John McGrath puts down $40,000 for childcare centre on Shark Tank
John McGrath invested $40,000 in a childcare centre for children living with disabilities or special needs on Channel 10's Shark Tank this week.
The McGrath estate agents founder secured a 12.5% stake of Hummingbirds, as did tech entrepreneur Steve Baxter when the pair decided to split the offered 25% stake.
The two "Sharks" chose to invest after hearing the story of Rebecca Glover and Leah James, businesswomen and mothers of children with disabilities.
Their business, Hummingbirds, offers care, early intervention and support for young children of all abilities, including those with motor development delays. They founded the business after finding traditional childcare facilities unsuitable for their own children, who live with disabilities.
Currently, they offer just four places for children, but said on the show there was a waiting list of 35. Hummingbirds' care is offered at $120 per day, with government assistance and Medicare rebates reducing the out of pocket cost to about $35 per day.
Glover and James are hoping to expand the business to accommodate 21 children, with two carers carers available at all times for each room of seven children.
As they presented their business model on Shark Tank, the potential investors queried the businesswomen about their plans to upscale the business, wondering whether they were willing to take on the extra commitment of expanding Hummingbirds. The entrepreneurs assured the panel that they one day hoped to become a national business.
James said to the panel: "We're driven with heart and passion but we're smart women. We're very capable of this. But we have so many desperate, desperate mothers and fathers out there."
Their pitch was enough to convince Baxter, founder of SE Net, who has no experience in childcare. He later wrote in BRW:
"If you told me a year ago that I would be investing in the childcare industry, I'd have laughed you out the door. However, when Leah James and Rebecca Glover entered the Shark Tank, they came not just with a moving personal story about what they've done to ensure a better future for their children, and other children effected by disabilities. They came with a sharp, well-thought and viable business proposition ... As I said in Shark Tank, Hummingbirds was a deal too important not to be done."
McGrath, who was visibly moved by the pair's story, said he had a friend who worked in the childcare industry.
McGrath's $40,000 investment isn't his first on the show – he has also committed money to Salsa Rudo Hot Sauces, paying $80,000 for a 45% stake in the business. And while not investing in teenager Daniel Baise's interactive computer screen GTouch, he did, with Baxter, help support the teenager's trip to a trade show in Las Vegas.
McGrath famously did very poorly in his HSC results before moving into the real estate business as a letting agent. At 20, he moved to real estate sales and later founded his own agency. McGrath Estate Agents now has 62 offices along Australia's east coast and sold over $12 billion in residential property in the last year.
McGrath has also been a director on the board of REA Group since 2001.