Tribal Group
plc
("Tribal" or "the
Group")
Preliminary Results for the
year ended 31 December 2023
Tribal (AIM: TRB), a leading
provider of software and services to the international education
market, today announces its preliminary results for the year ended
31 December 2023.
Financial performance
·
|
A solid trading performance with
Adjusted EBITDA, net debt and Group revenue ahead of market
expectations as at January 2024*.
|
·
|
Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR)
increased 8.7% to £54.5m (2022: £50.2m at constant currency),
reflecting a 12.9% growth in the Group's strategic
products.
|
·
|
Group revenue increased 3.2% to
£85.7m (2022: £83.1m constant currency, £83.6m
reported).
|
|
o
|
Student Information Systems
revenue grew 1.1% to £68.6m, with 23% growth in Cloud revenue,
offset by a reduction in professional services revenues partly due
to the termination of the Nanyang Technological University ("NTU")
contract.
|
|
o
|
Education Services revenue grew
12.7% to £17.2m.
|
·
|
Adjusted EBITDA increased by 99.0%
to £14.4m (2022: £7.2m constant currency; £7.0m reported),
representing an Adjusted EBITDA Margin of 16.8% (2022: 8.7%
constant currency; 8.4% reported).
|
|
o
|
The net impact of the release of
the £4.5m NTU onerous contract provision created in 2022, with
associated contract costs in 2023 gave a £0.6m one off upside in
the year, excluding this Adjusted EBITDA would be £13.8m and
Adjusted EBITDA Margin 16.1%.
|
·
|
Statutory Profit before tax for
the year increased to £6.6m (2022: £1.0m constant
currency).
|
·
|
Net debt and cash equivalents at
31 December 2023 were (£7.2)m (2022: £3.4m).
|
|
o
|
Operating cash conversion
increased to 110.5% (2022: 89.0%) and free cash outflow improved to
£(1.4)m (2022: £(5.3)m).
|
|
o
|
Operating cash inflow increased to
£9.4m (2022: £8.7m) despite £0.8m cash outflow from costs relating
to the lapsed offer from Ellucian and £0.9m outflow from
restructuring of Education Services.
|
·
|
Given Tribal's solid financial
performance in FY23, the Board intends to pay a dividend to
shareholders. However, given the uncertainty around the likely
outcome of the dispute with NTU, the Board is deferring its
decision on the quantum of the dividend payment this year until the
Board has an appropriate level of certainty. Such dividend is
likely to be declared as an interim dividend.
|
Operational highlights
·
|
Solid sales performance, adding
four major Tribal Cloud contracts from existing customers and one
SITS:vision contract from a new customer, adding a total of £2.2m
to ARR.
|
·
|
Continued focus on operational
efficiency and organisational structure to support the Group's SaaS
ambitions, with a cost reduction programme
implemented in 2024 to ensure Group profit margins remain stable
through the transition to SaaS.
|
·
|
Successful go live of a standalone
Tribal Admissions pilot product marking an important milestone for
Edge product development, with continued investment of £8.5m in
2023 (2022: £10.3m) as the Group works towards making Tribal
Admissions generally available in 2025.
|
·
|
Education Services secured new
contracts with the UK Department for Education. The division has been successfully restructured as a
standalone business, and investment made into the team, to support
future growth.
|
Outlook
·
|
Trading in H1 FY24 has begun in
line with Board expectations.
|
·
|
The NTU mediation process is
expected to conclude in the first half of 2024.
|
·
|
Focused on the delivery of our key
strategic priorities, which are to drive growth in high margin
recurring SaaS revenue and grow operating profits and look to the
future with confidence.
|
Mark Pickett, Chief Executive,
commented:
"While there were several
corporate developments at Tribal in FY23, our focus has remained
resolute on delivering outstanding service to our customers around
the world and providing our teams with a rewarding place to work.
Our financial performance demonstrates the enduring strength of the
Group as we executed against our growth strategy, winning new
customers, transitioning existing customers to the Cloud, and
successfully piloting our newly developed native cloud product,
Tribal Admissions.
We have entered 2024 very much on
the front foot, with a clear strategic focus, to evolve Tribal at
pace to become an EdTech SaaS business, which will in turn drive
growth in high margin recurring SaaS revenue and protect our
operating profit margins."
*Market expectations: Net
Debt(excluding leases): £9.8m, Revenue: £84.2m, Adjusted EBITDA:
£12.5m
Tribal Group plc
|
Tel:
+44 (0) 117 311 5293
|
Mark Pickett, Chief Executive
Officer
Diane McIntyre, Chief Financial
Officer & Company Secretary
|
|
|
|
Investec Bank plc (NOMAD
& Joint Broker)
|
Tel: +44
(0) 20 7597 5970
|
Virginia Bull, Nick Prowting,
Tom Brookhouse
|
|
|
|
Singer Capital Markets Limited (Joint Broker)
|
Tel: +44
(0) 20 7496 3000
|
Shaun Dobson, Tom Salvesen, Alex
Bond
|
|
|
|
Alma Strategic Communications
|
Tel: +44
(0) 203 405 0205
|
Caroline Forde, Hannah
Campbell
|
|
About Tribal Group plc
Tribal Group plc is a pioneering
world-leader of education software and services. Its portfolio
includes Student Information Systems; a broad range of education
services covering quality assurance, peer review, benchmarking and
improvement; and student surveys that provide the leading global
benchmarks for student experience. Working with Higher Education,
Further and Tertiary Education, schools, Government and State
bodies, training providers and employers, in over 55 countries;
Tribal Group's mission is to empower the world of education with
products and services that underpin student
success.
This Statement has been prepared
for and is addressed only to our shareholders as a whole and should
not be relied on by any other party or for any other purpose.
Tribal, its directors, employees, agents or advisers do not accept
or assume responsibility to any other person to whom this Statement
is shown or into whose hands it may come and any such
responsibility or liability is expressly disclaimed. This
Statement may contain forward-looking statements. Any
forward-looking statement has been made by the directors in good
faith based on the information available to them up to the time of
approval of this Statement and should be treated with caution due
to the inherent uncertainties, including both economic and business
risk factors, underlying such forward-looking information. To the
extent that this Statement contains any statement dealing with any
time after the date of its preparation, such statement is merely
predictive and speculative as it relates to events and
circumstances which are yet to occur and therefore the facts stated
and views expressed may change. Tribal undertakes no obligation to
update these forward-looking statements.
Chair's Statement
The Board is pleased with the
progress achieved across the Group's strategic priorities,
including the transition to Cloud-based offerings. Our core SITS
offering is number one in the UK market and our Cloud offerings are
gaining traction. We have an enviable list of customers, market
leading technology and growing opportunities.
As shareholders will be aware on 5
October 2023 the Board recommended an offer for the Company at a
price of 74 pence per share. The offer did not achieve the
necessary support from our largest shareholder and as a consequence
the offer did not progress. Our largest shareholder has indicated
their continuing support for the Company and its management and is
optimistic for its future.
For the year ended 31 December
2023 Tribal reported adjusted EBITDA, net
debt and Group revenue ahead of market
expectations. The Group achieved revenue
growth of 3% to £85.7m, Adjusted EBITDA growth of 86% to £13.8m
(excluding the £0.6m net benefit from the release of provisions and
payment of costs in respect of NTU) and closed the year with a net
debt position of £7.2m. Importantly, Tribal exited the year with
over £54.5m of Annual Recurring Revenue. This was achieved against
the backdrop of the lapsed offer for the Company, as announced in
October 2023, and the termination of the contract with NTU (both of
which absorbed substantial management time and effort)
demonstrating the strength of the business, with its established
customer base and respected product set. Tribal is, as
previously announced, entering a mediation process with NTU which
is expected to conclude in the first half of 2024, the potential
outcome remains uncertain. We will continue to provide updates as
appropriate.
Education Services (ES) continued
to contribute positively to the Group's financials, delivering
another year of good progress under its new managing director. The
Board conducted a strategic review of the division during the Year
and concluded that the best way to deliver value to shareholders
and drive further growth in revenue and profitability, was to
establish ES as a standalone entity within the Group with its own
company structure. ES made good progress in FY23, resetting its
operating model, and strengthening its business development and
marketing functions.
Dividend
Given Tribal's solid financial
performance in FY23, the Board intends to pay a dividend to
shareholders. However, given the uncertainty around the likely
outcome of the dispute with NTU, the Board is deferring its
decision on the quantum of the dividend payment this year until the
Board has an appropriate level of certainty. Such the dividend is
likely to be declared as an interim dividend.
People
Supporting our employees as we
transition to a SaaS business is a top priority, and much work has
been done throughout the year to ensure appropriate training and
development opportunities exist across the Group. The Board would
like to thank the team for their unwavering commitment to the
success of Tribal and its customers.
Outlook
The Board is confident Tribal has
the resources and high levels of recurring revenues sufficient to
continue to execute on its growth strategy and looks forward to
continuing to drive the Group forward, for the benefit of all
stakeholders.
Tribal started 2024 with £54.5m of
ARR, providing the business with a substantial platform from which
to grow its core software product and service offerings in Higher
and Further Education. Following our strategic review of our ES
business we are increasingly positive that it will deliver growth
in 2024 and beyond. We are also committed to driving improved
operational efficiencies across the Group whilst continuing to
improve customer satisfaction. The Board has no doubt that
businesses generally face many economic headwinds, we are however
positive that Tribal can continue the progress achieved to
date.
Richard Last
Chair
Chief Executive's review
While there have been many
corporate developments at Tribal over the course of the last year,
our focus has remained resolute on delivering outstanding service
to our customers around the world and providing our teams with a
rewarding place to work. As a result, we have continued to execute
against our growth strategy, winning new customers, transitioning
existing customers to the Cloud, and successfully piloting our
newly developed native cloud product, Tribal Admissions.
Naturally some new business
discussions were paused whilst we were in an offer period, as
customers assessed the impact of a potential change of ownership of
Tribal. Nonetheless, the Company's strong underlying basis of
recurring revenue and continued focus on cost control have ensured
we have delivered a year of growth.
We have entered 2024 very much on
the front foot, with a clear strategic focus, to evolve Tribal at
pace to become an EdTech business, delivering products to the
further and higher education sectors. This transition will
accelerate in 2024, as we change our operational structure to
better fit that of a focused, SaaS business. We have implemented a
cost reduction programme to ensure our profit margins remain stable
as we execute against this strategy.
Strategy
Our strategic focus over the
recent years has been the transition of the Group to a pureplay
EdTech, SaaS business. Over the next year we will continue to focus
on this, building on the solid SaaS foundations we have already
established.
With a clear direction of travel,
focused on the delivery of our market-leading products as a
cloud-based solution, further driving the adoption of our newly
launched Tribal Admissions product and educating our customers on
the opportunity and need to transition to the cloud, we are
confident in our ability to continue to deliver growth.
Product development
In FY22, the Board made the
decision to focus development spend in
2023 and 2024 on our existing Edge products, to ensure we are
focused on maximising the opportunity for each, targeting an
overall reduction in Edge development from
2023 as the peak of development investment on the Admissions
product has passed. Our Edge products are part of the broader
Student Information System ecosystem as we modernise our Student
Management Systems products to provide a roadmap to SaaS for all
our customers.
