Why are you calling on the UK Government to invest over ÂŁ100M in a publicity splurge to raise the profile of geospatial tech amongst entrepreneurs ?
Thereâs a huge amount of heritage, provenance and expertise in the UKâs geospatial sector, not least of all in our armed forces. The Royal Air Force specifically has extremely well-developed roots and careers, and their output is highly regarded amongst the UK and the US.
Weâre in a place where the world really matters, but equally, the data we can get from places on the planet really matters. And yet, even at a governmental level, weâve got this consumerist attitude to that data, where weâre prepared to buy it at an extortionate rate. And sometimes, weâre prepared to buy it at value-based levels, but at others weâre paying a premium for it â when actually we could grow it ourselves. For me, thatâs what intellectual property is all about.
If the UK wants to sit on its own and has decided to vote its way out of the EU, then thatâs great â letâs follow the democratic trail. But the thing that we should really be worrying about is our home. I donât want to force this down anyoneâs throats, but we have the pedigree, the history, the experience, and the skill set. But this will just fade if no one invests the money. I think the real issue is that there is a lack of awareness of who and what is available in the UK right now.
A little bit of cash could put us on the world stage against companies like Maxar. Itâs a matter of it not being a huge issue to put some cash in and see a huge amount out the other end.
So you're trying to convince them that the money they'd invest would be worth it?
Without the money, geospatial tech will just become a diminishing factor in the UKâs technology sectors. And I actually think that we could argue the UK is failing to invest enough in technology as a whole. Geospatial technology is one of those huge sectors that would allow the government to practise what they preach: understanding and acting on information derived from real stuff â demographic data, satellite imagery, fishing, farming, borders, and so on.
What exactly is the UK Geospatial Strategy for 2030?
I think the real questions for you should be: whoâs the arbiter for that investment? Are we looking again at a government spend thatâs already earmarked?
We could spend the cash, we can earmark it, and we can make it accountable. But is it really in the UK, or is it in the UK defence industry?
I ask those questions â and I might sound hugely pompous having done so â but there doesnât seem to be any huge structure behind the strategy. There isnât any substantial framework in its promise to make the UK openly accountable and to introduce the investment of that cash.
It just feels like another huge, big-hand strategy; and yet, in my own mind, I can defend it by going, âwell, maybe thatâs what Iâm looking for!â Iâd like to have those questions answered because, if we are both trying to do the same thing, then that would be amazing.
Let me help you! Who do I need to speak to to transmit the information I have and make a meaningful impact on where that money goes?
How can startups and entrepreneurs help the British government achieve their goals?
I think itâs a question about innovation. And actually, itâs not on one person to force their opinion onto other people or to convince them. We fundamentally live within our brains. Our entire reality is subjective. We have no objective understanding of what itâs like to be another person. So, to get all furious about a person missing the point is kind of missing the point itself. We should maybe ask the other question: âwhy do I feel so opposed to something, and what context am I missing?â
But if we absolve ourselves of that responsibility for a moment, I think innovation is really the core of this question.
A startup, by definition, is a spaceship doomed to crash. Anyone whoâs evangelising their startup or their new business otherwise is totally insane. But for those who are doing it âeyes wide openâ or have maybe done it a couple of times, they understand that the numbers just simply donât add up. The probability is youâre going to spank into the ground in a huge explosion, but we live in a country where, if you walk away, youâll absolutely live on.
How amazing â and what a rush. Accelerated innovation only takes place with a huge amount of risk, and startups are an absolute firecracker to promote innovation that would help the government.
I think the UK government has always understood that they need those firecrackers. With entrepreneurs and their startups, they can make catastrophic mistakes, pick themselves up, and go out and do it again.
Itâs societally a good thing that these entrepreneurs donât work or try to work in a corporate environment that will cause pain and trouble. If we take enough of these people, with enough good intention, motivation, and application, and throw them at a wall, show them that we can do that a couple of times without completely destroying them, then weâre going to see some gold.
I think itâs just the natural order of things. The government benefits from these ideas, and also through patents and British licencing. I think itâs âeyes wide openâ from both sides. I hope it is, because if there are any entrepreneurs going out there who do not see that the odds are stacked against them, then I think they need a therapy doll.
So is it risky to start a business nowadays?
Itâs about what you value. Whatâs risky about starting a business in the UK? You end up with no money and no business. No oneâs going to come and cut your head off.
Actually, the biggest risk is that public speaking is one of the English peopleâs worst nightmares. Worse than death! Many people are more concerned with humiliation than they are with living. So, they would rather conform and have an average life than do something they believe in and risk someone humiliating them over it.
The biggest risk of screwing up in your startup is you have to start up again.
As long as you can maintain your humanity, no one else has to suffer because of your trial and error. And most importantly, we donât learn anything until we mess up. Failure is the greatest teacher. Fail as often as possible and come out the other end richer. Maybe a bit bruised, but thatâs progress.
Youâve got to screw it up, is my advice. Do it when youâre young, and you have lots of energy.
Iâve screwed up so many times. As a young kid, I was expelled from school twice. I was literally considered to be some sort of failure by my teachers in all the schools Iâve been to. But living that misery was a blessing in disguise because when I went out into the world, my status quo was failure.
I realised very early on that there were some brilliant people who would never apply their brilliance because the most terrifying thing in their life was failing. I see it a lot with overachieving people who have had a wildly successful education, maybe in Oxford or Cambridge, maybe through a PhD. They then got some great executive jobs where theyâre heading up some massive technology project. But when you tell them they could do so much more, they often just go, âno way, too risky, canât mess it up.â
As Jean-Jacques Rousseau said, weâre born free and forever in chains. We create our own prisons as human beings.
