("Mirriad" or the "Company")
Final Audited Results for the year ended
Mirriad, the leading in-content advertising company, announces its final audited results for the year ended
Financial highlights
· Broadly maintained year-on-year revenue at
· US revenues, the world's largest advertising market, significantly increased by 182% to
· Operating loss widened to
· Strong cash position maintained with net cash at
· Net assets at
KPIs
To further illustrate operating progress of the business, the Company will now report key performance indicators ("KPIs") on an annual basis. The three "supply side" KPIs will allow to track the wider market adoption of the Mirriad platform and the three "demand side" KPIs will allow to track the development of the commercial relationships with agencies, advertisers and partnerships.
KPI |
2020 (baseline) |
2021 |
% Change |
Supply side: 1. Active supply partnerships* 2. Supply partners represented 3. Seconds of content available** |
#16 #28 282,672 secs. |
#25 #46 472,754 secs. |
+56% +64% +67% |
Demand side: 1. Active agency relationships 2. Number of advertisers who have run campaigns 3. Strategic and commercials partnership agreements with advertisers and agencies |
#14 #21 - |
#19 #45 #3 |
+36% +114% N/A |
* Defined as the number of supply partners who ran a campaign during the period
** Defined as the total number of seconds of advertising inventory available for sale during the period
Operational highlights
· Significant increase in overall supply partners. Mirriad now has access to content from 46 content partners globally
· Number of advertisers placing campaigns more than doubled to 45 during the year
· Contract signed in
· Renewal of Tencent partnership effective
· Research studies confirmed that in-content advertising reaches more people than conventional spot advertising with an average increase in reach of +23% across seven campaigns tested
Post period highlights
· First campaign run in
· First campaign run in
· Agreement signed with Springserve for programmatic enablement of in video content in the US market in
· Newly appointed Head of Programmatic Partnerships (US), Head of Studio Partnerships (US), and
Current trading and outlook
· Trading in the current year to
· We continue to invest in the Company and leverage our successes with blue chip advertisers, a roster of now over 100 partners (including supply and demand side partners), the experience of hundreds of campaigns and our market leading reputation
· We are expecting to announce imminently new Board members who will enhance our existing team and help drive the next phase of our business growth
· It is our objective to accelerate the integration of Mirriad's product in the linear and programmatic media ecosystem to establish a new standard in the industry
"As ad markets and budgets started their post pandemic recovery in 2021, it became increasingly clear that brands and advertisers must prioritise diversification to ensure campaign success and relevancy with customers for meaningful business growth. With the simultaneous rise in connected TV and streaming services, we expect further opportunities for us from growth across these new platforms.
"Looking at 2022, Mirriad expects to capitalise on the significant opportunities in the North American market and our launch into the programmatic realm. We will also continue to nurture strong existing relationships in
ENDS
For further information please visit www.mirriad.com or contact:
|
Tel: +44 (0)207 884 2530 |
Nominated Adviser & Broker: Panmure Gordon Alina Vaskina /
|
Tel: +44 (0)20 7886 2500
|
|
Tel: +44 (0) 7741 659021 Tel: +44 (0) 7810 636995
|
This announcement contains inside information for the purposes of Article 7 of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 as it forms part of UK domestic law by virtue of the
Notes to Editors
About Mirriad
Mirriad's award-winning solution unleashes new revenue for content producers and distributors by creating new advertising inventory in content. Our patented, AI and computer vision technology dynamically inserts products and innovative signage formats after content is produced. Mirriad's market-first solution seamlessly integrates with existing subscription and advertising models, and dramatically improves the viewer experience by limiting commercial interruptions.
Mirriad currently operates in the US, Europe and China.
Forward looking statements
Certain information contained in this announcement, including any information as to the Group's strategy, plans or future financial or operating performance, constitutes "forward-looking statements". These forward-looking statements may be identified by the use of forward-looking terminology, including the terms "believes", "estimates", "anticipates", "projects", "expects", "intends", "aims", "plans", "predicts", "may", "will", "seeks" "could" "targets" "assumes" "positioned" or "should" or, in each case, their negative or other variations or comparable terminology, or by discussions of strategy, plans, objectives, goals, future events or intentions. These forward-looking statements include all matters that are not historical facts. They appear in a number of places throughout this announcement and include statements regarding the intentions, beliefs or current expectations of the Directors concerning, among other things, the Group's results of operations, financial condition, prospects, growth, strategies and the industries in which the Group operates. The directors of the Company believe that the expectations reflected in these statements are reasonable, but may be affected by a number of variables which could cause actual results or trends to differ materially. Each forward-looking statement speaks only as of the date of the particular statement.