We see significant opportunities
for our core cloud-native Edge and SITS:Vision products in the next
few years, across our key geographies, as there is an increasing
appetite from the higher education sector to transition their
existing Student Information Systems to the cloud and we anticipate
this to be the main driver for uptake of our
current range offerings.
NTU update
As previously announced on 20 and
24 March 2023 the contract with Nanyang Technological University
("NTU") has been terminated and in April 2023, Tribal received from
NTU an interim demand for the payment of damages which it rejected.
In November 2023, NTU claimed the HSBC Bank Guarantee to the
value of approximately £0.6m, which Tribal disputes. In February
2024, Tribal received an updated interim demand for the payment of
damages. Tribal is now entering a
mediation process with NTU which is expected to conclude in the
first half of 2024, the potential outcome of which remains
uncertain. Tribal vigorously disputes NTU claims and
no provision has been currently made for any
outcome from the mediation or potential future litigation.
An update will be provided as and when
appropriate.
Student Information Systems (SIS)
Student Information Systems, our
core segment which targets the further and higher education sectors
through our range of software solutions, delivered a steady
performance in the year, growing customer numbers and
revenue.
During the year, we secured a new SITS: Vision customer, adding a total of £0.5m
to ARR. This is a multi-year contract with the London School of
Science and Technology to provide an improved student
experience and deliver operational efficiencies for the university.
This new business win comprises SITS Cloud, Engage and Tribal
Dynamics Marketing & Recruitment.
In the first half of the year, we
also sold further native-cloud based Edge
modules, such as Dynamics, Engage and
Tribal Data Engine (TDE), to existing
customers. Notably, Tribal Dynamics saw several projects go live in
the period. Early in H2, we also went live with our first
Admissions product, a next generation, native SaaS solution, built
using Edge technology. Edith Cowen university, an Australian
university with around 30,000 students, is running a pilot,
starting with the admission of Post Graduate Domestic students and,
over the coming year, rolling the product out to all student
admissions. This is a key milestone for Tribal, successfully
implementing a complex solution which is a critical system for a
university and we are working towards
making Tribal Admissions generally available in 2025.
With our Course & Exam
Scheduling product, Semestry, we are beginning to see the UK
universities starting to come to market to select their
next-generation scheduling product. Although there is a good
pipeline of opportunities, it is likely to be into mid 2024 before
we see those tenders coming to market. In the meantime, we have
taken the opportunity to integrate Semestry fully into the Tribal
organisation.
We signed three further cloud
contracts for existing customers, the University of Wolverhampton,
University of the Arts and Royal Veterinary College, as part of
their programme of improvement with Tribal to migrate to the Tribal
Cloud. We secured smaller contracts across
our ebs and Maytas portfolios where we continue to
see substantial opportunities for these offerings
across both existing and new customers.
We are pleased with these positive
signs of potential across the Group and although it will take time
for full adoption of our solutions by our customers due to the
annual cycle of the academic year, we remain confident in the
significant long-term opportunities.
Education Services (ES)
Tribal Education Services (ES)
delivers Quality Assurance and benchmarking services to ministries
of education and other education agencies around the world, across
a broad range of services including overall school quality,
leadership and teaching quality, as well as many specialist areas
such as new teacher competence, Early Years, literacy and
numeracy.
Last year, we implemented a
strategy for the business, targeting sustainable growth. The aim of
the new strategy was to create a clear identity for the ES business
and better articulate the value it creates for our
customers.
The business has made good
progress, concluding the first phase of its new strategy this year,
resetting the operating model and bedding in new structures and
processes. A principal focus has been investing to strengthen both
its business development and marketing functions, starting with the
appointment of a new Director of Business Development in January
2023, and aligning leadership expertise with key markets, including
appointments of new Directors for the UK and Middle East business
units. These changes have already created growth in our pipeline
depth and quality, which in turn underscore our confidence in the
division and the services it provides. This year, the Board also conducted a strategic review of the
ES division and concluded that the best way to drive further growth
in revenue and profitability, and deliver value to shareholders,
was to establish ES as a standalone entity.
In the year, ES signed a new
24-month £1.5m contract with the Department for Education in
England - Multiply - supporting the roll out of promising
interventions supporting Adult Numeracy with colleges and other
providers across the country. We have focused much of our business
development attention on the Middle East, resulting in an improved
pipeline of projects due over the coming months. The first of these
to come on stream is with the Emirates Schools Establishment in the
UAE, a new customer. We are delighted to begin a 12-month 10m AED
(United Arab Emirates Dirham) project supporting teachers in public
schools to attain their professional license, working in
partnership with Queen Rania Teachers Academy in Jordan. These two
major projects were complemented by the strong performance in our
Surveys and Benchmarking business, now trading above pre-COVID
levels.
Operations and people
We continue to carefully invest in
our operations and people, whilst effectively managing our cost
base as we evolve our operational model to ensure service levels
are maintained for long-term profitable growth and to remain
robust.
We have seen considerable progress
since the Global Business Services (GBS) organisation was
established in January 2023, with the objective of driving internal
efficiencies by simplifying, standardising and centralising back
office processes into a single, global Centre of Excellence. In
January 2023 we welcomed a new leader for GBS, based in the
Philippines, who has a solid track record of leading finance and
accounting services to large global corporations and who will lead
the next phase of the program to realise the benefits as we
transform our execution of business processes. By year end, several
business-critical processes had migrated to GBS delivering
immediate benefits and a solid foundation for continued
improvements, in line with our Centre of Excellence model. This
progress has already enabled us to create savings and unlock
investment in new capabilities, which will be critical to our SaaS
transformation. We will continue to build on this progress across
all business support functions, so they take full advantage of the
potential offered by Global Business Services.
Our evolving operational model,
which is built upon our increasing focus on customer success and
alignment to Tribal's 'as-a-service' transition, continues to prove
effective. The new target operating model is also now being
supported by the implementation of new SaaS financial systems and
processes, intended to give our customers a more personalised
experience and to maximise the value of each of the Group's
products
In June 2023, Tribal Achievers was
launched, a global peer to peer recognition programme to maintain a
vibrant culture and ensure reward and recognition is part and
parcel of life at Tribal. It has been very encouraging to see both
the creativity and frequency with which colleagues are ready to
celebrate one another's achievements.
Our Customer Success model has
successfully established itself in Further Education, providing
some impressive outcomes and establishing a clear new revenue
stream and source of value creation. We are taking those learnings
into the Higher Education market, bringing in highly valued sector
professionals to build our advisory services and customer success
offerings.
We remain committed to our ESG
strategy and long-term goals. This year Tribal is supporting
employees volunteering with ChapterOne, an education-based charity
providing reading and literacy support to primary school aged
children living in deprived areas of the UK. There are currently 14
active Tribal volunteers on the programme, collectively providing
over 6 hours of support each week. We are proud that our volunteers
are making a meaningful difference; ChapterOne's latest Impact
results show children who participate in the programme increase
their reading level by 44%, on average.
Focus for 2024
The resolution of the NTU contract
dispute will continue to be a key area of focus during 2024 and we
will update the market as appropriate.
We are focused on the delivery of
our clear strategic priorities for the year, which will in turn
drive growth in high margin recurring SaaS revenue and protect our
operating profit margins, and look to the future
with confidence.
Mark Pickett
Chief Executive Officer
Financial review
Results
£m
|
2023
|
2022 Reported
restated1
|
Constant
currency
20223
|
Change constant
currency
|
Change constant currency
%
|
Revenue
|
85.7
|
83.6
|
83.1
|
2.7
|
3.2%
|
Student Information
Systems
|
68.6
|
68.2
|
67.9
|
0.7
|
1.1%
|
Education Services
|
17.2
|
15.4
|
15.2
|
1.9
|
12.7%
|
Gross Profit
|
42.1
|
31.3
|
31.4
|
10.7
|
34.1%
|
Gross Profit Margin
|
49.1%
|
37.5%
|
37.8%
|
11.3%
|
11.3pp
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted EBITDA2
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Before Central Overheads)
|
28.1
|
17.9
|
18.1
|
10.1
|
55.6%
|
Student Information
Systems
|
25.7
|
14.35
|
14.6
|
11.1
|
75.9%
|
Education Services
|
2.4
|
3.65
|
3.5
|
(1.0)
|
(29.8%)
|
Central
Overheads4
|
(13.6)
|
(10.8)
|
(10.8)
|
(2.9)
|
26.5%
|
Net foreign exchange
(losses)/gain
|
(0.2)
|
(0.1)
|
(0.1)
|
(0.1)
|
62.7%
|
Adjusted EBITDA2
|
14.4
|
7.0
|
7.2
|
7.1
|
99.0%
|
Adjusted
EBITDA2
|
16.8%
|
8.4%
|
8.7%
|
8.1%
|
(8.1)pp
|
Statutory Profit before Tax
|
6.6
|
0.4
|
1.0
|
5.6
|
562.9%
|
Statutory Profit/(Loss) after Tax
|
5.3
|
(0.5)
|
0.2
|
5.1
|
2,703.7%
|
Annual Recurring Revenue
|
54.5
|
51.2
|
50.2
|
4.3
|
8.7%
|
1.
2022 Gross profit margin, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA
margin are all restated due to a change in accounting policy in
2023 to 'exceptionals'. As a result, certain items of income or
expense previously included as 'exceptionals' have been classified
as underlying; Items reclassified are employee related share option
charges, including employer related taxes (2023: £446,000;
2022: £450,000).
2.
Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA Margin are in respect of
continuing operations and are calculated by taking the Adjusted
EBITDA after the allocation of Central Overheads and excludes
Interest, Tax, Depreciation and Amortisation and exceptional items
of £2.9m (2022: £2.1m), refer to Note 4.
3.
2022 results updated for constant currency - the Group has applied
2023 foreign exchange rates to 2022 results to present a constant
currency basis. On a constant currency basis there is a decrease in
Revenue of £0.5m and an increase to Adjusted EBITDA (before Central
Overheads) of £0.2m.
4.
Central Overheads are made up of costs that are not directly
attributable to either Student Information Systems or Education
Services.
5.
2022 Adjusted EBITDA has been restated by £0.3m in Student
Information Systems and (£0.3m) in Education Services due to a
misclassification.
The financial review presents the
reported results for 2023 and 2022, and the 2022 results restated
to 'constant currency' using 2023 rates to exclude foreign currency
impact. The change percentages and comparatives are shown on the
2022 constant currency numbers. In addition to EBITDA and Adjusted
EBITDA, the presentation disclosed as "constant currency" is an
alternative performance measure and not a statutory reporting
measure prepared in line with International Financial Reporting
Standards (IFRS). The Group has chosen to present its results on a
constant currency basis to reflect the year-on-year performance and
account for the impact of foreign exchange movements in
the year.
Revenue
Revenue increased 3.2% to £85.7m
(2022: £83.1m constant currency, £83.6m reported). Notwithstanding
the drop in professional services partly due to the NTU contract
ending, the Group's Student Information Systems segment performed
well, with significant growth of 23% in Cloud revenue driven by new
customer wins and Tribal Cloud migrations.
