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  • Whether its running, cycling or swimming, group sports are making a comeback.

  • And that's something that Alex Rose and Sam Browne were counting on,

  • as the founders of online sports events booking platform Let's Do This.

  • They claim that it is the world's largest marketplace for mass participation sports

  • and have already drawn in  investment from sporting stars 

  • like Serena Williams and Usain Bolt.

  • I think we're a bit of a rarity in starting a tech company as two non-technical people.

  • Rose and Browne knew each other from childhood, but became good friends

  • while studying at the U.K.'s University of Cambridge.

  • Both keen runners and cyclists, they founded Let's Do This in July 2017

  • following a conversation at the pub about how difficult it was to find and sign up for races.

  • Browne was already working in the sports industry,

  • having co-founded adventure travel company IGO Adventures,

  • while Rose was working as an associate at a management consultancy.

  • When did you decide to quit your full-time jobs?

  • And what gave you the confidence to take the plunge to do that?

  • We probably sort of set about it with a combination of naivety and overconfidence.

  • And I think looking back on it, if we knew half the things we knew now

  • about the obstacles, you know, that you have to overcome to start a business,

  • I wonder whether we would have quit our jobs to do it.

  • I think it also caught me at a point where I knew I really hated the job

  • that I had at the moment. And suddenly the obstacles

  • in starting a new company suddenly didn't seem so terrifying.

  • So, they decided to set up Let's Do This. The one-stop platform enables people

  • to find information on and book onto endurance events across the U.K.

  • To cover the initial start-up costs, the pair raised £150,000

  • from a network of London-based angel investors, mostly amateur athletes.

  • However, they soon realized that this wouldn't be enough to cover the costs

  • of hiring software engineers to build the initial platform,

  • so they raised a further £1 million, mostly from the same group of investors.

  • You had to talk to a lot of people to, you know, to find people who were interested.

  • But if you can find a problem that people are passionate about then, you know,

  • there are always people who are willing to back exciting ideas.

  • In 2018, Rose and Browne moved to Palo Alto, in California,

  • to complete the prestigious Y Combinator start-up accelerator program,

  • along with another six members of the team.

  • Y Combinator has been the launching pad for major names like Airbnb and Reddit.

  • That's when things really began to take off.

  • Then this guy, Pete Flint, led a $5 million seed funding round

  • for the company in August 2018. Flint is general partner for

  • venture capital firm NFX and is known for being the co-founder

  • of online real estate marketplace Trulia, which was bought by its competitor Zillow in 2015.

  • Tennis legend Serena Williams and Olympic gold-medalist Usain Bolt

  • also invested in the seed round.

  • That came about because Serena is married to a guy called Alexis Ohanian,

  • who was one of the co-founders of Reddit, and was part of a very, very early batch of Y Combinator.

  • He actually got in touch with us halfway through in one of those emails

  • that you can't quite believe you've received, you know, coming from,

  • without a doubt one of the most famous, well-connected alumni of the program,

  • saying that he'd just done his first Spartan Race and loved what we were building,

  • and would be really interested to hear more.

  • And then at the end of Y Combinator, when you pitch to investors,

  • he got back in touch about the opportunity to invest.

  • And at that point, I think we went back to him and said,

  • 'look, we'd obviously love to take investment from you,

  • but you also happen to be married to one of, if not the greatest female sports women ever.'

  • The Usain investment was another story where Sam, my co-founder,

  • I think, had seen that he was in London opening a bar,

  • and actually went to the bar opening himself and managed to corner Usain Bolt

  • and persuade him to have dinner with him, and pitch the idea to him then, and it went from there.

  • A real example of hustling your way into the right investor meeting.

  • Since Rose and Browne set up Let's Do This, the company has raised just over $31 million.

  • The London-based company now has 65 employees, up from about 25 members of staff in early 2021.

