Sorcit’s MD David Fannin comments on the latest Dragon’s Den episode:
1. Presentation: Michael Oke – Bound Biographies
£75,000 for 20% share
The product/idea was well presented and left the Dragons with a good final thought. However, after further questioning it turns out that the business had been established 18 years ago. Thus, the likelihood of a very small return on investment for the Dragons is quite high. The Dragon’s were also appalled at Michael’s pricing, it came across as if the product eventually would exploit people. It is a very expensive product for what you get in return.
2. Presentation: Kay Russell – Physicool Ltd.
£100,000 for 20% share
Kay seemed nervous in the beginning but the product interested the Dragons. I personally felt that the ‘refill option’ was complicated but on the other hand it is this refill tool that made the product so unique. Good financial figures from an already established business in the equine market. Unfortunately, this was were the Dragons started to drop out which was not at all surprising as Kay already set-up two separate businesses to market the product in two different markets. Debra did well in by offering the investment in return for a stake in both businesses. I would have done the same.
3. Presentation: Steven Voller – Bee Automobiles
£2.5m for 30% share
The investment was too high for a business that would eventually drain money with no guarantee of return. Steven needed £10 million alone just to get the car to production stage which makes his product an extremely risky investment. ‘Playing with the big boys is very dangerous!’
4. Presentation: Michael Pritchard – The Anyway Spray
£125,000 for 5% share
Great product and confident presentation. Michael explained the problem and the solution very well. His idea of royalty based return for a high volume item seemed a very good idea. The only weak area is that the patent was still pending which unfortunately made some of the Dragon’s drop out. Michael was also confident and a great negotiator in the final stages of the equity split. This clearly showed how keen Theo and Peter were on the product.










Dragon’ Den is a series in which budding entrepreneurs get three minutes to pitch their business ideas to five multi-millionaires willing to invest their own cash.