Education Services revenue
increased by 12.7% to £17.2m (2022: £15.2m constant currency;
£15.4m reported) as the main UK contracts continued to track well
throughout the year in addition to growth in Surveys and
Benchmarking due to the seasonality of the Southern Hemisphere
International Student Barometer's in which most institutions
participate every other year.
32.7% (2022: 38.0%) of Tribal's
revenue in the year was generated outside the UK and is therefore
subject to foreign exchange movement.
Gross Profit increased 33.6% to
£42.1m (2022: £31.4m constant currency, £31.3m reported) and the
margin percentage has increased to 49.1% (2022: 37.8% constant
currency, 37.5% reported). The margin percentage increase is
largely due to the release of the NTU onerous contract provision
following termination of the contract.
Adjusted EBITDA
Adjusted EBITDA increased £7.1m to
£14.4m (2022: £7.2m constant currency; £7.0m reported). Adjusted
EBITDA margin increased to 16.8% (2022: 8.7% constant currency;
8.4% reported). The net impact of the release of the £4.5m NTU
onerous contract provision created in 2022, with associated
contract costs in 2023 gave a £0.6m one-off upside in the year,
excluding this the adjusted EBITDA would be £13.8m and adjusted
operating margin 16.1%.
Central Overheads, representing
costs in HR, IT, Finance, Marketing and Management that aren't
directly attributable to lines of business increased by £2.9m to
£13.6m (2022: £10.8m constant currency and reported). This includes
£1.1m of one-off costs in relation to NTU, as well as increased
global insurance costs and legal and professional fees in line with
market trends, and investment in global business services as we
focus on standardisation of processes across the Group to
drive efficiency.
Statutory (Loss)/Profit after Tax
The Statutory (Loss)/Profit after
tax for the year increased by £5.1m against constant currency to a
profit of £5.3m (2022: £0.2m constant currency; (£0.5m) reported).
The increase is largely due to the negative impact of the NTU
contract within 2022, offset by £1.2m higher exceptionals due to
£1.4m of costs associated with the lapsed offer for the company by
Ellucian. The tax charge was £1.3m (2022: £0.9m reported
and £0.8m constant currency).
Segmental performance
The Group provides software and
non-software related services to the international educational
market. These services are managed across two divisions, SIS and
ES.
Student Information Systems
(SIS)
|
|
|
|
|
|
£m
|
2023
|
2022
Reported
|
Constant currency
2022
|
Change constant
currency
|
Change constant currency
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Foundation Support and
Maintenance
|
24.9
|
25.4
|
25.1
|
(0.2)
|
(0.7%)
|
Foundation Software
|
8.5
|
7.2
|
7.3
|
1.3
|
17.5%
|
Cloud Services
|
10.4
|
8.5
|
8.5
|
2.0
|
23.2%
|
Edge
|
5.2
|
4.8
|
4.8
|
0.4
|
9.0%
|
Professional Services
|
9.8
|
11.2
|
11.7
|
(1.9)
|
(16.1%)
|
Core Revenue
|
58.8
|
57.1
|
57.2
|
1.6
|
2.8%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Other Software &
Services
|
9.7
|
11.0
|
10.6
|
(0.9)
|
(8.4%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Revenue
|
68.6
|
68.2
|
67.9
|
0.7
|
1.1%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Operating Profit
|
25.7
|
14.31
|
14.61
|
11.1
|
75.9%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Operating Margin
|
37.5%
|
20.9%
|
21.6%
|
16.0%
|
(16.0)pp
|
1.
2022 Adjusted Operating Profit has been restated by £0.3m in
Student Information Systems and (£0.3m) in Education
Services.
Student Information Systems
focuses on software-related solutions to the Higher Education,
Further Education Colleges and Employers (referred to in Australia
as VET), and Schools sectors across the main geographic markets
being the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Netherlands and
Canada.
SIS revenue increased 1.1% to
£68.6m (2022: £67.9m constant currency; £68.2m reported). Revenue
generated from our core product offerings increased 2.8% to £58.8m
(2022: £57.2m constant currency and £57.1m reported). Growth in our
Foundation, Edge and Cloud revenue streams has offset the
professional services revenue lost from NTU following contract
termination in March 2023.
Foundation Support &
Maintenance fees in the period on our Foundation products
(including SITS, Callista, ebs, Maytas, K2 and SID) decreased 0.7%
in the period. As previously announced, Victoria University
(Callista) exited in Q4 2022 resulting in £0.7m decline in
revenues. Several ebs and Maytas customers moved onto
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) contracts in the year, resulting in
£0.3m of associated revenues transferring from Foundation Support
and Maintenance to Foundation. This has been offset by £0.8m
increased revenues from inflationary and student number increases
across SITS and Callista.
Foundation Software includes the
sale of new software licenses on our Foundation products. Revenue
in the period increased 17.5% to £8.5m (2022: £7.3m constant
currency, £7.2m reported) driven by growth across SITS, ebs and
Maytas, including a new SITS customer: London School of Science and
Technology.
Cloud Services cover the provision
of Tribal Cloud, a fully managed public cloud service and other
hosting services supporting Tribal products, either in a private
cloud, or increasingly in a public cloud. Cloud revenues have
continued to increase and are up 23.2% to £10.4m (2022: £8.5m
constant currency and reported). As previously discussed, revenue
growth in this area is driven by significant sales to existing
customers, transitioning their existing on-premise SITS:Vision
software, into the Tribal Cloud. During 2023, four additional
customers signed up to migrate their on-premise solutions into the
cloud including University of the Arts London, University of
Wolverhampton, University of Exeter and Royal
Veterinary College.
Edge revenues saw an increase of
9.0% to £5.2m (2022: £4.8m constant currency and reported), due to
sales across our range of products such as Semestry, Support and
Wellbeing and Engage.
Professional Services includes the
implementation of all our Foundation and Edge software products at
customer sites, typically working alongside customer teams.
Implementation projects vary in length and complexity, ranging from
a small number of days to more than two years for complex projects.
Revenues are either a day rate fee or performed under a fixed fee
for defined implementation scope. Professional services have
continued to be delivered remotely where appropriate, and the team
has been bolstered by the Global Delivery Centre (GDC) in Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia. Professional Services revenue decreased by 16.1%
to £9.8m (2022: £11.2m constant currency, £11.7m reported), partly
driven by the termination of the NTU contract.
Other Software & Services
revenue decreased 8.4% to £9.7m (2022: £10.6m constant currency,
£11.0m reported) due to continued Australian SchoolEdge churn and
declining revenues on the Department of Education Contract
with schools in New South Wales as previously announced. The
Department of Education is working with schools to allow them to
select their own providers and move away from one overarching
contract with Tribal. Ahead of this expected exit, revenues will
decline as usage of the Tribal systems decreases. The previously
announced exit of the Technical and Further Education colleges New
South Wales, 'TAFE NSW' contract has been extended from H2 2023 to
H2 2024, at which point no further revenue will be generated. The
TAFE and DoE contracts contributed £4.9m to Other Software and
Services revenues in 2023.
Adjusted Operating Profit
increased by 75.9% to £25.7m (2022: £14.6m constant currency;
£14.3m reported) and Adjusted Operating Margin increased to 37.5%
(2022: 21.6% constant currency and 20.9% reported). Operating
profit benefited by £1.8m from the net impact of the reversal of
the onerous contract provision recognised against the NTU contract
in 2022 and the loss made on the contract in the early part of
2023. Revenue growth across Foundation Software and Cloud as
discussed above, together with cost optimisation has further
contributed to the margin improvement.
Education Services (ES)
£m
|
2023
|
2022
Reported
|
Constant currency
2022
|
Change constant
currency
|
Change constant currency
%
|
Revenue
|
17.2
|
15.4
|
15.2
|
1.9
|
12.7%
|
School Inspections & Related
Services
|
14.2
|
12.7
|
12.6
|
1.6
|
12.9%
|
i-graduate - Surveys & Data
Analytics
|
2.9
|
2.7
|
2.6
|
0.3
|
11.6%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Operating Profit
|
2.4
|
3.61
|
3.51
|
(1.0)
|
(29.8%)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adjusted Operating Margin
|
14.1%
|
23.6%
|
22.7%
|
(8.6%)
|
(8.6)pp
|
1.
2022 Adjusted Operating Profit has been restated by £0.3m in
Student Information Systems and (£0.3m) in Education
Services.
Education Services (ES) provides
non-software related solutions globally across the same market
sectors. The core offerings are inspection and review services
which support the assessment of educational delivery, performance
benchmarking, student surveys, and data analytics.
Education Services revenue
increased by 12.7% to £17.2m (2022: £15.2m constant currency;
£15.4m reported).
The revenue from School
Inspections & Related Services increased by 12.9% to £14.2m
(2022: £12.6m constant currency; £12.7m reported). This revenue
growth was driven by contracts in the UK with the Department for
Education in England. The National Centre for Excellence in the
Teaching of Mathematics 'NCETM' contract scope was increased
resulting in additional revenues for Tribal and the contract for
the National Tutoring Programme 'NTP' won in 2022 benefited from a
full year's delivery. Tribal was also successful in securing a new
contract with the Department for Education for the Multiply
contract with a total contract value of £1.2m over two years. The
Middle East revenues declined against 2022 with no new contracts
won in year
The revenue for Surveys & Data
Analytics increased by 11.6% to £2.9m (2022: £2.6m constant
currency; £2.7m reported). The revenues from Surveys are improved,
as expected, due to the seasonality of the Southern Hemisphere
International Student Barometer in which most institutions
participate every other year.
The Adjusted Operating Profit in
Education Services decreased by 29.8% to £2.4m (2022: £3.5m
constant currency; £3.6m reported), the Adjusted Operating Margin
also decreased 8.6pp to 14.1% (2022: 22.7% constant currency; 23.6%
reported), this decrease is largely due to the mix of contracts
running, with lower revenues in the Middle East which typically
attract higher margins than in the UK, together with investment in
the delivery, sales and management teams to drive and sustain
growth in 2024 and beyond. There were £0.6m of one-off negative
operating margin impacts, the majority of which relate to
reorganisation of the operating model.
Product development
£m
|
2023
|
2022
Reported
|
Change
|
Product Development
|
12.4
|
14.4
|
14%
|
|
|
|
|
Of which capitalised
|
8.5
|
10.3
|
17%
|
Tribal Edge
|
8.5
|
10.3
|
17%
|
Other Products
|
-
|
-
|
|
|
|
|
|
Of which expensed
|
4.0
|
4.1
|
5%
|
Foundational Products
|
2.7
|
2.31
|
(19%)
|
Edge
|
0.7
|
1.3
|
49%
|
Other Software Products
|
0.6
|
0.61
|
(0%)
|
|
|
|
|
Amortisation
|
1.6
|
1.4
|
(13%)
|
1
2022 restated as the Student Information Desk product (£0.3m) has
been restated from other.
The Group spent £12.4m on Product
Development, of which £8.5m was capitalised in relation to Edge,
including Dynamics and Semestry (2022: £14.4m spent, £10.3m
capitalised, £4.1m expensed).
As a cloud-native SIS, Edge
provides a competitive differentiator in targeting and acquiring
new customers. In addition, it protects Tribal's customer base by
providing an efficient route to achieve a comprehensive,
integrated, open-standards SIS which maximises the student
experience and reduces the technical complexity and IT cost for our
customers.