By their nature, forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties because they relate to events and depend on circumstances that may or may not occur in the future or are beyond the Group's control. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance. Even if the Group's actual results of operations, financial condition and the development of the industries in which the Group operates are consistent with the forward-looking statements contained in this document, those results or developments may not be indicative of results or developments in subsequent periods.
Chairman's statement
2021 was an important year for Mirriad as we enter the critical adoption phase of our unique product and the wider industry understanding of the scale and potential of the in-content advertising market.
It is impossible to review 2021 in full without mentioning the lasting impact of Covid-19 on global advertising markets. While industry reports suggest that budgets started to return towards the end of the year, it has been a prolonged and challenging period for everyone in the advertising and content industries.
Thanks to the ongoing efforts of management and the whole Mirriad team, the Company navigated the pandemic and these difficult conditions which impacted our industry, combining flexibility and determination to make the most of new ways of working. This effort manifested itself in ongoing operational stability and the important ability to swiftly capitalise on returning advertising budgets.
The improved picture Mirriad reported in H2 2021 was primarily driven by growing deal size and deal volume in the US, vindicating our strategic focus on this important market. I am confident the Company has the capacity to ensure this momentum will continue while nurturing the strong partnerships we have built and continue to expand around the globe.
The in-content space Mirriad is building in the world's largest advertising geographies is designed with advertisers, brands and content in mind, but the approach also draws heavily on the Company's creative heritage to appeal to audiences. It offers a route to targeting consumers in a seamless and authentic way that simply does not exist elsewhere in the market.
We were delighted to welcome Philip Mattimoe as Chief Technology Officer in
In line with our ambitions to position Mirriad for future scale, we were also pleased to announce the appointment of Chief Revenue Officer Miles Lewis in
We are also expecting to announce imminently new Board members who will enhance our existing team and help drive the next phase of our business growth.
As the Company continues its growth journey, the Board will be measuring the delivery of our strategic progress by establishing and reporting against several broader non-financial key performance indicators (KPIs) including measures covering active supply and demand partnerships and the volume of available inventory.
Mirriad is also committed to a clear and considered approach to Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) matters, always ensuring a balance between corporate and ESG strategies. To this end, Non-executive director, Kelsey Lynn Skinner has been appointed as the board's ESG lead.
The Company is actively developing its policies in this area, but since last year its estimated carbon emissions, including travel based on pre-COVID-19 patterns, have been offset by purchasing carbon credits.
Despite the need to adapt working practices in line with various national pandemic restrictions, the Company has retained a high employee satisfaction score of 92%.
All senior leaders undertook a three-part course covering diversity and inclusion awareness. A specific diversity and inclusion presentation was given to all other staff and all staff were required to complete a mandatory diversity and equality training course. Mirriad is also proud to have introduced a Company-wide volunteering policy to help staff give back to the communities in which we operate around the globe.
We are also tracking wider progress against the UN Sustainable Development Goals. There is still much more to do in this area and working closely with Kelsey to realise the 2022 ESG plans we have outlined. Progress will be reported in due course.
Looking ahead, there is every reason to be confident that in-content advertising offers a revolutionary solution to challenges faced by brands, content creators and broadcasters. Mirriad's approach counters the growing threat of subscription fatigue by delivering new revenue streams, while also offering a real solution to the rise of ad blocking and entrenched consumer aversion to interruptive advertising.
Every successful campaign run, or partner signed builds awareness of the scale of the in-content opportunity, and Mirriad is in a uniquely strong position to capitalise on growing awareness of, and appetite for, this high value and high potential market segment.