  • And a passion for sport is deeply engrained in the company's culture,

  • with Olympic gold-medal  rower Constantine Louloudis 

  • working as vice president of  sales and business operations.

  • But growing the business hasn't been without its issues.

  • The coronavirus pandemic forced the U.K. to go into lockdown in 2020 and 2021,

  • shutting down mass participation events like marathons and triathlons.

  • That dealt a blow to Let's Do This, which at the time listed 18,000 of these kinds of endurance events,

  • making its money from commission on the tickets that are sold through the platform.

  • The firm saw revenues crash  at the start of the pandemic

  • prompting Rose and Browne  cut their own pay by 70%,

  • as well as asking employees to take a 20% reduction in salary.

  • They were also forced to close down their office in San Francisco.

  • What impact did the coronavirus pandemic have on the business?

  • It's sort of hard to overstate the impact that it had on the business.

  • It was, you know, it was pretty dramatic when it happened.

  • The whole market that we operate in had to stop.

  • Overnight there was suddenly no bookings coming from the platform,

  • revenue dropped to zero. But I think to be honest with you

  • our concern at the time was almost more for the market that we were in

  • and the organizers that we're working with, than it was for us.

  • We were lucky enough to have done our series A round of funding

  • a few months before the pandemic happened. And therefore we knew we had cash, you know,

  • a bank account full of cash that would see us through,

  • but it was much more about what was, you know, what was this going to do to the market?

  • How long was this going to last?  

  • So, in a move that kept the business going, they pivoted into virtual event sign ups.

  • Over the summer of 2021, group sports events returned

  • as the U.K. government lifted coronavirus social distancing measures.

  • As a result, Let's Do This has seen a rebound in business,

  • with 15,000 events now listed on the platform

  • and ticket sales doubling week-on-week for a period of around six months.

  • Rose is confident this growth will continue as outdoor exercise remains popular beyond the pandemic.

  • Lockdown has shifted how people exercise. You've seen such a huge shift to, you know,

  • at home connected fitness. If you look at the sales around, you know,

  • whether it's trainers, sneaker sales or bikes, you know, they are,

  • you can't buy a roadbike at the moment, they're all sold out.

  • There's never been so much demand. And so whilst I think there's still some

  • nervousness about people booking events, if you look at the broader trends that are

  • genuinely upstream of that, whether it's the number of people who downloaded Strava,

  • you know, which is three times what it's ever been historically,

  • or the fact that sales of sports equipment have gone through the roof.

  • I think, as we come out the other end, we're expecting next year

  • to be to be a bigger year than the industry's ever seen.

  • Exercise tracking app Strava said that 1.1 billion activities

  • were uploaded to its platform globally in 2020, up by a third on the previous year.

  • You've seen how young people, particularly young people,

  • today want to invest in experiences beyond objects.

  • And then we've seen this wave of growth in athleticism, you know,

  • it's both the sort of serious triathleteas well as the sort of 5k trot on a on a Sunday afternoon.

  • So it's just this, you know, people are increasingly healthy.

  • And as it turns out, you know, that's just accelerated during Covid,

  • you walk the streets, or you're on the commute, you see so many people on the move.

  • What are the opportunities and the challenges to the global group sports event market

  • So the opportunity is huge. The Internet loves ticketing businesses.

  • Some of the challenge is just pulling this mass of information together,

  • as well as providing a level of information that gives you a kind of point of view,

  • like, 'what's the right thing for me?' Plus just growing a business,

  • it's just trying to figure out how to grow a business.

  • So what's next for the entrepreneurs?

  • What's next for us is going internationally,

  • and that starts with going to the U.S. in January of next year.

  • And then expanding on from there, I think we've shown a model

  • and we've shown some traction in the U.K. that can be applied to the same market all over the world.

  • And then I think eventually, I think our mission goes way beyond running and cycling and triathlon,

  • we want to be the online company that gets everyone offline.

Whether its running, cycling or swimming, group sports are making a comeback.

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