As previously announced, the Edge
development team reached its peak of development activities to
deliver Tribal Admissions during 2022. The team was reduced part
way through 2023 to align to our development strategy, which
resulted in a 17% saving in capitalised product development and
will reduce further in 2024 with further reductions undertaken in
early 2024.
Expensed product development
decreased 5% to £4.0m (2022: £4.1m) of which £2.7m (2022:
£2.3m) related to our Foundation products, £0.7m (2022: £1.3m)
related to Edge and £0.6m (2021: £0.6m) related to other
products.
Key performance indicators (KPIs)
£m
|
2023
|
2022
Reported
|
2022
Constant currency
|
Change constant
currency
|
Change constant currency
%
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Revenue
|
85.7
|
83.6
|
83.1
|
2.7
|
3.2%
|
- Student Information
Systems
|
68.6
|
68.2
|
67.9
|
0.7
|
1.1%
|
- Education Services
|
17.2
|
15.4
|
15.2
|
1.9
|
12.7%
|
Adjusted
EBITDA1
|
14.4
|
7.0
|
7.2
|
7.1
|
99.0%
|
Adjusted EBITDA
Margin1
|
16.8%
|
8.4%
|
8.7%
|
8.1%
|
8.1pp
|
Annual Recurring Revenue
(ARR)2
|
54.5
|
51.2
|
50.2
|
4.3
|
8.7%
|
Gross Revenue Retention
(GRR)3
|
91%
|
91%
|
91%
|
0%
|
0.0pp
|
Net Revenue Retention
(NRR)4
|
102%
|
103%
|
103%
|
(1%)
|
(1.0)pp
|
Committed Income (Order
Book)
|
168.8
|
172.9
|
170.4
|
(1.6)
|
(0.9%)
|
Operating Cash
Conversion6
|
110.5%
|
89.0%
|
89.6%
|
20.9%
|
23.3pp
|
Free Cash (Out)/In Flow
|
(1.4)
|
(5.3)
|
(5.3)
|
3.9
|
73.2%
|
Staff Retention
|
86.2%
|
83.6%
|
83.6%
|
2.6%
|
2.6pp
|
Revenue per Operational
FTE5
|
£103.2k
|
£102.0k
|
£101.4k
|
£1.8k
|
1.8%
|
1.
Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA Margin are in respect of
continuing operations and exclude charges reported in 'Exceptional
items' of £2.9m (2022: £2.1m), refer to Note 4. EBITDA is
calculated by taking the Adjusted Operating Profit after the
allocation of Central Overheads and excludes Interest, Tax,
Depreciation and Amortisation.
2.
Annual Recurring Revenue is a forward-looking metric. Includes exit
rate annualised recurring revenue, plus future contracted recurring
revenue yet be delivered, and known losses within the next 12
months where customers have given notice
3.
GRR is calculated as a percentage of recurring revenue retained
from existing customers at 1 January including contract expiry,
cancellations or downgrades in the year. NRR is calculated as a
percentage of recurring revenue retained from existing customers at
1 January including upsells as well as contract expiry,
cancellations or downgrades in the year. NRR for 2022 has been
restated, resulting in a decrease of 1pp from the reported
value.
4.
Committed Income (Order Book) refers to the Total Contract Value of
booked sales orders which have not yet been delivered (including
two years Support and Maintenance, where it is contracted on an
annual recurring basis).
5.
Revenue per Operational FTE is the average FTE for the year
excluding average FTE associated with capitalised Product
Development. In 2023 107.3 FTE were capitalised (2022:
152.3).
6
Operating cash conversion is calculated as net cash from operating
activities before tax, excluding cash outflow of £0.8m (2022: £nil)
from an aborted takeover and £0.9m (2022:£0.6m) of restructuring
costs as a proportion of Adjusted EBITDA excluding the onerous
contract provision release of £4.3m (2022: provision created
£4.5m)
The above Alternative Performance
Measures (APM) are not Statutory Accounting Measures and are not
intended as a substitute for statutory measures. A reconciliation
of Statutory Operating Profit and Adjusted EBITDA has been provided
in the financial statements.
Annual recurring revenue (ARR)
|
|
2022
|
Constant
currency
|
|
|
£m
|
2023
|
Reported
|
2022
|
Change
|
Change %
|
Foundational Support &
Maintenance
|
25.0
|
24.8
|
24.3
|
0.6
|
2.6%
|
Foundational
Subscription
|
7.7
|
5.4
|
5.4
|
2.3
|
42.3%
|
Cloud
|
12.6
|
10.2
|
10.1
|
2.5
|
24.5%
|
Edge
|
5.9
|
5.4
|
5.4
|
0.4
|
8.1%
|
Core product ARR
|
51.1
|
45.8
|
45.3
|
5.8
|
12.9%
|
Other Software &
Services
|
3.4
|
5.4
|
4.9
|
(1.5)
|
(30.6)%
|
Total ARR
|
54.5
|
51.2
|
50.2
|
4.3
|
8.7%
|
ARR is a key forward-looking
financial metric of the Group and is an area of strategic focus.
Our aim is to grow ARR in our core products through the delivery of
Software-as-a-Service contracts, providing increased quality of
earnings.
ARR relating to our core product
offering increased by 12.9% to £51.1m (2022: £45.3m constant
currency, £45.8m reported) driven by new customer wins and upsell
to existing customers across our core product offerings.
ARR relating to other software and
services has decreased 30.6% to £3.4m (2022: £4.9m constant
currency, £5.4m reported), of which £1.5m relates to the removal of
ARR for the Department of Education as we expect the customer to
exit within the next 12 months.
NRR 102% (2022 restated: 103%) has
decreased by 1pp. Upsell to existing customers has been largely
consistent year on year, highlighting the growth opportunities
within our existing customer base, in particular migrations of
on-premise customers into the cloud.
GRR 91% (2022: 91%) includes
expected churn across our School Edge customers of 0.7ppt, 2.5ppt
for the material decline in DoE contract revenues, and 2.4ppt for
the termination of NTU.
Committed Income (Order Book)
The Committed Income (Order Book)
relates to the total value of orders across SIS and ES, which have
been signed on or before, but not delivered by 31 December 2023.
This represents the best estimate of business expected to be
delivered and recognised in future periods and includes two years
of Support & Maintenance revenue. At 31 December 2023 this
decreased to £168.8m (2022: £170.5m constant currency, £172.9m
reported). Growth in Foundation and Edge ARR revenues have driven
committed income upwards, offset by the reduction due to a further
12 months delivered on key contracts including Callista, DoE and
Education Services contracts.
Operating cash conversion
Operating cash conversion is
calculated as net cash from operating activities before tax
(excluding the cash outflow of £0.8m (2022: £nil) from costs
associated with the lapsed offer from Ellucian and £0.9m (2022:
£0.6m) of restructuring costs) as a proportion of Adjusted EBITDA
excluding the onerous contract provision of £4.5m in 2022 and its
£4.3m subsequent release due to the end of the NTU contract in
2023. In 2023, operating cash conversion was 110.5% (2022: 89.0%
reported). The increase in operating cash conversion is a result of
improved working capital.
Free cash flow
Free cash flow is included as a
key indicator of the cash that is generated (or absorbed) by the
Group and is available for acquisition-related investment, interest
and finance charges, and distribution to shareholders. It is
calculated as net cash generated, before dividends, interest and
finance charges, deferred consideration, and investments in
subsidiaries. Free cash flow in 2023 improved to an outflow of
£(1.4)m (2022: outflow of £5.3m reported) as investment in product
development decreased £1.9m to £8.5m (2022: £10.4m), net cash used
in operating activities before tax increased £0.7m to £9.4m (2022:
£8.7m), despite £1.8m of cash outflow from takeover and
restructuring costs in year (2022: £0.6m), and there were lower tax
payments of £1.5m to £1.1m (2022: £2.6m).
Full time equivalent (FTE) and staff retention
|
2023
|
2022
|
Change
|
UK
|
601
|
622
|
(21)
|
Asia Pacific
|
293
|
317
|
(24)
|
Rest of
world1
|
14
|
13
|
1
|
Full Time Equivalent
(FTE)
|
908
|
952
|
(44)
|
|
|
|
|
1.
Including USA, Canada and Middle East.
Our overall workforce has
decreased by 4.6% to a total FTE of 908 from 952 at 31 December
2022.
On an operational FTE basis
(excluding Capitalised Product Development), the revenue per
average operational FTE increased to £103.2k (2022:
£102.0k).
The reduction in headcount
reflects our drive for operational efficiencies and reduction in
Edge product development, whilst growing our global delivery
capability in Malaysia and the Philippines. Staff retention has
increased to 86.2% (2022: 83.6%).
Exceptionals
The Group has adopted a policy of
disclosing separately on the face of its Group income statement the
effect of any components of financial performance considered by the
Directors to be not directly related to the trading business or
significant one-off events, for which separate disclosure would
assist in a better understanding of the financial performance
achieved.
A full explanation of 'Exceptional
items' is included in Note 4, however the main items are as
follows:
·
|
Restructuring and associated costs:
Relate to planned reductions within our Edge development
teams during the first half of 2024, and the restructuring of the
Group's operations to implement a new target operating model in
2023.These costs relate to one-off initiatives that support the
Group's transition to a pureplay Edtech, SaaS business (2023:
£1.0m; 2022: £0.6m).
|
·
|
Education Services restructure
costs: Board's strategic review of Education Services and
establishing ES as a standalone entity, with costs of £1.0m in
2023
|
·
|
Lapsed offer by Ellucian: Costs of
£1.4m were spent on due diligence and external advisors in
2023.
|
·
|
Acquisition-related costs: Amounts
relating to the consultancy and legal costs of potential
acquisitions (2023: credit of £0.1m; 2022 charge of £0.2m). The
credit in 2023 has arisen from the recalculation of accounting for
changes in the fair value of the contingent deferred consideration
as part of the earn-out agreement with Eveoh BV, and the
corresponding gain has been recognised in the income
statement.
|
Net cash and cash flow
£m
|
2023
|
2022
|
Change
|
Net cash flow from operating
activities before tax
|
9.4
|
8.7
|
0.7
|
Tax paid
|
(1.1)
|
(2.6)
|
1.5
|
Purchases of PPE
|
(0.4)
|
(0.7)
|
0.3
|
Net lease payments
|
(0.9)
|
(0.9)
|
0.0
|
Capitalised product
development
|
(8.5)
|
(10.4)
|
1.9
|
Proceeds from shares
|
0.0
|
0.6
|
(0.6)
|
Free cash flow
|
(1.4)
|
(5.3)
|
3.9
|
Net cash outflow from acquisition
activities
|
(0.1)
|
(1.0)
|
0.9
|
Net cash inflow/(outflow) from
other financing activities
|
5.6
|
3.2
|
2.4
|
Net decrease in cash & cash equivalents
|
4.1
|
(3.1)
|
7.2
|
Cash & cash equivalents at
beginning of the year
|
2.9
|
5.9
|
(3.0)
|
Less: Effect of foreign exchange
rate changes
|
(0.2)
|
0.0
|
(0.2)
|
Cash & cash equivalents at end of
period
|
6.8
|
2.9
|
3.9
|
Borrowings
|
(14.0)
|
(6.3)
|
(7.8)
|
Net (debt)/cash & cash equivalents end of
period
|
(7.2)
|
(3.4)
|
(3.8)
|
Net debt and cash equivalents at
31 December 2023 were (£7.2)m (2022: (£3.4)m).
Operating cash inflow before tax
for the period was £9.4m (2022: £8.7m), £0.7m higher than last year
despite £0.8m cash outflow from costs relating to the lapsed offer
from Ellucian and £0.9m outflow from restructuring.