John Pearson
Chief Executive Officer's Statement
Since my appointment in
In the current environment, marketers are facing three major challenges:
1. consumers are shifting to more ad-free or ad-light video environments;
2. current cookie-based targeting is unsustainable; and
3. ad clutter and over-exposure are driving ad-fatigue or avoidance.
Shifting consumer behaviour (issue 1) means that it is more difficult to reach people and if companies don't reach their target audiences their ability to grow is constrained.
The ultimate withdrawal of cookies (issue 2) has increased the complexity of targeting because marketers can't rely on third party cookies to aggregate audiences and target them at scale on the basis of their behaviour. The reduced ability to target creates the need for a new approach to identify and address the right people.
Clutter and over-exposure (issue 3) lead to low consumer attention and make it difficult for advertising to cut through and stay relevant.
The net impact of all of these issues is that as investment increases, audience reach and advertising impact are going down.
By contrast, Mirriad's in-content advertising solution drives improved brand consideration, purchase intent and overall awareness. This conclusion was illustrated by the twelve advertising effectiveness research studies Mirriad carried out in 2021. The superior performance of the format ties back to the to the simple fact that our format is liked by viewers who have a six-fold preference for in-content advertising over conventional spots in commercial breaks and mid/pre-rolls. The Mirriad format is seen as natural, innovative and makes the brands involved more appealing to consumers.
Our approach is radically different to conventional advertising. Rather than adding more noise to the overcrowded space of ad breaks that, in a typical broadcast environment represent around 6% of people's viewing time, we utilise the 94% of viewing time represented by the content itself. Untouched by conventional advertising this viewing time represents untapped reach, attention and relevance. This approach means that we reach on average 23% more viewers than for the equivalent TV spot breaks in the same content (based on Nielsen research data).
The huge potential of this largely unrealised opportunity is something we are constantly promoting to new partners and this is why we are confident about the future potential for Mirriad and our
Strategic approach
Our strategy is based on the twin pillars of driving adoption and integrating with the linear and programmatic media buying ecosystem. As we build out against these two pillars and work to automate more of our actitivity we will achieve scale.
Since 2020 we've been investing in the development of Mirriad in the US. The US is the largest media and advertising market in the world and forecast to be significantly larger than the next five biggest advertising markets. In 2021 we saw the first signs of success with rapidly rising H2 revenues and deal numbers in the US. This was delivered by incrementally increased sales power, a strong roster of new content partners and growing relationships with major advertisers and their agencies.
This progress in North America is parallel tracked by progress in the other markets where we have distinct strategies in place. There were positive developments in these markets too. Innovative new deals with CANAL+
The rapidly increasing available inventory across more content categories is starting to make a difference by stimulating the demand side. This is creating a virtuous circle and we will continue to invest in both the demand and supply sides of the market with a view to sustaining this positive momentum.
There is no escaping the fact that the COVID-19 pandemic cost us time. Throughout 2021, we highlighted that advertising budgets were taking longer than expected to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. We also emphasised that the focus on both the demand and supply sides of the market had been on building back versus the new and innovative thus lengthening the buying cycle with respect to in-content. Recent industry reports indicate that we are moving into a recovery phase. As this happens, Mirriad is offering a positive solution to the long-standing decline in reach of advertisers' TV campaigns, with this reality particularly pronounced amongst younger viewers.
Business focus and performance
We are delivering against our strategic targets of adoption, integration and automation. In terms of adoption, we are now working with a record number of active content partners, in a wide range of sectors and geographies. On integration, we are initiating our programmatic path with an integration with Springserve, a leading ad serving platform for the over-the-top and connected TV space, and working on test campaigns with dynamically inserted in-content ads. We have also developed and adapted our systems to launch a new solution with
Beyond these core achievements, we have signed important new supply partner agreements and ended the year with 25 active supply partners (that is partners with whom we had run a campaign in 2021) a 25% increase on the number of contracted supply partners shown at the end of 2020. Every contract signed in the past year has brought different opportunities to our business. Whether this is high quality inventory, additional verticals, a progressive buying model delivered at scale with
Last year I outlined the need to add more sales capacity in the US and I am pleased to report that we have delivered on this. To sustain momentum and drive adoption in this strategically important market we will continue to add resource into our US sales and business development teams to support the increases in deal volume and deal size seen in the latter half of 2021.
