David Giampaolo
David Giampaolo | |
---|---|
Born |
1958 Miami, Florida |
Occupation | Chief executive of Pi Capital and director of private companies |
Organization | Pi Capital |
Known for | Pi Capital, Fitness First |
David Anthony Giampaolo (born 1958) is the chief executive of Pi Capital, a London-based investor club. He is also a noted entrepreneur[1] in the global health and fitness sector. He has been described as “…London’s most networked man” by The Times and other newspapers. He has co-founded or served on the board of several large businesses, including Fitness First, 24 Hour Fitness, Zumba[2] and GlobalFit. In 2007 The Daily Telegraph listed him as one of the most influential Americans living in the UK.[3]
Early life and career
Born in Miami, Florida, Giampaolo spent his childhood in the city of Hollywood, FL. His father held several jobs simultaneously, including journalist, jazz musician and racetrack announcer. Giampaolo attended Cooper City High School, dropping out at age 16.[4] He credits his decision to become an entrepreneur to his Italian immigrant family’s work ethic, particularly that of his father.[5]
Aged 15 Giampaolo started a lawn-cutting business in his local neighbourhood, a business which grew to employing two of his friends. He then took up weight training, becoming an instructor at his local gym. At 17, he sold his lawn-cutting business for $3,000, a sum which he used to set up a small gym aimed at fitness enthusiasts. His clients there included a trio of wealthy doctors whose medical practice was nearby. In an interview with Moneyweek, Giampaolo recounted: "One doctor said: ‘This place is a dump, it’s so hot. Why don’t you move to bigger premises?’ And I said, flippantly, "give me the money and I’ll do it". And he said ‘you’re on’.”[6] Over the next two years the trio backed Giampaolo in opening up two health clubs, investing $50,000 to capitalise on the then-new trend for Nautilus fitness machines.[7]
Fitness clubs
In 1984, having sold his first three gyms, Giampaolo joined health club chain Chicago Health Clubs, then-owned by Bally Fitness. In 1987 Bally selected Giampaolo to set up and lead its business in the UK, beginning with The Barbican Health and Fitness Centre. In 1988 Giampaolo wrote to Diana, Princess of Wales with an invitation to perform the Barbican club's opening ceremony. She agreed, and the resulting press coverage helped to establish Barbican as Britain's first upmarket health venue.[8]
Giampaolo left Barbican Health and Fitness in 1989 and raised £3m to found Espree Leisure, which subsequently developed two health clubs in London. In 1991 Giampaolo set up Forza, a European exercise equipment distributor for several fitness brands, including Reebok and Cybex. In 1998 he and Mark Mastrov co-founded Fitness Holdings Europe, a private-equity-backed investment vehicle, to open and acquire small chains of European health clubs. Fitness Holdings Europe was sold to the 24-Hour Fitness Chain in 2000.[9] Giampaolo left 24-Hour Fitness in 2001 to begin work on a management buy-in of investor club Pi Capital, which completed in 2002.[10]
Pi Capital
Giampaolo is a major shareholder and chief executive of Pi Capital.[11]
Pi’s membership includes entrepreneurs and chairman/CEOs from the business community in the UK and from around the globe. Andrew Davidson, writing in The Sunday Times, describes Pi's membership as "... drawn from the business elite of Britain, [pooling] money and know-how to back fledgling firms."[12] Giampaolo and a team of in-house advisors filter investments before circulating them among members.[13] Giampaolo claims 300 members for Pi.[14] He and his partners co-invest on the same terms and on a peer-opt-in basis.[15] Pi also invests in funds that are closed or invite-only, or have financial entry requirements beyond those of individual Pi members.[16] Pi has co-invested with Apax, BC Partners, Cinven and Alchemy Partners.[17] In 2013 Pi Capital's investment in Thomsons Online Benefits was replaced by ABRY Partners in a deal which valued Thomsons at around £100m.[18] He is also an early-stage investor in Vint, an online marketplace for personal training services.[19]
Giampaolo is reported as saying that wealthy investors are “…sceptical of relying on third parties to invest their capital. They don’t want to be shown a product which a bank has created, and to which large fees are usually attached whether the investment does well or not." He describes Pi as a “...conservative investor”.[20]
The Independent reported in 2007 that Pi members have invested over £150m since Giampaolo’s buy-out. Following the takeover, Giampaolo is associated with bringing a members-club ethos to Pi Capital,[21] as well as fostering a salon-like atmosphere by arranging monthly events featuring speakers on intellectual as well as financial topics. Previous speakers include Bill Clinton, Sir Martin Sorrell, CEO of WPP, and Dominic Barton, global MD of McKinsey. Giampaolo commented to the Financial Times in September 2012: “Intellectual capital is the focus.”[22] The article drew parallels between Pi Capital’s events and those of non-financial salons in London, such the 14-10 club, Intelligence Squared and the 5x15 talk series.
Pi Club has also begun participating in philanthropic initiatives under Giampaolo's leadership.