Spend on product development
decreased to £8.5m (2022: £10.4m) in line with the Group's product
investment programme. The Group made a payment of £0.1m for
deferred consideration (2022: £1.0m), which was a final earn-out
payment for Eveoh. There have been no acquisitions in
2023.
Cash inflow from other financing
activities (per table above) increased to £5.6m (2022: £3.2m). The
Group paid a final dividend of 0.65p per share in the year with
£1.4m returned to shareholders. Bank loan arrangement fees and all
interest in the period totalled £0.9m (2022: £0.3m). During the
year the Group drew down an additional net loan of £7.8m (2022
£6.3m) from the £20m facility to assist with working capital
requirements.
Funding arrangements
On 29 December 2023 the Group
entered into a three-year £20m multicurrency revolving
facility with a further £5m accordion with HSBC, with the option to
extend by a further two years. The facility was put in place to
cover general corporate and working capital requirements of the
Group; as at 31 December 2023 £14.0m (2022: 6.3m) of the loan was
utilised. The Group has a £2m committed overdraft facility in the
UK and an AUD $2m committed overdraft facility in Australia; both
facilities are committed for a 12-month period ending August 2024
and October 2024 respectively. At 31 December 2023 none of the
overdraft facilities were drawn.
Shareholders returns and dividends
Given Tribal's solid financial
performance in FY23, the Board intends to pay a dividend to
shareholders. However, given the uncertainty around the likely
outcome of the dispute with NTU, the Board is deferring its
decision on the quantum of the dividend payment this year until the
Board has an appropriate level of certainty. Such dividend is
likely to be declared as an interim dividend.
Going concern
As at 31 December 2023, the Group
had cash and cash equivalents of £6.8m (2022: £2.9m) and borrowings
of £14.0m (2022: £6.3m). The Group has funding arrangements in
place as described earlier, also please see Note 13.
The Group benefits from strong
annual recurring revenues and cash generation, it also has a
significant pipeline of committed income as it enters 2024. The
Group's net current liability position has reduced to £19.1m from
£25.0m in 2022; the decrease mainly driven by the release of the
onerous contract provision (£4.5m) following termination of the NTU
contract. The remaining net current liabilities primarily consists
of net contract liabilities £21.8m (2022: £19.3m) relating to
deferred customer revenue recognised in accordance with IFRS
15.
Management have considered a range
of outcomes in relation to the NTU contract dispute and its
potential impact on the Group's cash flows. If mediation is not
successful, it may result in possible litigation. Should the
dispute result in litigation, timelines for resolution will be
uncertain but are considered highly unlikely to be resolved within
the next 12 months. Management is undertaking a range of actions,
including assessing all discretionary spend, in order to improve
cash flows as a matter of prudence.
In assessing the Group's going
concern position the Directors have considered all relevant facts,
latest forecasts, an assessment of the risks faced by the Group,
and considered potential changes in trading performance. In
addition, management have stress tested the latest forecasts to the
point where either the Group cannot meet its liabilities or is in
breach of banking covenants and have concluded that this position
is highly unlikely. Accordingly, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Group and the Company have adequate resources
to continue in operational existence for at least 12 months from
the date of approval of the financial statements and the
foreseeable future. Thus, they continue to adopt the going concern
basis in preparing the financial statements.
Taxation
The corporation tax on profit
before tax was £1.3m (2022: £0.9m). This increase is driven by the
increased profits of the Group.
Share options and share capital
On 16 October 2023, 418,314
nil-cost share options were granted to Mark Pickett (240,308) and
Diane McIntyre (178,006) as part of their ongoing
remuneration.
On 16 October 2023, 185,194
nil-cost share options were granted to eligible employees on the
Executive Board under the terms of its 2018 Long-Term Incentive
plan.
Earnings per share (EPS)
Adjusted basic earnings per share
from continuing operations before exceptional items and intangible
asset impairment charges and amortisation, which reflects the
Group's underlying trading performance, increased to 4.1p due to
the improved adjusted profit before tax in the year.
Statutory basic earnings per share
increased to 2.5p (2022: statutory loss 0.2p) as a result of the
statutory profit in the year £5.3m (2022: statutory loss
£0.5m).
Pension obligations
At 31 December 2023, the Group
operated two defined benefit pension schemes for the benefit of
certain deferred employees of its subsidiaries in the UK. These
schemes are administered by separate funds that are legally
separated from the Company. The trustees of the pension funds are
required by law to act in the interest of the funds and of all
relevant stakeholders in the schemes. The trustees of the pension
funds are responsible for the investment policy with regard to the
assets of the funds.
Across the pension schemes, the
surplus calculated under IAS 19 at the end of the year was
£0.1m (2022: surplus of £0.1m), with gross assets of £8.5m and
gross liabilities of £5.7m (2022: £8.1m and £5.4m respectively).
Total actuarial losses recognised in the consolidated statement of
comprehensive income are (£0.1m) (2022: gains £0.3m). The Company
does not have an unqualified right to apply any surplus on one of
the schemes and consequently a surplus of £2.6m has not been
recognised.
Diane McIntyre
Chief Financial Officer
Consolidated Income Statement
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
Note
|
Year ended 31 December
2023
Total
£'000
|
Restated*
Year ended 31 December
2022
Total
£'000
|
Revenue
|
2
|
85,750
|
83,585
|
Cost of sales
|
|
(43,628)
|
(52,250)
|
Gross profit
|
|
42,122
|
31,335
|
Total administrative expenses
|
|
(34,861)
|
(30,556)
|
Operating profit
|
3
|
7,261
|
779
|
Analysed as:
Operating profit (before exceptional items)
|
3
|
10,581
|
2,901
|
Exceptional items
|
4
|
(3,320)
|
(2,122)
|
Operating profit (EBIT)
|
|
7,261
|
779
|
Finance income
|
|
308
|
25
|
Finance costs
|
5
|
(939)
|
(417)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
6,630
|
387
|
Tax charge
|
6
|
(1,336)
|
(897)
|
Profit/(loss) attributable to the owners of the
parent
Earnings per share
|
|
5,294
|
(510)
|
Basic
|
8
|
2.5p
|
(0.2)p
|
Diluted
|
8
|
2.4p
|
(0.2)p
|
Consolidated statement of comprehensive
income
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
Note
|
Year
ended
31 December 2023
£'000
|
Year
ended
31 December 2022
£'000
|
Profit/(loss) for the year
|
|
5,294
|
(510)
|
Other comprehensive (expense)/income:
Items that will not be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
Remeasurement of defined benefit pension
schemes
|
|
(129)
|
262
|
Deferred tax on measurement of defined benefit pension
schemes
|
|
-
|
(66)
|
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or
loss:
Exchange differences on translation of foreign
operations
|
|
(458)
|
595
|
Other comprehensive (expense)/income for the year net of
tax
|
|
(587)
|
791
|
Total comprehensive income for the year attributable to
equity holders of the parent
|
|
4,707
|
281
|
Consolidated balance sheet
As at 31 December 2023
|
Note
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Non-current assets
Goodwill
|
9
|
28,524
|
29,176
|
Other intangible assets
|
10
|
49,894
|
43,667
|
Property, plant and equipment
|
|
836
|
1,044
|
Right-of-use assets
|
|
2,117
|
1,435
|
Net investment in lease
|
|
21
|
70
|
Deferred tax assets
|
|
4,960
|
5,064
|
Retirement benefit scheme assets
|
|
81
|
72
|
|
|
86,433
|
80,528
|
Current assets
Trade and other receivables
|
11
|
13,690
|
12,505
|
Net investment in lease
|
|
49
|
47
|
Contract assets
|
2
|
5,918
|
6,676
|
Current tax assets
|
|
752
|
421
|
Cash and cash equivalents
|
|
6,797
|
2,891
|
|
|
27,206
|
22,540
|
Total assets
|
|
113,639
|
103,068
|
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables
|
12
|
(5,902)
|
(5,788)
|
Accruals
|
|
(9,194)
|
(8,622)
|
Contract liabilities
|
2
|
(27,732)
|
(26,004)
|
Current tax liabilities
|
|
(1,541)
|
(1,145)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(713)
|
(728)
|
Borrowings
|
13
|
-
|
(35)
|
Provisions
|
|
(1,205)
|
(5,194)
|
|
|
(46,287)
|
(47,516)
|
Net current liabilities
|
|
(19,081)
|
(24,976)
|
Non-current liabilities
Other payables
|
12
|
(212)
|
(209)
|
Deferred tax liabilities
|
|
(2,740)
|
(2,930)
|
Contract liabilities
|
2
|
-
|
(141)
|
Lease liabilities
|
|
(1,320)
|
(721)
|
Borrowings
|
13
|
(14,000)
|
(6,250)
|
Provisions
|
|
(605)
|
(483)
|
|
|
(18,877)
|
(10,734)
|
Total liabilities
|
|
(65,164)
|
(58,250)
|
Net assets
|
|
48,475
|
44,818
|
Equity
Share capital
|
|
10,611
|
10,611
|
Share premium
|
|
83
|
83
|
Other reserves
|
|
28,893
|
28,598
|
Accumulated profits
|
|
8,888
|
5,526
|
Total equity attributable to equity holders of the
parent
|
|
48,475
|
44,818
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
Note
|
Share capital
£'000
|
Share premium
£'000
|
Other reserves
£'000
|
Accumulated
(losses)/profits
£'000
|
Total
equity
£'000
|
Balance at 31 December 2022
|
|
10,519
|
18,961
|
27,978
|
(11,118)
|
46,340
|
Loss for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(510)
|
(510)
|
Other comprehensive income for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
791
|
791
|
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
281
|
281
|
Issue of equity share capital
|
|
92
|
481
|
-
|
-
|
573
|
Share premium capital reduction
|
|
-
|
(19,359)
|
-
|
19,359
|
-
|
Equity dividend paid
|
7
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(2,736)
|
(2,736)
|
Credit to equity for share-based payments
|
|
-
|
-
|
589
|
-
|
589
|
Foreign exchange difference on share-based
payments
|
|
-
|
-
|
31
|
-
|
31
|
Tax charge on credit to equity for share-based
payments
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(260)
|
(260)
|
Contributions by and distributions to
owners
|
|
92
|
(18,878)
|
620
|
16,363
|
(1,803)
|
Balance at 31 December 2022 and 1 January
2023
|
|
10,611
|
83
|
28,598
|
5,526
|
44,818
|
Profit for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
5,294
|
5,294
|
Other comprehensive expense for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(587)
|
(587)
|
Total comprehensive income for the year
|
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
4,707
|
4,707
|
Equity dividend paid
|
7
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(1,377)
|
(1,377)
|
Credit to equity for share-based payments
|
|
-
|
-
|
295
|
-
|
295
|
Tax credit on credit to equity for share-based
payments
|
6
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
32
|
32
|
Contributions by and distributions to
owners
|
|
-
|
-
|
295
|
(1,345)
|
(1,050)
|
At 31 December 2023
|
|
10,611
|
83
|
28,893
|
8,888
|
48,475
|
Consolidated cash flow statement
For the year ended 31 December
2023
|
Note
|
Year
ended
31 December 2023
£'000
|
Year
ended
31 December 2022
£'000
|
Net cash from operating activities
|
14
|
8,308
|
6,106
|
Investing activities
Purchases of property, plant and equipment
|
|
(390)
|
(716)
|
Expenditure on intangible assets
|
10
|
(8,479)
|
(10,369)
|
Payment of deferred consideration for
acquisitions
|
|
(71)
|
(994)
|
Proceeds from sub-leases
|
|
50
|
29
|
Net gain on forward contracts
|
|
175
|
23
|
Net cash outflow from investing activities
|
|
(8,715)
|
(12,027)
|
Financing activities
Interest paid
|
|
(717)
|
(229)
|
Loan arrangement fees
|
|
(112)
|
(9)
|
Loan drawdown
|
|
8,750
|
8,500
|
Loan repayment
|
|
(1,000)
|
(2,250)
|
Proceeds on issue of shares
|
|
-
|
573
|
Principal paid on lease liabilities
|
|
(911)
|
(943)
|
Interest paid on lease liabilities
|
|
(77)
|
(60)
|
Equity dividend paid
|
7
|
(1,377)
|
(2,736)
|
Net cash from financing activities
|
|
4,556
|
2,846
|
Net increase/(decrease) in cash and cash
equivalents
|
|
4,149
|
(3,075)
|
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of
year
|
|
2,856
|
5,924
|
Effect of foreign exchange rate changes
|
|
(208)
|
7
|
Cash and cash equivalents at end of year
|
|
6,797
|
2,856
|
1. General information
The basis of preparation of this
preliminary announcement is set out below.