Technological progress
Strategic partnerships also mean we have passed important new technological milestones. These include the Springserve integration in the US that will help accelerate Mirriad's strategy to make in-content inventory available at scale in industry-leading digital media buying platforms.
Every development in this space is designed to ensure Mirriad fits seamlessly into the ad-buying process, and we are further progressing in this space with CPM pricing advances. Our aim is that Mirriad will become a 'line item' in existing systems and a go-to for format decision makers in this space.
We have increased the number of accessible content hours analysed by almost 300% (to 5,232 from 1,318 in 2020) in the past year, underlining the additional content supply the Company now has at its fingertips.
Our protected technology and platform is central to our business. Driven by our expert team, we will continue to innovate to future-proof the business and ensure we protect our position as the leading in-content advertising company.
Outlook
The Company's trading in the current year to
The market needs a new advertising solution. I believe Mirriad's platform more than meets the needs of our partners. This has been demonstrated by our results and the growing adoption of our solution. We aim to continue to invest in the Company and leverage our successes with blue chip advertisers, a roster of now over 100 partners (across the supply and demand sides of the market), the experience of hundreds of campaigns and our market leading reputation. It is our intention that the integration of Mirriad's product will bring a new standard to the industry.
I would like to thank our employees, the Board, our partners and the investors who continue to support us on this journey. Everyone at Mirriad is focused on delivering the agreed strategy to ultimately generate long-term shareholder value. We building a business for the long-term and also leading what has the potential to be a transformative new advertising segment.
Stephan Beringer
Chief Executive Officer
Financial review
COVID-19 continued to impact the world's advertising markets in 2021 particularly in the first half. Although we are reporting a slight fall in year on year revenues this masks significant improvements in the range and volume of work we undertook and the significant progress we made in developing our US market. Overall Mirriad saw an increase in underlying campaign activity, particularly in the second half of 2021.
Zenith advertising forecast figures, published in
During the year we focused particularly on investment in our US operations as the scale of the opportunity in the US market is significantly greater than any other market. The US remains the world's largest advertising market with revenues estimated at just over
2021 results
Revenue for the year was slightly lower than the prior year at
During the year revenues from the US expanded fast and have begun to replace the revenue historically guaranteed in our
European revenues also increased during the year and we were particularly pleased to run our first campaign on
In China we focused on renewal of our relationship with
As a result of a modest increase in the level of investment in staff associated with our cost of sales on a broadly flat revenue base, gross margin reduced slightly to
The Group's principal operating cost remains staff. We previously reported that we intended to increase investment in our staff base focused on our sales and technology teams. Underlying headcount has increased from 106 at the end of 2020 to 130 at the end of 2021. Over the course of 2021, administrative expenses increased to
Mirriad has continued to review and monitor the application of IAS 38 with respect to the capitalisation of development cost. We continue to take the view that due to the uncertainty of future revenue generation we will not capitalise any development cost in 2021 even though technology remains key to the Company's business and internally generated software and IP remain a key focus for future development of the business. Accordingly, the income statement includes
The increase in operating costs and slight reduction in gross margin fed through to EBITDA with the EBITDA loss increasing to
Likewise, the loss for the year before tax increased to
Tax
During the year we reviewed our approach to claiming R&D tax credits and reviewed previously submitted claims for 2019 and 2020. Accordingly, there is a significant tax credit reported in the 2021 income statement which includes increases in the prior years' tax credits. At the time of drafting the increased claim for 2019 has been approved by HM Revenue & Customs which gives us a degree of confidence that the revised claim for 2020 and the initial claim for 2021 will also be approved. Taken together these three claims have resulted in a total credit to the income statement of
The Group has not recognised any tax assets in respect of trading losses arising in the current financial year or accumulated losses in previous financial years. The tax credit recognised in the current and previous financial years arises from the receipt of R&D tax credits.