And, I know Iâm borrowing other peopleâs words, but I believe that. I see it all the time around me â and I think thatâs a shame. If we all understood how freeing not just failure but occupying a space of your choosing was, worrying slightly less about what everyone else thought, then progress would come a lot easier to the human race.
We wouldnât be sat here with such disparity in wealth. We wouldnât be sat here massively concerned with how weâre going to convince someone to stop screwing up their own planet.
Is the UK collaborating with the European Space Agency or has Brexit made things difficult?
We can buy products from the European Space Agency (ESA) regardless of the British government. The danger is people becoming apathetic to the fact that the British Government just arenât having those conversations.
They understand that British business is just going to circumvent them to talk to people like the ESA or private companies who have geospatial satellites. It would be great if they would see the value in that relationship.
Iâm pretty confident that there are a lot of scientific advisors hanging off the coattails of ministers going, âwe have a space agency just over here, we could do all of this amazing stuff. If itâs about priorities, this is the highest priority; and if you donât listen, Iâll just get louder.â
Itâs not because I want to bang my own drum; itâs just that it would be a criminal waste of energy, human resources, and experience if the UK didnât utilise its own sector.
We can buy satellite data from the US, but who knows what the checks and balances will be? For example, if the US was able to buy satellite imagery at zero hour, as in the moment itâs taken, I would assume down the line they would say: âright, other countries can have the six-hour-old stuff because we want the latest, because it helps our military industrial complex.â
It becomes not secret but controlled information. And Iâm in danger of walking down some sort of conspiratorial side here. But itâs business. The US values that stuff for a really, really good reason.
I think we all have our union. We donât need a passport or the government to tell us what our union is. Iâm still able to go to the lakes in Italy or Tarifa and kite surf with a Hispanic hippie. No one cares â and thatâs great. Thatâs what is wonderful about the human race. Itâs just about making your way through, even at an individual level, but also at a community level. You deal with the constraints; you work around them. Brexit is just one of those.
Could you tell our readers more about Animus Bytes?
If my life was a novel, itâd be a dark comedy. Having catastrophically left a business that I started, I swore to never to start another business again. Then life laughed in my face and put me in a position where someone went:
âHey, Tom, we really need some help with some software.â
And thereâs that little voice again. Itâs always, âwhy are they talking to you?â
So, I was like, âokay, so what do you need?â
And they said, âwe would like you to do it.â
Thatâs how I found myself in a place where I had an opportunity to start another business. The universe is conspiring to look after me despite my best efforts. So, I sat back, and I thought about names. Animus is a reference to some of Carl Jungâs work, as in the Anima and Animus.
I had this other opportunity, and I was put in a place where I had choices. And my answer to that choice was to start the business. I could have done it in a lot of different ways; but I promised myself that if I did this, I wouldnât want to start lifestyle business.
Thereâs enough lifestyle going on, so Animus had to have meaning. And, whether I was the only one who thought it or not, I wanted it to be something that could incrementally solve more complex problems.
Communication is the art of getting your point across. For example, the Americans and the Brits are cursed by the fact that we think we share a common language. We donât.
We use some words that sound the same but have very, very different meanings. I want to take Animus to a place where weâre solving very complex problems that are very meaningful in their output. But weâve got to get to know people. Itâs going to be a long journey. And that was really, I suppose, the challenge to myself.
Weâre now in a place where Animus is getting to know people. Weâre starting to solve those problems; weâre starting to understand what they really mean â and what the real trouble is. Because weâve all got our subjective reality, Iâd like to get to know other peopleâs reality and find out what the common theme is. And perhaps weâll finish doing something that really matters.
Migrant Watch, is an application developed by Animus Bytes that pinpoints the real-time location of vulnerable migrants in need of rescue at sea. You display a real anthropism and a liking for human kindness. What in your journey has led you to embrace such values?
I kind of engineer my way out of stuff here and there â and some of the things I build, I might just build for myself.
But, I need that relationship with someone to understand what their problem is and to really dive into why itâs important to them. Migrant Watch is a result of a conversation with an analyst who was working on trying to identify areas of concern for migrants and their positions. And it took maybe 45 minutes of his time to describe it to me. For me, itâs like, âwhy is this a problem? How can we hook up the ships to find these people when we donât have a latitude and longitude for them?â
But weâve got all this other data, and weâre figuring it out manually. Weâre watching Tweet Deck. Literally. Weâre looking for tweets of migrants in danger, and then weâre trying to locate where they are.
Some meaningful problems arenât very sexy, but they really help â and theyâre human-focused. I could have dedicated a week of my time with analyst whoâs working on a problem just to ask, âdoes this help? Itâs commercially invalid. Itâs the worst business decision anyone could make.â But hey, Iâm that guy â and thatâs how Migrant Watch came about.
Is there someone who inspires you?
Human kindness inspires me. Everywhere Iâve been, everywhere Iâve travelled, the people who have helped me had no good reason to help me. Itâs often been a total stranger whoâs done something meaningful for me, and then left without me having the opportunity to say thank you, or to perhaps relay to them how meaningful that action was.
The spirit of that, whatever it is, inspires me. I think, fundamentally, people are good. I donât particularly want to talk about it, but if we went to Palestine or Israel, weâd find wonderful people â and some mixed-up messaging, for sure.
But weâd find peace anywhere. Iâve been to some of the âworstâ places on the planet, according to lots of people. But I found some real beauty and kindness, with people just making do, smiling and coming to help. And that inspires me because I feel that as well; I try to give that to people when I can. For all the naysayers and the negativity, we live in a place where, despite lots of suffering, people are still kind. We should respect that.
Tom O'Sullivan is the CEO of Animus Bytes.