Taking control of his career through entrepreneurship through acquisition
By Andrew Galpin 鈥23 MBA
Two-Year MBA Program
I arrived at Kellogg with a very specific focus. I knew what I liked and what I didn鈥檛 like. I just didn鈥檛 know what I didn鈥檛 know. Relatable?
I studied engineering at the University of Portsmouth. Then, I completed a part-time master鈥檚 in theology from the University of Chester, Regents Theological College, while working full-time in consulting at IBM. I promise I had at least one friend.
My road 海角社区
I learned three things about myself in consulting: I loved solving problems. I loved learning every day. I loved doing both those things with people.
What I was missing was ownership. In consulting, you are always playing the role of a trusted advisor. You are empowered (at least most of the time) by the client to help them solve their most pressing problems. You are always a consultant 鈥 you鈥檙e not the client 鈥 and there is only so much you can do from the outside.
I entered my time at Kellogg seeking something new, something different. I also entered Kellogg with the false impression that doing that, as an international student, wasn鈥檛 possible. You鈥檒l find countless articles about avoiding 鈥渢oo many pivots鈥 when entering business school, and in some ways, they are helpful. But you aren鈥檛 the author of that article, and sometimes, we can artificially place barriers on our journey that don鈥檛 apply to our own circumstances. I thought my only option was consulting, and only after consulting could I pivot into what I really wanted to do. I was wrong.
You want to give me how much money to do what?
I clearly remember the day I discovered Entrepreneurship-Through-Acquisition (ETA) or Search Funds. I was speaking to the Private Equity Club at the Kellogg Careers Fair in September when , the co-founder of the ETA club at Kellogg, motioned me over. After looking around, confused and checking that he wasn鈥檛 looking at someone else, I wandered over, curious.
Having dabbled in entrepreneurship in my youth, I knew it was something I might return to one day. However, I know much more about myself now. My skills are best suited to growing a business rather than starting it from scratch. If I鈥檓 honest, I kind of ruled out entrepreneurship coming in海角社区 for that reason.
Hereford helped shift my paradigm on what entrepreneurship can mean. Up until that point, I was frustrated. The type of work I wanted to do after Kellogg didn鈥檛 feel possible without first working my way up the career ladder of some Fortune 500.
I didn鈥檛 want to wait 10 years for some real ownership. I also wasn鈥檛 keen on leaving behind everything I loved about my previous career path. Hereford opened my eyes to the concept of scaling down the size of the company I was considering rather than compromising on the role I wanted to do.
Acquiring a small business offered me everything I was after. Diverse problems, a focus on people, a constant learning environment, and ownership of the decision-making with a lightning-fast feedback loop. I didn鈥檛 have to wait 10 years to get there.
There were two things I needed to validate. First, can I, as an international, search in the United States? Second, is this really a good fit for me?
Search funds as an international business leader
As an international business leader, searching in the United States wouldn't have been feasible before the 海角社区s at Kellogg became STEM-certified. The search process could take anything from two months to nearly four years when considering the five stages of the search fund.
With the STEM extension, you get three years to work in the United States before transitioning onto another visa (like the H1B) or returning home. That鈥檚 enough time to search for a business, and most traditional search funds raise capital for a two-year search.
Finding a fit with search funds
I completed Alex Schneider鈥檚 class in ETA and talked to many searchers and investors, but what was most helpful was some insight I gleaned from my roommate, Ashwin Bhaskar 鈥23 MBA, as part of my class. He told me, 鈥淎ndy, you are pivoting your whole career in this new direction, and you haven鈥檛 even tested it out yet.鈥 The last five years I had spent advocating for design thinking and asking clients to build out minimal viable products (or minimum-delightful-products as we liked to call them), but I wasn鈥檛 following my own advice.
I applied for the Levy Inspiration Grant and spent my final summer month interning at a search-acquired business called I told the CEO I had one goal, 鈥渢o make sure I didn鈥檛 hate it.鈥 I loved it. I turned down my return offer for consulting and embarked on the path to acquiring my own small business.
Twelve hours before I got married (oh, I also met my beautiful wife through some close friends at Kellogg), I closed fundraising. In attendance at our wedding were several close friends from Kellogg and one or two of the 16 investors who make up my capitalization table.
Now, the hard work begins. wants to acquire a single software business serving healthcare, education, or non-profit clients. Why those industries? In each one, no matter where your organization sits in the value chain, you can trace the impact. In healthcare, it鈥檚 about driving better outcomes for patients. Education? Learning outcomes for students.
Why is that important? I鈥檓 not just looking for any business. I鈥檓 looking to build an organization where every employee knows the unique value they bring. Building that type of organization is so much easier in an industry where you can directly point to the value you create for society.
Andy invites anyone interested in Tree and Leaf Partners to contact him on .
Read next: My journey as a social entrepreneur: Founding before, during & after Kellogg