Earnings per share
Loss per share was 4p per share (2020: loss of 4p per share) as a result of the increase in operating costs over the year and the increase in the Company's weighted average number of shares in issue during the financial year following the increase in share capital in
Dividend
No dividend has been proposed for the year ended
Cash flow
Net cash used in operations was
No shares were issued during the year other than as a result of the exercise of share options. Net proceeds from the issue of shares totalled
Balance sheet
Net assets decreased to
Accounting policies
The Group's consolidated financial information has been prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards in conformity with the requirements of the Companies Act 2006. The Group's significant accounting policies, which have been applied consistently throughout the year, are set out in the annual report.
Going concern
The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis notwithstanding the Group having made a loss for the year of
After making enquiries and producing cash flow forecasts for the period up to
David Dorans
Consolidated statement of profit or loss
For the year ended
|
|
Year ended |
Year ended |
|
|
31 December |
31 December |
|
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
Note |
£ |
£ |
Revenue |
3 |
2,009,721 |
2,179,919 |
Cost of sales |
|
(293,627) |
(244,359) |
Gross profit |
|
1,716,094 |
1,935,560 |
Administrative expenses |
|
(13,936,458) |
(11,216,312) |
Other operating income |
|
200,982 |
188,306 |
Operating loss |
4 |
(12,019,382) |
(9,092,446) |
Finance income |
|
9,907 |
34,339 |
Finance costs |
|
(10,768) |
(30,702) |
Finance income - net |
|
(861) |
3,637 |
Loss before income tax |
|
(12,020,243) |
(9,088,809) |
Income tax credit |
|
1,047,771 |
32,429 |
Loss for the year |
|
(10,972,472) |
(9,056,380) |
Loss per Ordinary Share - basic |
5 |
(4p) |
(4p) |
All activities are classified as continuing.
Consolidated statement of comprehensive income
For the year ended
|
Year ended |
Year ended |
|
31 December |
31 December |
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
£ |
£ |
Loss for the financial year |
(10,972,472) |
(9,056,380) |
Other comprehensive loss |
|
|
Items that may be reclassified to profit or loss: |
|
|
Exchange differences on translation of foreign operations |
(216,756) |
(646) |
Total comprehensive loss for the year |
(11,189,228) |
(9,057,026) |
Items in the statement above are disclosed net of tax.
Consolidated balance sheet
At
|
Group |
|
|
|
As at |
As at |
|
|
31 December |
31 December |
|
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
|
£ |
£ |
|
Assets |
|
|
|
Non-current assets |
|
|
|
Property, plant and equipment |
767,396 |
636,543 |
|
Intangible assets |
- |
- |
|
Investments |
- |
- |
|
Trade and other receivables |
162,962 |
186,021 |
|
|
930,358 |
822,564 |
|
Current assets |
|
|
|
Trade and other receivables |
1,892,152 |
1,475,785 |
|
Other current assets |
1,116,320 |
72,993 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
24,501,214 |
35,421,396 |
|
|
27,509,686 |
36,970,174 |
|
Total assets |
28,440,044 |
37,792,738 |
|
Liabilities |
|
|
|
Non-current liabilities |
|
|
|
Lease liabilities |
411,993 |
204,437 |
|
|
411,993 |
204,437 |
|
Current liabilities |
|
|
|
Trade and other payables |
2,866,773 |
1,913,845 |
|
Current tax liabilities |
2,481 |
13,361 |
|
Lease liabilities |
217,825 |
390,220 |
|
|
3,087,079 |
2,317,426 |
|
Total liabilities |
3,499,072 |
2,521,863 |
|
Net assets |
24,940,972 |
35,270,875 |
|
Equity and liabilities |
|
|
|
Equity attributable to owners of the parent |
|
|
|
Share capital |
52,690 |
52,688 |
|
Share premium |
65,754,666 |
65,710,297 |
|
Share-based payment reserve |
3,665,525 |
2,850,571 |
|
Retranslation reserve |
(360,054) |
(143,298) |
|
Accumulated losses |
(44,171,855) |
(33,199,383) |
|
Total equity |
24,940,972 |
35,270,875 |
|
Consolidated statement of changes in equity
For the year ended
|
Year ended |
|||||
|
|
|
Share-based |
Retranslation |
Accumulated |
|
|
Share capital |
