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TRANSCRIPT
325 CONSULTING
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
SERIESINTERVIEW
WITH
JONATHAN PROSSERGroup GM – Strategy & Growth
Cronulla Sharks
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
BIOGRAPHYJonathan Prosser is the Head of Strategy & Growth at the Cronulla Sharks Group. His remit is tobuild a financially sound organisation whilst strengthening the club's position as the beating heart ofthe community, working on the Sharks Have Heart Foundation (the socialimpact arm of the Group),the Football Club, the Licensed Club, and other entities relating to residential and retaildevelopments, R&D and innovation.
The Sharks have a strong and growing reputation for true innovation. As has been seen from recentmedia coverage outside of the sports pages, the Sharks are doing things differently.
Jonathan is known for his creativity and for always bringing a unique perspective. He is the founder ofthe boutique sports agency Racing Green, is a mentor for the Branson Centre for Entrepreneurship,and in his consulting days led two award winning programs.
He describes his time in Accenture’s business strategy practice in London as an onthejob MBA ashe worked crossindustry and across many functions to build a very broad skill set. His time atAccenture was capped with a secondment to the company’s thinktank, the Institute for HighPerformance, a global team of c.22 economists, academics and strategists in a company of 370,000which focuses on developing thoughtleadership, leading papers and media articles.
CRONULLA SHARKS - 2016 NRL PREMIERSWhat factors do you credit to the Cronulla Sharks winning the Premiership for thefirst time in fifty years?
The work done to recruit the right squad is of course critical, particularly in the backs to bring the
flair to match the firepower of the forwards. James Maloney and Chad Townsend have been
outstanding, Ben Barba was voted the Member’s player of the year, and the backs quickly gelled
to play a very exciting style of play.
The second piece is putting the right leadership in place, with Lyall Gorman our Group CEO at the
helm. Having the right values and vision at the top permeates through all parts of the club and the
Group. This has enabled all involved to think bigger, to aim for more, and to be inspired to give
their all to not only stretch and fulfil their own potential, but to help their colleagues, and every
single day make a difference in the organisation and the wider community.
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
I really love sport, so it’s not hard to bounce out of bed every day and give my all to shaping and
improving a major sports organisation. Also, my experience and interests cover three main areas:
foreign affairs and diplomacy, business big and small, and sport on and off the field.
For the first time I have a role where I can bring together these three areas in my daily work, and do
so in a unique role as an inhouse entrepreneur focusing on nontraditional growth. I have a lot of fun.
What is the best thing about your job?
CAREER RELATED QUESTIONS
Are there any exciting initiatives at The Cronulla Sharks that we should be looking outfor in the next 12 months ?
Projects broadly fall into one of two areas: developing the existing business, and growth through new
and innovative ways. We have invested in senior and highly experienced people to help us uplift the
traditional components such as commercial partnerships, membership and our stadium. In parallel to
this we are working to add new revenue lines that will contribute to building a financially sound
organisation with the focus on the next 50 years of the club.
On the 28th October we announced a new partnership with Japan’s largest tea producer, Ito En.
They are seeking growth in Australia, and are working with us exclusively. The interesting thing is that
this is not a sponsorship deal. There is no branding, nor player or coach involvement. They are our
first professional services client, looked after by our inhouse business growth agency. We hosted a
tea ceremony to announce the partnership, and it was a real honour to have Treasurer Scott Morrison
attend and share his thoughts on this type of innovation in business. Channel 10 news had an
exclusive and more on this can be found here:
http://www.sharks.com.au/news/2016/10/29/_it_s_a_true_reflect.html
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
What advice would you give someone transitioning from a consulting firm to a rolein industry?
For me it’s all about the people. Do certain people gravitate to certain industries? Perhaps.
What I have found is that the spark which drives people to give their best needs to be aligned to a
sector that truly fascinates them. Often this means that people you enjoy working with move
towards a certain sector, and there is a lot more fun to be found if you can align your skills and
passion with an industry.
If you can’t, then it’s the entrepreneur’s choice: accept second best or create something new.
Those seeking true fulfillment only see one option there.
“How can we help more people in the UK’s most deprived communities gain employment and
independence?”
I led a pro bono program with the charity School of Hard Knocks. They inspire and enable individuals
to gain and retain employment, and they work in the most deprived communities of the UK with the
socially excluded. They are the charity behind the hit Sky TV show, but faced the challenge of
growing their organisation to match the size and impact of their brand.
What started with their incredibly inspiring CEO and me working sidebyside, grew to 20 consultants
working across 15 strategy projects, all under that same headline question.
What followed was very special: an invitation to fly from Sydney to London to attend the Management
Consulting Association industry awards, where as a joint charityconsultancy team we won the Social
Value category.
A unique business and social challenge to tackle, and all who worked on the project quickly
understood what a privilege it was to contribute to a nationchanging initiative.
http://schoolofhardknocks.org.uk
What is the most challenging project/problem you have worked on either as anexternal consultant or an internal strategist?
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
What are your three favourite books and what are you currently reading?
A Formula 1 driver. Nothing to do with the champagne and propensity to mix with the beautiful
people I suspect when I announced this at age four, just what seemed to be the next logical step
from racing around in my peddle gokart!
As a child what did you want to be when you were older
PERSONAL INSIGHTS
I currently have a few books on the go which are picked up depending on mood: Consigliere –
Leading from the shadows, by Richard Hytner; Leading by Sir Alex Ferguson; and Role of Honour,
a 1984 James Bond novel by John Gardner.
I love reading to soak up and shape ideas, but fiction is very important for unwinding.
A favourite book is incredibly hard to pick, so I’ll name both The Last Don by Mario Puzo, and The
Prince by Machiavelli. I am not saying I’m inspired by mafia bosses and a brutal realist! They are
both however very thought provoking.
Always maintain your integrity.
My parents never instructed this, they simply demonstrated it every single day.
What is the favourite piece of advice you have received and from whom?
My Dad. He provides the ultimate example of what vision, hard work, and care can do not only for
one’s self and family, but for those who are positively moved by coming into contact with that work.
Both my parents continue to challenge, prompt, listen, and inspire.
Who has influenced your career the most and why?
INTERVIEWED BY TIM CARROLL
Who would you like sitting next to you at a dinner party and why?
Count Negroni – he felt that the very refreshing Americano cocktail simply didn’t have enough bite
to it, so subbed out the soda water and despatched gin into the fold. That’s the sort of guest you
need for dinner.
What is your favourite quote or motto?
“The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person who is doing it.”
(Chinese proverb)
“Do not lose the substance by grasping at the shadow.” (Aesop)
JayneAnne Gadhia – handpicked by Sir Richard Branson to run his bank Virgin Money in the UK
because she is utterly different to her peers. A freethinker who stood out hugely from the other
executives at RBS, and who I suspect will really leave her mark on the industry and beyond.
Who is your personal or business hero/heroine and what quality do you mostadmire in them?