The Sunday Times Profit Track 100 is an annual league table published in association with The Sunday Times newspaper in the UK. It ranks Britain's 100 private companies with the fastest-growing profits over their last three years. It is published in The Sunday Times each April, with an awards event typically held in June,[1] and alumni dinners during the year. The league table is researched and produced by Fast Track, an Oxford-based research and networking events business.[2]
About Fast Track
Fast Track is a leading research and events company that has built a network of the UK's top-performing private companies, from the fastest-growing to the biggest, through its rankings in The Sunday Times. Founded in 1997[2] by Hamish Stevenson,[3][4] it now publishes seven annual league tables and brings company founders and directors together at invitation-only networking awards events and alumni dinners.[5]
Entry criteria
Companies have to meet the criteria below to be able to qualify for the Profit Track 100 league table:
UK registered, unquoted, and not subsidiaries
Profits of at least £500,000 in the base year trading (latest year minus 3 years)
Profits of at least £3m in the latest year
Profits are defined as operating profits before exceptional items
Profits must increase in the latest year
Trading weeks in the base and latest years have to exceed 25
Companies that do not meet the criteria can still be considered for the Ones to Watch programme.[6] This is a selection of companies that have either achieved, or predict, good profit growth.
Exclusions
Excluded companies include pure property and financial trading companies, and those with restricted accounts; companies that are equal joint ventures, or majority-owned by quoted or other companies
Notable alumni companies
Profit Track 100 was launched in 2000 to recognise Britain's private companies with the fastest growing profits. Since then, 1,500 companies have appeared on the league table, including:
Dyson first featured in 2000 having grown profits from £4.3m to profits of £24.3m.[7] In 2018, profits exceeded £1bn on global sales of £4.4bn.[8]
EG Group, the fuel forecourt operator, made its debut in 2008 with profits of £4.9m.[9] It was valued at £1.3bn in 2015[10] and has since expanded across America and Australia, reporting profits of £264.5m in 2018.
Travel search engine Skyscanner, featured in 2015 with profits of £17.7m[11] and was acquired for £1.4bn by Chinese travel group Ctrip in 2016.[12]
The 21st annual Sunday Times Profit Track 100 league table supplement was due to be published on 5 April 2020. However, given the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, Fast Track delayed publication in order to liaise with the featured companies.[16] Out of the original 100 companies, 70 explicitly asked to feature, and 30 did not want to be included.[17] In addition to the league table ranking, the supplement highlighted the positive actions that some companies took to support their staff, local communities, the NHS and key workers during the initial stages of the pandemic.[18][19] The number one ranked company was fitness clothing retailer Gymshark, which grew its operating profits from £1.1m in 2016 to £18.6m in 2019.[20]