Share premium |
payment reserve |
reserve |
losses |
Total equity |
|
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
Balance at |
52,029 |
40,932,183 |
2,500,944 |
(142,652) |
(24,143,003) |
19,199,501 |
Loss for the financial year |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(9,056,380) |
(9,056,380) |
Other comprehensive loss for the year |
- |
- |
- |
(646) |
- |
(646) |
Total comprehensive loss for the year |
- |
- |
- |
(646) |
(9,056,380) |
(9,057,026) |
Proceeds from shares issued |
659 |
26,228,815 |
- |
- |
- |
26,229,474 |
Share issue costs |
- |
(1,450,701) |
- |
- |
- |
(1,450,701) |
Share-based payments recognised as expense |
- |
- |
349,627 |
- |
- |
349,627 |
Total transactions with shareholders recognised directly in equity |
659 |
24,778,114 |
349,627 |
- |
- |
25,128,400 |
Balance at |
52,688 |
65,710,297 |
2,850,571 |
(143,298) |
(33,199,383) |
35,270,875 |
|
Year ended |
|||||
|
|
|
Share-based |
Retranslation |
Accumulated |
|
|
Share capital |
Share premium |
payment reserve |
reserve |
losses |
Total equity |
|
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
£ |
Balance at |
52,688 |
65,710,297 |
2,850,571 |
(143,298) |
(33,199,383) |
35,270,875 |
Loss for the financial year |
- |
- |
- |
- |
(10,972,472) |
(10,972,472) |
Other comprehensive loss for the year |
- |
- |
- |
(216,756) |
- |
(216,756) |
Total comprehensive loss for the year |
- |
- |
- |
(216,756) |
(10,972,472) |
(11,189,228) |
Proceeds from shares issued |
2 |
44,369 |
- |
- |
- |
44,371 |
Share-based payments recognised as expense |
- |
- |
814,954 |
- |
- |
814,954 |
Total transactions with shareholders recognised directly in equity |
2 |
44,369 |
814,954 |
- |
- |
859,325 |
Balance at |
52,690 |
65,754,666 |
3,665,525 |
(360,054) |
(44,171,855) |
24,940,972 |
Consolidated statement of cash flows
For the year ended
|
Group |
|
|
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
|
£ |
£ |
|
Cash flow used in operating activities |
(10,450,796) |
(8,146,368) |
|
Tax credit received |
72,993 |
99,886 |
|
Taxation paid |
(46,928) |
(17,697) |
|
Interest received |
9,907 |
34,339 |
|
Lease interest paid |
(10,768) |
(30,702) |
|
Net cash used in operating activities |
(10,425,592) |
(8,060,542) |
|
Cash flow from investing activities |
|
|
|
Investment in subsidiaries |
- |
- |
|
Purchase of tangible assets |
(159,250) |
(25,202) |
|
Proceeds from disposal of tangible assets |
- |
100 |
|
Net cash used in investing activities |
(159,250) |
(25,102) |
|
Cash flow from financing activities |
|
|
|
Proceeds from issue of Ordinary Share capital |
44,371 |
24,778,773 |
|
Payment of lease liabilities |
(379,711) |
(363,346) |
|
Net cash (used in) / generated from financing activities |
(335,340) |
24,415,427 |
|
Net (decrease) / increase in cash and cash equivalents |
(10,920,182) |
16,329,783 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year |
35,421,396 |
19,091,613 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year |
24,501,214 |
35,421,396 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents consists of: |
|
|
|
Cash at bank and in hand |
24,501,214 |
35,421,396 |
|
Cash and cash equivalents |
24,501,214 |
35,421,396 |
|
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the year ended
1. Corporate Information
2. Basis of preparation
The financial information set out above does not constitute the Group's statutory accounts for the years ended
On
The financial statements of
The accounting policies applied are consistent with those of the annual report and accounts for the year ended 31 December
2020.
(a) New standards, amendments and interpretations
The Group has applied the following standards and amendments for the first time for the annual reporting period commencing
• Interest Rate Benchmark Reform Phase 2 - Amendments to IFRS 9, IAS 39, IFRS 7 and IFRS 16;
• Covid-19 related rent concessions beyond
The amendments listed above did not have any impact on the amounts recognised in prior periods and are not expected to significantly affect the current or future periods.