The financial information set out
above does not constitute the Company's statutory accounts for the
years ended 31 December 2023 or 2022 but is derived from those
accounts. Statutory accounts for 2022 have been delivered to the
Registrar of Companies and those for 2023 will be delivered
following the Company's annual general meeting. The auditor BDO LLP
has reported on the statutory financial statements for the year
ended 31 December 2023 and the audit report was
unqualified.
Whilst the financial information
included in this preliminary announcement has been completed in
accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards
(IFRSs), this announcement itself does not contain sufficient
information to comply with IFRSs. The financial information has
been prepared on the historical cost basis, except for financial
instruments.
Copies of this announcement can be
obtained from the Company's registered office at King's Orchard, 1
Queen Street, Bristol BS2 0HQ.
The full financial statements
which comply with IFRSs will be communicated to shareholders via
their selected preference and are available to members of the
public at the registered office of the Company from that date and
are now available on the Company's website: www.tribalgroup.com.
2. Revenue for contracts with customers
The Group has split revenue into various categories which is
intended to enable users to understand the relationship between
revenue streams and segment information.
31 December 2023
|
UK £'000
|
Australia £'000
|
Other APAC
£'000
|
North America and Rest
of the world
£'000
|
Total £'000
|
Foundation - Support & Maintenance
|
15,903
|
6,269
|
1,727
|
996
|
24,895
|
Foundation - Software
|
7,865
|
185
|
417
|
75
|
8,542
|
Cloud Services
|
8,384
|
1,432
|
453
|
150
|
10,419
|
Edge
|
3,913
|
414
|
63
|
801
|
5,191
|
Professional Services
|
7,969
|
498
|
1,164
|
151
|
9,782
|
Core Student Information Systems (SIS)
|
44,034
|
8,798
|
3,824
|
2,173
|
58,829
|
Other software & services
|
3,316
|
6,424
|
-
|
9
|
9,749
|
Total Student Information Systems (SIS)
|
47,350
|
15,222
|
3,824
|
2,182
|
68,578
|
Schools inspections & other related services
(QAS)
|
9,121
|
-
|
1
|
5,104
|
14,226
|
i-graduate survey & data analytics
|
1,214
|
370
|
1,076
|
286
|
2,946
|
Total Education Services (ES)
|
10,335
|
370
|
1,077
|
5,390
|
17,172
|
Total
|
57,685
|
15,592
|
4,901
|
7,572
|
85,750
|
North America and Rest of
31 December 2022
|
UK £'000
|
Australia £'000
|
Other APAC £'000
|
the world
£'000
|
Total
£'000
|
Foundation - Support & Maintenance
|
15,668
|
7,112
|
1,617
|
1,023
|
25,420
|
Foundation - Software
|
6,575
|
106
|
515
|
21
|
7,217
|
Cloud Services
|
6,577
|
1,351
|
425
|
144
|
8,497
|
Edge
|
3,870
|
400
|
142
|
346
|
4,758
|
Professional Services
|
7,618
|
1,191
|
2,181
|
231
|
11,221
|
Core Student Information Systems (SIS)
|
40,308
|
10,160
|
4,880
|
1,765
|
57,113
|
Other software & services
|
3,240
|
7,808
|
-
|
-
|
11,048
|
Total Student Information Systems (SIS)
|
43,548
|
17,968
|
4,880
|
1,765
|
68,161
|
Schools inspections & other related services
(QAS)
|
7,176
|
-
|
-
|
5,570
|
12,746
|
i-graduate survey & data analytics
|
1,126
|
126
|
1,080
|
346
|
2,678
|
Total Education Services (ES)
|
8,302
|
126
|
1,080
|
5,916
|
15,424
|
Total
|
51,850
|
18,094
|
5,960
|
7,681
|
83,585
|
Net contract
liabilities
|
Contract asset/
(liability)
2023 £'000
|
Contract asset/
(liability)
2022 £'000
|
Opening contract balance
|
(19,469)
|
(17,647)
|
Of which released to income statement
|
19,328
|
17,405
|
New billings and cash in excess of revenue
recognised
|
(21,673)
|
(19,227)
|
Closing contract balance
|
(21,814)
|
(19,469)
|
Balances arise on contract assets and liabilities when
cumulative payments received from customers at the balance sheet
date do not necessarily equal the amount of revenue recognised on
contracts. Customers are on standard payment terms, which may
result in settlement of invoices prior to the recognition of
associated revenue.
Contract assets inherently have some contractual risks
associated with them related to the specific and ongoing risks in
each individual contract with a customer. The impairment of
contract assets/(liabilities) reflects provisions recognised
against contract assets in relation to these
risks.
The amount of incremental costs to obtain a contract which
extends over a period of more than 12 months has been recognised as
an asset in prepayments totalling £0.3m (2022: £0.5m) and will be
released in line with the total contract revenue. No amount has
been impaired at 31 December 2023 or 2022.
Remaining performance
obligations
The amount of revenue that will be recognised in future
periods on revenue contracts entered into prior to 31 December when
the remaining performance obligations will be satisfied is analysed
as follows: At 31 December
2023
|
2024 £'000
|
2025 £'000
|
2026 £'000
|
Thereafter £'000
|
Total £'000
|
Foundation - Support & Maintenance
|
25,476
|
24,784
|
16,230
|
63
|
66,553
|
Foundation - Software
|
7,489
|
7,332
|
3,935
|
20
|
18,776
|
Cloud Services
|
11,523
|
11,219
|
7,204
|
1,272
|
31,218
|
Edge
|
4,845
|
4,649
|
2,337
|
421
|
12,252
|
Professional Services
|
7,763
|
1,642
|
52
|
-
|
9,457
|
Core SIS
|
57,095
|
49,625
|
29,758
|
1,776
|
138,253
|
Other software & services
|
6,120
|
2,346
|
1,066
|
56
|
9,588
|
Total SIS
|
63,215
|
51,971
|
30,824
|
1,832
|
147,841
|
Schools inspections & other related services
(QAS)
|
11,396
|
6,190
|
275
|
22
|
17,883
|
i-graduate survey & data analytics
|
1,764
|
903
|
453
|
-
|
3,120
|
Total ES
|
13,160
|
7,094
|
728
|
22
|
21,003
|
TOTAL
|
76,375
|
59,064
|
31,552
|
1,853
|
168,844
|
At 31 December 2022
|
2023 £'000
|
2024 £'000
|
2025 £'000
|
Thereafter £'000
|
Total £'000
|
Foundation - Support & Maintenance
|
24,635
|
24,472
|
15,783
|
6,389
|
71,279
|
Foundation - Software
|
5,876
|
5,275
|
3,187
|
134
|
14,472
|
Cloud
|
8,947
|
8,320
|
5,618
|
2,334
|
25,219
|
Edge
|
4,648
|
4,560
|
2,996
|
1,263
|
13,467
|
Professional Services
|
7,093
|
1,303
|
74
|
12
|
8,482
|
Core SIS
|
51,199
|
43,930
|
27,658
|
10,132
|
132,919
|
Other software & services
|
7,577
|
3,541
|
1,982
|
9
|
13,109
|
Total SIS
|
58,776
|
47,471
|
29,640
|
10,141
|
146,028
|
Schools inspections & other related services
(QAS)
|
12,013
|
8,120
|
2,101
|
141
|
22,375
|
i-graduate survey & data analytics
|
2,121
|
1,033
|
878
|
439
|
4,471
|
Total ES
|
14,134
|
9,153
|
2,979
|
580
|
26,846
|
TOTAL
|
72,910
|
56,624
|
32,619
|
10,721
|
172,874
|
An analysis of the Group's revenue is as
follows:
|
2023
£'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Continuing operations
Sales of services
|
85,750
|
83,585
|
Total revenue
|
85,750
|
83,585
|
Further details of the nature of the services provided are
disclosed in Note 3. Sales of goods are not material and are
therefore not shown separately. Included in sales of services is
£1.3m (2022: £1.7m) related to software license revenues recognised
as a result of a periodic review of our license entitlement
resulting from changes in our customers' enrolled student
numbers.
There is no revenue in respect of discontinued
operations.
3. Business Segments
Information reported to the Group's Chief Executive for the
purposes of resource allocation and assessment of segment
performance is focused on the nature of each type of activity. The
Group's reportable segments and principal activities under
IFRS 8 are detailed below:
•
Student
Information Systems (SIS) represents the delivery of software and
subsequent maintenance and support services and the activities
through which we deploy and configure our software for our
customers, including software solutions, asset management and
information managed services; and
•
Education
Services (ES) represents inspection and review services which
support the assessment of educational delivery, and a
portfolio of performance improvement tools and services, including
analytics.
In accordance with IFRS 8 'Operating Segments', information
on segment assets is not shown, as this is not provided to the
chief operating decision-maker, being the Chief Executive.
Inter-segment sales are charged at prevailing market
prices.
