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Lumison team up with private equity firm

One of Scotland's longest-established internet businesses has been snapped up by a private equity firm as a springboard for an acquisition spree in the fast-growing IT services sector. It is understood that chief executive and founder of Lumison, Aydin Kurt-Elli, and his family, will have made a substantial six-figure sum from selling a majority stake for an undisclosed sum to London-based Bridgepoint Development Capital (BDC).

Lumison Logo

Kurt-Elli, 37, named young business leader of the year in the Scottish Leadership Awards last month, said: "We now have the firepower available to expand and accelerate the range of services we can offer thanks to this timely and strategically important development for our business."

Lumison, which turns over more than £7 million, employs about 50 people at its base in Leith, near the Scottish Government offices. It boasts some 2,500 clients in the UK including drinks groups Drambuie and Caledonian Brewery and education IT company RM. Kurt-Elli will remain as chief executive of the company he started up as EdNet when in his early-20s in 1995. He told The Scotsman that, although he was selling down his majority 60 per cent holding, he would retain "a substantial minority stake". He and his family are reinvesting part of the proceeds in the new business."Existing investors have done well and we are all very pleased with the transaction," Kurt-Elli said.

Lumison acts as the outsourced partner for managing clients' IT infrastructure, hosting key hardware in secure physical facilities and providing network managed services that allow clients to connect securely to the internet and other locations.

BDC, part of the Bridgepoint international private equity group, said it saw Lumison as "a first step" in building a larger IT services group focused on serving the small and medium-sized business market.BDC said Mark Howling, formerly a senior executive with Computacenter, will become executive chairman of Lumison and would "work with the existing management team to grow the business both organically and by serial acquisition".

Kurt-Elli added: "Our growth so far has been organic, a sort of bootstrap business. Every penny we have earned we have invested back in the business. But it is different when you start looking for inorganic growth (acquisitions].

Read the full story at The Scotsman

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