Business philosophy
The Financial Times quotes Giampaolo as believing that entrepreneurs should not hide behind a persona of success, but embrace their failures instead: "The best entrepreneurs talk about failure with pride and guts."[23]
Personal life
Giampaolo has lived in the UK since 1987. He is a member of the Young Presidents' Organization (YPO) and of The Chief Executives Organisation, an independent graduate organisation of YPO. Giampaolo is also a former board member of the International Health, Racquet & Sportsclub Association.
He lists Bill Clinton, David Patraeus, Colin Powell and his father as his biggest personal influences. His hobbies are fitness, wine and travel.[24]
In May 2013 Giampaolo became patron of Pro Bono Economics, the not-for-profit organisation which matches volunteer economists with charities.[25]
References
- ↑ http://www.companydirectorcheck.com/david-anthony-giampaolo-2 List of companies related to David Giampaolo
- ↑ Buchanan, Leigh. "Zumba Fitness: Company of the Year". Inc.com. Retrieved 6 December 2012.
- ↑ "Most influential Americans in the UK: 40 to 31". The Daily Telegraph. 20 Nov 2007. Retrieved 12 July 2012. "Often described as the best connected man in London..."
- ↑ Blackhurst, Chris (February 24, 2010). "David Giampaolo and his Pi club - only City goliaths need apply". Evening Standard. "He's an American, who grew up in Florida and has been developing and running businesses since he was 16."
- ↑ Pagano, Margareta (May 16, 2010). "Pi Capital's boss has questions for David Cameron and Nick Clegg". The Independent.
- ↑ Clarke, Jody (February 18, 2008). "The survival of the fittest: David Giampaolo, Pi Capital". MoneyWeek.
- ↑ Pagano, Margareta (May 16, 2010). "Pi Capital's boss has questions for David Cameron and Nick Clegg". The Independent.
- ↑ Blackhurst, Chris (February 24, 2010). "David Giampaolo and his Pi club - only City goliaths need appl". Evening Standard.
- ↑ "24 Hour Fitness Worldwide, Inc. History". Funding Universe. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
- ↑ "Biography". David Giampaolo's personal website. Retrieved July 13, 2012.
- ↑ "David Giampalo, Pi Capital". Spear's WMS. Retrieved July 4, 2012. "Giampaolo gives full credit to Pi’s founder, Michael Stoddart, for having implemented a business model conceived by HNW individuals for HNW individuals, who all invest on the same terms in any one transaction and stand to gain or lose as a single unit."
- ↑ Davidson, Andrew (April 17, 2005). "The Andrew Davidson Interview: London's most networked man". The Sunday Times.
- ↑ "Angels discover the value of Pi". The Telegraph. July 20, 2003. "Rupert Pennant-Rea, a Pi member and former deputy governor of the Bank of England and chairman of the Stationery Office, says the club's main attraction to him is that it screens out the duds.… 'Pi Capital acts as a sieve. They do all the time-consuming stuff before passing recommendations to their members.'"
- ↑ "Q&A Pi Capital". Real Deals. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ↑ Cash, William. "More oodles than Boodle's". December 2006. Pi Capital. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
- ↑ Cave, Andrew (April 1, 2006). "Business profile: The most exclusive black book in the City". The Telegraph.
- ↑ "Q&A Pi Capital". Real Deals. Retrieved 24 September 2012.
- ↑ Money Marketing January 2013
- ↑ Avellana, Nicel. VCPost.com http://www.vcpost.com/articles/21159/20140128/swedish-startup-vint-raises-1-8m-seed-round.htm
|url=
missing title (help). Retrieved 28 January 2014. - ↑ Chowdhry, Seema. "Investing wisely for bigger slices of Pi". LiveMint.com. Retrieved July 4, 2012. "Pi Capital, he explains, is a conservative investor. Even during the boom years—2006, 2007 and 2008, when cheap capital fuelled global investment sprees—Pi invested only in six ventures. He points out that one of funds that Pi invested in is yet to spend even a single penny of its £75 million (around Rs590 crore) corpus: 'I firmly believe that some of the best investments are the ones people don’t make.'"
- ↑ Cash, William. "More oodles than Boodle's". December 2006. Pi Capital. Retrieved July 4, 2012.
- ↑ Crichton-Miller, Emma (7 September 2012). "Club class upgrade". Financial Times. Retrieved 27 September 2012.
- ↑ Moules, Jonathan (24 January 2013). "Financial Times". From failure can come success. Pearson. Retrieved 28 January 2013. "David Giampaolo, chief executive of Pi Capital, says British attitudes to failure have changed since he arrived in London from the US 20 years ago. “There is still a massive gap between the views in the UK and the US but it is moving in the right direction,” he says."
- ↑ Jacobs, Emma (December 9, 2010). "20 questions: David Giampaolo". Financial Times.
- ↑ "Probonoeconomics.com". Welcoming David Giampaolo to PBE.