(b) New standards, amendments and interpretations not yet adopted
A number of new standards and amendments to standards and interpretations are effective for annual periods beginning after
3. Segment information
Management mainly considers the business from a geographic perspective since the same services are effectively being sold in every Group entity. Therefore regions considered for segmental reporting are where the Company and subsidiaries are based, namely the UK, the USA, India and China. The revenue is classified by where the sales were booked not by the geographic location of the customer. For this reporting purpose the Singapore and China entities are considered together.
The only income outside of the primary business activity relates to income received from grants which is recognised in other operating income.
Operating segments are reported in a manner consistent with the internal reporting provided to the chief operating decision maker. The chief operating decision maker, which is responsible for allocating resources and assessing performance of the operating segments, has been identified as the steering committee that makes strategic decisions. The steering committee is made up of the Board of Directors. There are no sales between segments. The revenue from external parties reported to the strategic steering committee is measured in a manner consistent with that in the income statement.
The parent company is domiciled in the United Kingdom. The amount of revenue from external customers by location of the Group billing entity is shown in the tables below.
|
2021 |
2020 |
Revenue |
£ |
£ |
Turnover by geography |
|
|
China |
981,164 |
1,765,196 |
USA |
884,248 |
313,967 |
UK |
144,309 |
100,756 |
Total |
2,009,721 |
2,179,919 |
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
£ |
£ |
Turnover by category |
|
|
Rendering of services |
2,009,721 |
2,179,919 |
Total |
2,009,721 |
2,179,919 |
|
2021 |
2020 |
Revenues from external customers by country, based on the destination of the customer |
£ |
£ |
China |
981,164 |
1,780,905 |
USA |
863,960 |
313,967 |
UK |
41,475 |
21,700 |
France |
35,399 |
31,559 |
Turkey |
26,194 |
22,010 |
Canada |
20,288 |
- |
Spain |
19,684 |
- |
Germany |
12,800 |
- |
Other |
8,757 |
9,778 |
Total |
2,009,721 |
2,179,919 |
4. Operating loss
The Group operating loss is stated after charging/(crediting):
|
|
2021 |
2020 |
|
Note |
£ |
£ |
Employee benefits |
7 |
9,398,756 |
7,559,195 |
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment |
12 |
440,390 |
466,097 |
Foreign exchange movements |
|
(247,956) |
28,040 |
Other general and administrative costs |
|
4,638,895 |
3,407,339 |
Other operating income |
|
(200,982) |
(188,306) |
Total cost of sales, administrative expenses and other operating income |
|
14,029,103 |
11,272,365 |
Other operating income includes income received from government grants and research and development expenditure credits. The Group has complied with all the conditions attached to these grant awards.
Included within Employee benefits costs are share based payments for the year ended
5. Loss per share
Basic loss per share is calculated by dividing the loss for the year by the weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue during the year. Potential Ordinary Shares are not treated as dilutive as the Group is loss making and such shares would be anti-dilutive.
Group |
2021 |
2020 |
Loss attributable to owners of the parent (£) |
(10,972,472) |
(9,056,380) |
Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares in issue (number) |
279,091,959 |
215,687,030 |
The loss per share for the year was 4p (2020: 4p).
No dividends were paid during the year (2020: £nil).
(b) Diluted
Potential Ordinary Shares are not treated as dilutive as the Group is loss making and such shares would be anti-dilutive.
6. Related party transactions
The Group is owned by a number of investors, the largest being
During the year the Company had the following significant related party transactions. No guarantees were given or received for any of these transactions:
Transactions with Directors
There were no transactions with Directors during the year.
In the prior year the following Directors purchased Ordinary Shares in the Company at a cost of
Director |
Number of shares |
John Pearson |
25,000 |
Stephan Beringer |
25,000 |
David Dorans |
2,500 |
Alastair Kilgour |
25,000 |
Bob Head |
50,000 |
Transactions with other related parties
All the related party transactions disclosed above were settled by
During the year ended
The Directors have authority and responsibility for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the Group and they therefore comprise key management personnel as defined by IAS 24 "Related party disclosures". Remuneration of Directors and senior management is disclosed in the Remuneration Report.