know, who is like just really well primed, to, to be, to in a, you know, to align with opera. Yeah.
Speaker 2 00:17:32 I mean, I think it depends where you're approaching from. If you're looking to launch a supplement business or a supplement brand, and your, you're entrepreneurial. I definitely direct you towards LFA. It's really set up to kind of handle that.
Speaker 2 00:17:46 if you're in that mid tier, manufacturing. So you're already very well established then Stokes and index are probably so we have different almost tiers of machinery. If you think like the VW Group they have VW but they also have Audi and then they have Porsche Superior. We have the same thing going on with our machinery. We have LFA machines, which is unashamedly the Chevy Malibu. You know, you can start a business on one of the tablet presses, but it definitely doesn't have the bells and whistles that our Audi A5 or our Stokes machines have. And then we have Elizabeth that does all of that really technical stuff. They're more like our Bosch. Right. So I think it kind of depends where you are inside the market segmentation. but honestly, I didn't come on your podcast today for a sales pitch. I kind of no, no. Sure. Just before we kicked off, for me, really, it's about paying it forward. So I've been really blessed over my life to have a couple of very solid coaches and a couple of very solid mentors.
Speaker 2 00:18:43 And, I really think that the entrepreneurial journey is one that can provide some individuals a, fantastic amount of reward. Right? but it's lonely and it's difficult and it's hard. Right. And so I think the person that I'm trying to speak to today is that entrepreneur who's out on that journey. And this is a very genuine offer. You can go to my LinkedIn page, you can shoot me a message, and if I think I have an answer or if I think I have an idea, I would be happy to share it with you because so many people have done that for me in the past.
Speaker 1 00:19:17 Yeah. and, you know, obviously with Oprah, it looks as though you may have, you know, again, I encourage someone to check out job openings, you know, when you're going through that much, much growth. you.
Speaker 2 00:19:29 Know. Yeah, I think we've, we've got a number of well, we always I don't know when you might be listening to this, but we always have positions open and, and we're really always looking for those A players, right? Those people that want to grow and learn and we like investing in them.
Speaker 2 00:19:43 So that would be a great shout out. If you're an A player that's particularly in the Dallas-Fort worth area, which is where our head office is, I would love to hear from you, because we're we're always looking to add great people to our team.
Speaker 3 00:19:55 Yeah.
Speaker 1 00:19:56 Yeah. Oh, perio Group. Com. Hey, can I ask you, Alister, just because you have a just a huge you have a huge library of books behind you. Are there any books that you've read over the past year that you think are just maybe either flying under the radar or just something that you've read that, the insights you found were of particular value, given kind of what we've been talking about today.
Speaker 2 00:20:22 Yeah, I think it really depends at what stage you're at in your business life. Right. I like to roughly break up business growth into like sub ten headcount, 10 to 30. HeadCount 30 to 100 and then 100 plus. Right. So I'll try and give a book for each one of those categories if it's okay.
Speaker 2 00:20:39 I think if.
Speaker 3 00:20:39 You. Yes.
Speaker 2 00:20:40 Yeah. I think if you're a subhead ten headcount, books around productivity like Tim Ferriss four hour workweek. Super helpful. Right. Because you're just trying to turbocharge and make the maximum of every bit of your time. when you move into that 10 to 30, I, I tend to see businesses get like, product drift. They want to do everything still. They're still in that entrepreneurial stage. So they're trying to grab shiny things. At that point, I would move on to a couple of books like The One Thing or essentialism, right. And really understand what it is that you're good at and how you're going to do like, more of it. And that will actually drive in that, in that space between 10 and 30 headcount. Doing less is definitely doing more, but it can be really hard for the entrepreneur that started at ten to like, shift that gear, right. and then when I'm going from probably 30 to 100, I'd be looking at two books potentially scaling up, or crossing the chasm.
Speaker 2 00:21:36 two really good books, but then also another one that I think definitely flies under the radar loads is Andy Grove's High Output Management. Because at this point, you're having to manage teams and potentially teams of teams like once you go from 30 to say 50 or 30 to say 100, you'll have a layer or maybe even two layers below you. So it's how do you build out processes to manage teams and teams of teams? and you'll really get that from, Andy Groves, books. And then at 100 headcount plus now I think the CEO role changes again and it becomes more about organizational culture. Right. And so then I would be back to because I think oftentimes it's sub10 people read Simon Sinek start with Y. Right. And actually I feel like it's way more applicable once you get like above a hundred headcount, because that's the point in which, yeah, no longer can have a personal relationship with everyone inside your organization. I didn't have to explain to ten people why we were doing something.
Speaker 3 00:22:36 Yeah, right.
Speaker 2 00:22:37 Exactly right. Like, but, but when you get to plus 100, you're going to be doing town halls, you're going to be doing offsite, you're going to be leading in a very different way. And so books like like I said, Simon Sinek, start with Y or Ben Howitt, I forget the name of his, Ben Horowitz. Was it a Ben Horowitz's book's called.
Speaker 3 00:23:01 this.
Speaker 2 00:23:01 You've got to be very much on the spot.
Speaker 1 00:23:03 No, no. Yeah. No, no, no. That's okay. Well, at the hard thing about hard things.
Speaker 2 00:23:07 Yes. The hard thing about hard things. Yeah.
Speaker 3 00:23:11 Yeah. Thank you Google.
Speaker 2 00:23:12 I would recommend books around that, which is much more around like organizational culture and, and that large headcount leadership kind of stuff.
Speaker 1 00:23:20 Are great great great.
Speaker 3 00:23:22 Great.
Speaker 1 00:23:23 Okay. Alastair. sorry your your LinkedIn. Alastair Sanderson again CEO sorry, I was looking at your LinkedIn and you keep it keep the last name, abbreviated. again CEO of a period group.
Speaker 1 00:23:37 Your website o period group.com. Thank you so much for sharing your insights, Alistair. Congratulations on your success.
Speaker 2 00:23:43 Thank you very much, Josh, it's been great hanging out with you.
Speaker 1 00:23:51 Thanks for listening to the Thoughtful Entrepreneur Show. If you are a thoughtful business owner or professional who would like to be on this daily program, please visit up my influence. Com and click on podcast. We believe that every person has a message that can positively impact the world. We love our community who listens and shares our program every day. Together we are empowering one another as thoughtful leaders. And as I mentioned at the beginning of this program, if you're looking for introductions to partners, investors, influencers, and clients, I have had private conversations with over 2000 leaders asking them where their best business comes from. I've got a free video that you can watch right now with no opt in or email required, where I'm going to share the exact steps necessary to be 100% inbound in your industry over the next 6 to 8 months, with no spam, no ads, and no sales.
Speaker 1 00:24:49 What I teach has worked for me for more than 15 years and has helped me create eight figures in revenue for my own companies. Just head to up my influence. Com and watch my free class on how to create endless high ticket sales appointments. Make sure to hit subscribe so that tomorrow morning. That's right, seven days a week you are going to be inspired and motivated to succeed. I promise to bring positivity and inspiration to you for around 15 minutes every single day. Thanks for listening and thank you for being a part of the Thoughtful Entrepreneur movement.