Restated *
Revenue
Adjusted segment operating profit
|
Year ended
31 December 2023
£'000
|
Year ended
31 December 2022
£'000
|
Year
ended
31 December 2023
£'000
|
Year
ended
31 December 2022
£'000
|
SIS
|
68,578
|
68,161
|
23,412
|
12,099
|
ES
|
17,172
|
15,424
|
2,254
|
3,496
|
Total
|
85,750
|
83,585
|
25,666
|
15,595
|
Unallocated corporate expenses
|
|
|
(14,360)
|
(11,596)
|
Amortisation of acquired software and customer contracts
& relationships
|
|
|
(725)
|
(1,098)
|
Adjusted operating profit
|
|
|
10,581
|
2,901
|
Exceptional items (see Note 4)
|
|
|
(3,320)
|
(2,122)
|
Operating profit
|
|
|
7,261
|
779
|
Finance income
|
|
|
308
|
25
|
Finance costs
|
|
|
(939)
|
(417)
|
Profit before tax
|
|
|
6,630
|
387
|
Tax charge
|
|
|
(1,336)
|
(897)
|
Profit/(loss) after tax
|
|
|
5,294
|
(510)
|
*
See Note 5
Associated depreciation and amortisation is allocated to
segment profits and is included in adjusted segment operating
profit as above. The amount included in SIS is £2.3m (2022: £2.6m)
and within Education Services £0.2m (2022: £0.1m).The accounting
policies of the reportable segments are the same as the Group's
accounting policies. Segment profit represents the profit earned by
each segment, without allocation of central administration costs,
including Directors' salaries, finance costs and income tax
expense. This is the measure reported to the Group's Chief
Executive for the purpose of resource allocation and assessment of
segment performance.
Within Education Services revenues of approximately 2% (2022:
5%) have arisen from the segment's largest customer; within SIS
revenues of approximately 4% (2022: 4%) have arisen from the
segment's largest customer. These percentages are calculated
against total revenue.
Geographical
information
Revenue from external customers, based on location of the
customer, is shown below:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
UK
|
57,685
|
51,850
|
Australia
|
15,592
|
18,094
|
Other Asia Pacific
|
4,901
|
5,960
|
North America
|
3,650
|
3,616
|
Rest of the world
|
3,922
|
4,065
|
|
85,750
|
83,585
|
Non-current assets (excluding
deferred tax)
|
2023 £'000
|
2022
£'000
|
UK
|
67,523
|
60,746
|
Australia
|
13,342
|
14,350
|
Other Asia Pacific
|
531
|
305
|
North America
|
27
|
52
|
Rest of the world
|
50
|
11
|
|
81,473
|
75,464
|
4. Exceptionals
|
2023 £'000
|
Restated*
2022
£'000
|
Acquisition related costs
Internal systems transformation programme
'VERITAS'
Takeover costs
Education Services (ES) restructure
Group restructuring and associated costs
|
103
-
(1,420)
(1,003)
(1,000)
|
(186)
|
(1,321)
|
-
|
-
|
(615)
|
Total exceptional items
|
(3,320)
|
(2,122)
|
The exceptional items are not part of the Group's underlying
trading activities and include the following:
Acquisition-related costs: Amounts relating to the
consultancy and legal costs of potential acquisitions (2023; credit
of £103,000; 2022: charge of £186,000). The credit in 2023 has
arisen from the remeasurement of accounting for changes in the fair
value of the contingent deferred consideration as part of the
earn-out agreement with Eveoh BV, and the corresponding gain has
been recognised in the income statement.
Internal systems transformation programme 'Veritas': The
upgrade of the accounting system went live in January 2023. In 2022
£1,321,000 of costs were included as exceptional items as the
upgrade was material and nonrecurring in nature. In 2023 all
further costs associated with this project have been expensed as
part of the Group's underlying activities.
Restructuring and associated costs relate to the
restructuring of the Group's operations, including properties and
the Education Services Restructure. (2023: £2,003,000; 31 December
2022: £615,000). These costs relate to one-off initiatives that
support the Group's transition to a Pureplay EdTech, SaaS
business.
Takeover costs: Amounts relating to the lapsed offer for
Tribal Group plc by Ellucian. Costs of £1,420,000 were spent on due
diligence and external advisors.
5. Finance Costs
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Interest on bank overdrafts and loans
|
717
|
229
|
Loan arrangement fees
|
112
|
9
|
Net interest payable on retirement benefit
obligations
|
-
|
4
|
Interest expense on lease liabilities
|
78
|
81
|
Unwinding of discounts
|
32
|
94
|
Total finance costs
|
939
|
417
|
6. Tax
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Current tax
UK corporation tax
|
(117)
|
(1,381)
|
Overseas tax
|
1,999
|
1,967
|
Adjustments in respect of prior years
|
(493)
|
483
|
|
1,389
|
1,069
|
Deferred tax Current year
|
502
|
(212)
|
Adjustments in respect of prior years
|
(555)
|
40
|
|
(53)
|
(172)
|
Tax charge on profits
|
1,336
|
897
|
The continuing tax charge can be reconciled to the profit
from continuing operations per the income statement as
follows:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Profit before tax on continuing operations
|
6,630
|
387
|
Tax charge at standard UK rate of 23.5% (2022:
19%)
|
1,558
|
74
|
Effects of:
Overseas tax rates
|
342
|
619
|
Expenses not deductible for tax purposes
|
495
|
14
|
Adjustments in respect of prior years
|
(1,048)
|
523
|
Additional deduction for R&D
expenditure
|
-
|
(23)
|
Share scheme costs
|
-
|
19
|
Fixed assets ineligible depreciation
|
-
|
(14)
|
Losses not recognised
|
92
|
989
|
Movement in IFRIC 23 tax provision
|
(117)
|
(1,405)
|
Effect of changes in tax rates
|
14
|
101
|
Tax expense for the year
|
1,336
|
897
|
In addition to the amount charged to the income statement a
current tax credit of £nil (2022: credit of £24,000) and a deferred
tax credit of £32,000 (2022: charge of £284,000) has been
recognised directly in equity during the year in relation to Share
Schemes.
A
deferred tax charge of £nil (2022: £726,000) has been recognised in
the Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income in relation to
defined benefit pension schemes.
The Group continues to hold appropriate uncertain tax
provisions.
The income tax expense for the year is based on the UK
statutory rate of corporation tax for the period of 23.5% (2022:
19%).
Tax for other jurisdictions is calculated at the prevailing
rates in the respective jurisdictions.
7. Dividends
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Amounts recognised as distributions to equity holders in the
period:
Final dividend for the year ended 31 December 2022 of 0.65
pence
(Final dividend for the year ended 31 December 2021: 1.3
pence) per share
|
1,377
|
2,736
|
Proposed final dividend:
Proposed final dividend for the year ended 31 December 2023
of 0.65 pence
(year ended 31 December 2022: 0.65 pence) per
share
|
1,379
|
1,379
|
The Board regularly reviews the available distributable
reserves of Tribal Group plc to ensure they are protected for
future dividend payments.
8. Earnings per share
Basic earnings per share and diluted earnings per share are
calculated by reference to a weighted average number of Ordinary
Shares calculated as follows:
|
2023 '000
|
2022 '000
|
Weighted average number of shares
outstanding:
Basic weighted average number of shares in
issue
|
214,180
|
211,627
|
Dilutive weighted average number of employee share
options
|
1,626
|
3,236
|
Total weighted average number of shares outstanding for
dilution calculations
|
215,806
|
214,863
|
Diluted earnings per share reflects the dilutive effect of
LTIP and CSOP share options for which vesting criteria have been
met. In regards the diluted loss per share in 2022, all potentially
dilutive Ordinary Shares, including options are anti-dilutive as
they would decrease the loss per share.
The maximum number of potentially dilutive shares, based on
options that have been granted but have not yet met vesting
criteria, is 3,300,128 (2022: 3,328,168). This includes 17,937
options in the 2019 SAYE Scheme (2022: 92,157).
The adjusted basic and diluted earnings per share figures
shown are included as the Directors believe that they provide a
better understanding of the underlying trading performance of the
Group. A reconciliation of how these figures are calculated is set
out below:
|
2023 £'000
|
Restated*
2022
£'000
|
Net profit/(loss)
|
5,294
|
(510)
|
Earnings/(loss) per share
Basic
|
2.5p
|
(0.2)p
|
Diluted
|
2.4p
|
(0.2)p
|
Net profit (before exceptional items) *
|
8,811
|
59
|
Adjusted earnings per share
Basic
|
4.1p
|
-
|
Diluted
|
4.1p
|
-
|
*
Net profit (before exceptional items) is calculated as
below:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Operating profit (before exceptional items)
|
10,581
|
2,901
|
Finance income
|
308
|
25
|
Finance costs
|
(939)
|
(417)
|
Operating profit (before exceptional items) before
tax
|
9,950
|
2,509
|
Tax charge (before exceptional items)
|
(1,139)
|
(2,450)
|
Net profit (before exceptional items)
|
8,811
|
59
|
9. Goodwill
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Cost
At beginning of year
|
110,407
|
109,813
|
Exchange differences
|
(652)
|
594
|
At end of year
|
109,755
|
110,407
|
Accumulated impairment losses
At beginning of year
|
81,231
|
81,231
|
At end of year
|
81,231
|
81,231
|
Net book value
At end of year
|
28,524
|
29,176
|
At beginning of year
|
29,176
|
28,582
|
Goodwill acquired in a business is allocated, at acquisition,
to the cash-generating units (CGUs) that are expected to benefit
from the business combination. The carrying amount of goodwill has
been allocated as follows:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Student Information Systems (SIS)
|
24,990
|
25,642
|
Education Services (ES)
|
3,534
|
3,534
|
|
28,524
|
29,176
|
Goodwill is reviewed at least annually for impairment by
comparing the recoverable amount of each cash generating unit (CGU)
with the goodwill, intangible assets and property, plant and
equipment allocated to that CGU.
The recoverable amount of a CGU is determined based on value
in use calculations. These calculations use risk adjusted cash flow
projections based on the financial budget approved by management
for the period to 31 December 2023. The budget was prepared based
on past experience, strategic plans and management's expectation
for the markets in which they operate including adjustments for
known contract ends, contract related inflationary increases and
planned cost savings. From the budget a forecast was extrapolated
by product over a five-year period to give greater clarity on
future cash flows. Cash flows beyond the budget and extrapolation
period were calculated into perpetuity using a 2% growth
assumption. This growth rate is in line with the expected long-term
growth rate of the market in which the business
operates.
The cash flows projections are discounted at a pre-tax
discount rate of 16.0% (2022: 14.5%). The single discount rate,
which is consistently applied for both CGUs, is determined with
reference to internal measures and available industry information
and reflects specific risks relevant to the
Group.
Impairment testing inherently involves a number of
judgemental areas, including the preparation of cash flow forecasts
for periods that are beyond the normal requirements of management
reporting; the assessment of the discount rate appropriate to the
Group and the estimation of the future revenue and expenditure of
each CGU. Accordingly, management undertook stress testing to
understand the key sensitivities and concluded as
follows:
A
rise in discount rate of 280bps and 250bps would trigger an
impairment in SIS and ES respectively. A decline in growth rate of
EBITDA (330bps) in SIS and (290bps) in ES would result in an
impairment.
Management does not believe a reasonably possible change in
the key assumptions may cause impairment.
