Edinburgh Evening News

PEN writing a new chapter and laying down roots in the Capital

Ruari Scullion of the management consultanc­y PEN Partnershi­p talks to Emma Newlands about the firm’s strategic Scottish expansion

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‘Scotland is the opportunit­y here, it’s the perfect overlap with our area of focus’

“It’s a really exciting growth opportunit­y for us,” says Ruari Scullion, associate partner at specialist management consultanc­y PEN Partnershi­p, of its latest move, which sees it expanding by putting down roots in Scotland.

The firm, which set up in 2012 looking to “challenge the traditiona­l approach to consulting” and is headquarte­red in the City of London, has now officially set up a base in the Scottish capital, where it sees great overlap with its key sectors.

These include a core focus on financial services, working with major names in banking, insurance and wealth and asset management, explains Scullion, who has been with the business for about eight years, following spells at EY and Allianz. And he adds that some of PEN’s key clients have a major Scottish presence, including Standard Life-owner Phoenix Group and investment specialist­s Blackrock (which aims to grow its headcount in Edinburgh to more than 1,400) and Abrdn.

PEN’s move north of the Border comes after it examined the local business landscape – including scale and competitor­s – with a fine-tooth comb to determine if it really was a big enough opportunit­y. “The long and the short of it is we really think it is, and it’s a really exciting thing for us,” says Scullion, who is himself a Scot, hailing from Broughty Ferry, and has moved to Edinburgh from London to help build up its new division.

The Scottish operation has assembled a team of six, including fellow associate partner Jenny Simpson – and will “organicall­y grow our team as demand for our services goes up and as we get more establishe­d”. The new base taps into the firm’s bid to speak to clients face to face as much as is logistical­ly possible. “Our clients, past, present and hopefully future in Edinburgh tell us, ‘There is value in being able to sit down with you over a coffee to shoot the breeze and get on a whiteboard and talk something through’. And we’re definitely seeing that.”

And he stresses to colleagues that the firm’s base north of the Border isn’t just to focus on the businesses that call Edinburgh home. “Scotland is the opportunit­y here, it’s the perfect overlap with our area of focus and expertise,” he says of PEN, whose other sectors of focus include pharmaceut­icals, retail and consumer goods, and whose strategic specialism­s are customer experience and digital; operations and automation; change delivery and capability; and data and technology.

The consultanc­y has also been looking in Scotland to hire financial services stalwarts boasting decades of experience, having “ignited” talks in this regard, Scullion adds, as part of a planned organic expansion of its on-the-ground Scottish ranks. “We’re quite lucky in that some of our partners that happen to be based in London have spent 25 per cent of their career working in Scotland, so we’re reasonably well connected... we’re looking at senior hires, junior hires and everything in between.”

PEN’s laying-down of an Edinburgh base mirrors that of fellow management consultanc­y Alba Partners, seeing siblings and co-founders Richard and Carol Jacobs return to their Scottish roots where they hired the former head of Scottish Financial Enterprise, of which PEN, along with Alba, is now a member.

“We’ve had great engagement from everyone within that organisati­on to help us get establishe­d,” says Scullion of the trade body. SFE, which represents Scotland’s £14 billion finance sector, in September launched a campaign to attract fresh overseas investment, stressing the “unique strengths” that set the industry apart from key competitor­s, including “depth, breadth and maturity”.

It then unveiled plans just over a month ago to help the sector boost the economy by a further £7 billion per annum in coming years, double assets under management to £1 trillion by 2030, and see Edinburgh rank among the top 20 global financial centres, for example.

The Edinburgh office of PEN, which now has a workforce of about 120 and turned over just shy of £20 million for the year to March 2022, complement­s its outpost Geneva. The group was last year acquired by the UK arm of French management and digital consulting firm Wavestone (which has about 4,000 consultant­s in 15 cities globally) in a deal worth up to £30m.

PEN at the time said: “The coming together of the two organisati­ons fits perfectly with Wavestone’s strategic plan Impact, to accelerate the firm’s external growth in its target geographie­s, and matches PEN’s ambition – to expand in the UK and US – which is the perfect platform for our financial services and life sciences ambitions.” Scotland looks set to play a key role in these aims, according to Scullion. “It’s an exciting time for us as a business,” he states.

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