10. Other Intangible Assets
|
Acquired software
£'000
|
customer contracts & relationships
£'000
|
Acquired
Intellectual property
£'000
|
Development costs £'000
|
Business systems
£'000
|
Software licenses
£'000
|
Total £'000
|
Cost
At 1 January 2022
|
12,233
|
9,753
|
1,873
|
54,013
|
818
|
1,488
|
80,178
|
Adjustments
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
23
|
(30)
|
-
|
(7)
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
10,294
|
75
|
-
|
10,369
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,171)
|
(793)
|
(1,445)
|
(11,409)
|
Exchange differences
|
349
|
149
|
-
|
155
|
5
|
1
|
659
|
At 31 December 2022 and 1 January 2023
|
12,582
|
9,902
|
1,873
|
55,314
|
75
|
44
|
79,790
|
Additions
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
8,479
|
-
|
-
|
8,479
|
Exchange differences
|
(383)
|
(163)
|
-
|
(170)
|
-
|
-
|
(716)
|
At 31 December 2023
|
12,199
|
9,739
|
1,873
|
63,623
|
75
|
44
|
87,553
|
Amortisation
At 1 January 2022
|
8,305
|
6,606
|
809
|
26,399
|
624
|
1,488
|
44,231
|
Charge for the year
|
628
|
470
|
141
|
1,160
|
20
|
-
|
2,419
|
Disposals
|
-
|
-
|
-
|
(9,058)
|
(644)
|
(1,445)
|
(11,147)
|
Exchange differences
|
350
|
113
|
-
|
156
|
-
|
1
|
620
|
At 31 December 2022 and 1 January
2023
|
9,283
|
7,189
|
950
|
18,657
|
-
|
44
|
36,123
|
Charge for the year
|
267
|
458
|
97
|
1,388
|
7
|
-
|
2,217
|
Exchange differences
|
(383)
|
(129)
|
-
|
(169)
|
-
|
-
|
(681)
|
At 31 December 2023
|
9,167
|
7,518
|
1,047
|
19,876
|
7
|
44
|
37,659
|
Carrying amount
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
At 31 December 2023
|
3,032
|
2,221
|
826
|
43,747
|
68
|
-
|
49,894
|
At 31 December 2022
|
3,299
|
2,713
|
923
|
36,657
|
75
|
-
|
43,667
|
Software, customer contracts and relationships and
intellectual property that have arisen from acquisitions are
amortised over their estimated useful lives, which are 3 to 8 years
and 3 to 15 years respectively. The amortisation period for
development costs incurred on the Group's product development is 3
to 15 years, based on the expected life cycle of the product.
Amortisation and impairment of development costs, amortisation for
software, customer contracts and relationships, intellectual
property, business systems and software licenses are all included
within administrative expenses.
Management have reassessed the useful economic life (UEL) of
the previously acquired software relating to the Tribal Dynamics
and Semestry intangible assets. As a result the UEL of these assets
has been aligned with that of the Tribal Edge product, reflecting
the fact that these products are integral to Edge. This has been
treated as a change in accounting estimate from 1 January 2023.
Prior periods have not been adjusted. The net impact of this change
in accounting estimate resulted in a reduced charge to the Income
Statement of £361,000 in the period (Charge to 31 December 2023:
£267,000; under previous estimate £628,000).
The Group is required to test annually if there are any
indicators of impairment and perform an impairment test on all
assets which are under development, irrespective of whether there
is an indicator of impairment. The recoverable amount is determined
based on value in use calculations of identified CGUs. The use of
this method requires the estimation of future cash flows and the
determination of a discount rate in order to calculate the present
value of the cash flows.
The impairment testing allocates all assets relating to
specific CGUs, including goodwill, other intangibles, property,
plant and equipment and net current assets and
liabilities.
11. Trade and other receivables
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Amounts receivable for the sale of services
|
8,834
|
7,387
|
Less: Loss allowance
|
(665)
|
(194)
|
|
8,169
|
7,193
|
Other receivables
|
689
|
828
|
Prepayments
|
4,832
|
4,484
|
|
13,690
|
12,505
|
The Group's principal financial assets are cash and cash
equivalents and trade and other receivables which represent the
Group's maximum exposure to credit risk in relation to financial
assets. The Group's credit risk is primarily related to its trade
receivables. The credit risk on liquid funds is limited because the
counterparties are banks with high credit ratings assigned by
international credit rating agencies.
All receivables are due within one year in both current and
prior years.
The Directors consider that the carrying amount of trade and
other receivables approximates to their fair
value.
Trade receivables
Trade receivables are measured at amortised cost. The average
credit terms on sales is 30 days (20221: 30 days). The Group sells
the majority of its services to the public sector or related bodies
and institutions, and as such there is a low incidence of default
experience.
Of the total trade receivables balance at the end of the year
there were three customers (2022: two) who held balances
outstanding of more than 5% (2026: £1.7m; 2022: £1.6m). The average
age of receivables is 29 days (2022: 40 days).
The Group applies the IFRS 9 simplified approach to measuring
expected credit losses using a lifetime expected credit loss
allowance for trade receivables and accrued income. To measure
expected credit losses on a collective basis, trade receivables and
accrued income are grouped based on similar credit risk and
ageing.
At 31 December 2023 the lifetime expected loss allowance for
trade receivables is as follows:
|
Expected loss rate
|
Gross carrying amount
£'000
|
Loss provision
£'000
|
Current
|
1%
|
7,004
|
39
|
30-60 days
|
9%
|
715
|
62
|
60-90 days
|
18%
|
277
|
50
|
90-180 days
|
34%
|
399
|
137
|
180+ days
|
86%
|
439
|
377
|
Total
|
|
8,834
|
665
|
At 31 December 2022 the lifetime expected loss allowance for
trade receivables is as follows:
Expected
Gross carrying
amount
Loss provision
|
loss rate
|
£'000
|
£'000
|
Current
|
1%
|
6,502
|
66
|
30-60 days
|
8%
|
255
|
19
|
60-90 days
|
39%
|
104
|
40
|
90-180 days
|
10%
|
252
|
25
|
180+ days
|
16%
|
274
|
44
|
Total
|
|
7,387
|
194
|
Movement in the impairment allowance for trade receivables is
as follows:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Balance at the beginning of the year
|
194
|
187
|
IFRS 9 expected credit loss adjustment
|
491
|
75
|
Amounts written off during the year
|
(12)
|
(12)
|
Movements on unused amounts
|
(8)
|
(56)
|
Balance at the end of the year
|
665
|
194
|
Contract assets
Contract assets are measured at amortised cost. Contract
assets inherently have some contractual risks associated with them
related to the specific and ongoing risks in each individual
contract with a customer. These are subject to the expected credit
loss impairment under IFRS 9.
Revenue provisions recognised in the income statement in
respect of contract assets amount to £0.5m (2022:
£0.5m).
12. Trade and other payables
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Current
Trade payables
|
1,283
|
1,010
|
Other taxation and social security
|
3,664
|
2,498
|
Other payables
|
955
|
2,280
|
|
5,902
|
5,788
|
Non-current
Other payables
|
212
|
209
|
|
212
|
209
|
Total
|
6,115
|
5,997
|
The average credit period taken for trade purchases is 30
days (2022: 10 days). For most suppliers, no interest is charged on
the trade payables for the first 30 days from the date of invoice.
Thereafter, in some cases, interest may be charged on the
outstanding balances due to certain suppliers at various interest
rates. The Group has financial risk management policies in place to
ensure that all payables are paid within a reasonable time frame.
The Directors consider that the carrying amount of trade and other
payables approximates their fair value.
Other payables are split as follows:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Goods received not invoiced
|
68
|
712
|
Other creditors
|
888
|
1,568
|
|
956
|
2,280
|
13. Borrowings
The Group had a £2m committed overdraft facility in the UK
and a AUD$2m committed overdraft facility in Australia, both
facilities are committed for a 12-month rolling period ending
August 2024 and October 2024 respectively. At 31 December 2023 none
of the overdraft facilities were drawn. As at 31 December 2023, the
Group had cash and cash equivalents of £6.8m (2022:
£2.9m).
On 29 December 2023 the Group entered into a three-year £20m
multicurrency revolving facility with HSBC, plus a £5m accordion,
with the option to extend by a further two years. The facility was
put in place to cover general corporate and working capital
requirements of the Group, as at 31 December 2023 £14.0m (2022:
£6.3m) of the loan was utilised.
The facility interest charge is set at Sonia +1.85% and the
loan is subject to two covenants: Senior interest cover (ratio of
EBITDA to Senior interest charge) and Total debt cover (ratio of
total debt to EBITDA). The Directors have reviewed the forecast
covenants and do not expect any breach for the foreseeable
future
14. Notes to the cash flow statement
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Operating profit from continuing operations
|
7,261
|
779
|
Depreciation of property, plant and
equipment
|
566
|
623
|
Depreciation of right-of-use assets
|
1,004
|
1,036
|
Amortisation and impairment of other intangible
assets
|
2,217
|
2,419
|
Share-based payments
|
331
|
589
|
Movement in contingent deferred
consideration
|
(115)
|
-
|
Research and development tax credit
|
(141)
|
(177)
|
Net pension credit
|
(9)
|
(29)
|
Other non-cash items
|
(470)
|
23
|
Operating cash flows before movements in working
capital
|
10,644
|
5,263
|
Increase in receivables
|
(423)
|
(808)
|
(Decrease)/increase in payables
|
(853)
|
4,252
|
Net cash from operating activities before
tax
|
9,368
|
8,707
|
Net tax paid
|
(1,060)
|
(2,601)
|
Net cash from operating activities
|
8,308
|
6,106
|
Net cash from operating activities before tax can be analysed
as follows:
|
2023 £'000
|
2022 £'000
|
Continuing operations
|
9,368
|
8,707
|
15. Contingent liabilities
The Company and its subsidiaries have provided performance
guarantees issued by its banks on its behalf, in the ordinary
course of business, totalling £0.1m (2022: £0.8m). These are not
expected to result in any material financial loss and the
likelihood of using these guarantees is assessed as
remote.
Tribal Holdings Limited, Tribal Dynamics Limited and Semestry
Limited have taken advantage of the exemption available under
Section 394A/479A of the Companies Act 2006 in respect of the
requirements for audit. As a condition of the exemption, the
Company has guaranteed the year-end liabilities of these
subsidiaries until they are settled in full. The liabilities of the
subsidiaries at the year-end were £72,799,710 (2022: £64,309,000).
These are inclusive of intercompany liabilities of £69,555,514
(2022: £60,963,020).
The Group delivers complex multi-year projects which from
time to time give rise to significant operational and commercial
risks. Such risks may, in certain circumstances, lead to potential
negotiations or disputes with customers which may give rise to
consequential financial or commercial obligations or liabilities
arising. The Group's contract with Nanyang Technological University
(NTU) has been terminated with both parties reserving rights. NTU
have demanded SGD17,511,651 and USD377,724 on account of alleged
damages, losses, costs and/or expenses which the Group vigorously
disputes. No legal proceedings have been instituted (nor are they
permitted to be brought) until the parties have participated in
mediation in an attempt to achieve a resolution. The timing and
outcome of that process is presently uncertain. It is possible that
there may be a significant adverse financial impact on the Group
but at this juncture it is not practicable for the Board to fully
assess such potential impact, if any.