Andreas Adamides has built his career on understanding what founders truly need to succeed. As CEO of Helm Club, the UK’s premier network for scaling entrepreneurs, he leads an organisation that has quietly shaped the country’s entrepreneurial landscape for over twenty years. Unlike the countless networking groups that have emerged and disappeared, Helm has endured by maintaining an unwavering focus on quality over quantity, creating a trusted environment where founders can share their most pressing challenges without the usual veneer of business diplomacy.

Adamides brings a unique perspective to this role, having walked the entrepreneurial path himself across multiple continents. From launching Australia’s first major eCommerce business as a university dropout to scaling FinluxDirect to £20 million revenue in just two years, his journey spans the evolution of modern entrepreneurship. Recently shortlisted for City A.M.’s Entrepreneur of the Year award in 2025, he understands firsthand the isolation and complexity that comes with leading a scaling business. In this exclusive interview with The Executive Magazine, Adamides reveals how Helm’s philosophy of “no sales, just give and get” has created breakthrough moments for hundreds of founders, why exclusivity drives better outcomes, and how the organisation is setting new standards for responsible business leadership as it expands internationally. His insights offer a compelling blueprint for what genuine peer support looks like in an increasingly complex business environment.
Having founded and scaled businesses across multiple continents, what fundamental shifts have you observed in the entrepreneurial landscape that led you to focus on peer-to-peer founder support through Helm Club?
“When I started out, entrepreneurship was far less celebrated than it is today. There were no podcasts, no LinkedIn communities, no playbooks for how to grow a business. You were expected to figure it out on your own, often in isolation. Support usually came in the form of expensive consultants, generic textbooks, or transactional networking events where the goal was to sell, not to share. It was lonely, and it didn’t always give you the answers you really needed.
“Over the past two decades, the biggest shift I’ve witnessed is the recognition that founders need genuine peer-to-peer support. Scaling a business is unlike any other job, the stakes are higher, the pressures more intense, and the decisions more personal. No advisor can truly replicate the lived experience of another founder. What you need is unfiltered conversations with people who understand because they are in the same position, carrying the same weight. That’s why Helm resonates so strongly with me. I’ve dedicated myself to building this community because I know first-hand that no consultant or board advisor can replace the value of a founder speaking honestly to another founder who is also at the helm.”
Helm Club has maintained its position as the UK’s premier founder network for over two decades whilst many competitor organisations have disappeared. What core principles have allowed the organisation to remain relevant and valuable to successive generations of scaling entrepreneurs?
“The simple truth is discipline. Many organisations in this space fall into the trap of chasing numbers, bigger memberships, bigger stages, bigger revenues, but in doing so they dilute their quality. From day one, Helm has resisted that temptation. We’ve stayed true to our purpose: being the most trusted founder-to-founder community in the UK. That means protecting our standards, keeping the community exclusive to founders and CEOs, and upholding our strict no-sales ethos. It’s not always the fastest path to growth, but it’s the only way to remain relevant and trusted over decades.

“What’s interesting is that while successive generations of founders face different challenges, whether it was digital transformation in the early 2000s or ESG and hybrid working today, the underlying need hasn’t changed. Every founder craves a place where they can talk honestly about the pressures of leadership without judgement or agenda. Because Helm has never compromised on candour, relevance, and trust, we’ve been able to evolve with the times while always remaining a constant for entrepreneurs. That is why we’ve endured while others have faded.”
The business deliberately restricts membership to founders and CEOs of scaling companies, rejecting what you describe as the “open to all” model. How does this exclusivity translate into tangible benefits for members, and what specific conversations or breakthrough moments can only happen within this carefully curated environment?
“Exclusivity is not about status, it’s about trust and relevance. When every person in the room is a founder or CEO leading a scaling business, there is an immediate baseline of understanding. You don’t have to waste time explaining what it means to raise a funding round, deal with shareholder pressure, or make tough calls on hiring and firing. Everyone gets it. That shared context allows members to cut straight to the heart of their challenges and speak openly in a way they simply wouldn’t in a diluted environment.
“I’ve seen founders walk into a forum thinking they were alone in their struggles, only to hear three other entrepreneurs share almost identical experiences. That moment of “you too?” is transformative. Whether it’s a founder sharing the emotional toll of managing layoffs, or another opening up about burnout, these are conversations that rarely happen in public. In Helm, they not only happen, but they often lead to genuine breakthroughs, a decision made with greater clarity, a new approach to handling pressure, or simply the reassurance of knowing you’re not facing it alone. That is the power of exclusivity: it creates the conditions for candour and meaningful support.”
Your “no sales, just give and get” philosophy represents a significant departure from traditional business networking. Can you describe how this approach fundamentally changes the dynamic between members and what practical impact this has on the quality of insights shared during sessions?
“The traditional model of networking is transactional: you show up, collect business cards, and wait for the pitch. It creates a defensive mindset where you’re constantly wondering who in the room is trying to sell to you. That atmosphere is toxic for real learning. At Helm, by enforcing a strict “no sales, just give and get” culture, we eliminate that tension entirely. Everyone knows they are there not to sell, but to share and to learn. The result is trust, and when trust is present, honesty follows.
“That honesty is what makes the insights so powerful. Instead of polished success stories designed to impress, members share what really happened, the mistakes, the missteps, the scars. I remember a session where a founder detailed how a product launch almost bankrupted their company, and the raw lessons they learned from it. In another, someone shared how they mishandled investor relations and what they would do differently. These aren’t stories you tell in a networking event where you’re trying to win business. They’re real, unvarnished accounts that give others practical takeaways to avoid the same pitfalls. It fundamentally changes the quality of conversation and, in turn, the value members receive.”
Helm carefully matches Forum groups to ensure challenges align, rather than leaving value to chance. What specific methodology do you employ to identify complementary founders and create these curated experiences, and how do you assess which entrepreneurs will benefit most from connecting with each other?
“We see curation as one of our most important responsibilities. This isn’t about putting ten random founders in a room and hoping something useful emerges. We go deep into understanding where each member is on their journey, their sector, their growth stage, the challenges they’re facing, and the opportunities they’re exploring. From there, we create groups where there’s both shared context and diversity of perspective. You want enough common ground that members understand each other’s struggles, but enough difference that fresh ideas can emerge.
“For example, pairing two founders both working through internationalisation makes sense because they face similar hurdles, but including someone who has already done it successfully brings invaluable experience. Likewise, we look carefully at personalities and leadership styles, a group works best when there’s balance between analytical thinkers, visionary leaders, and operational experts. It’s part science, part intuition, honed over two decades of running these Forums. The end goal is simple: every founder should leave the room feeling like they’ve had conversations that mattered, with people who truly understand them.”
Leading a scaling business today presents complexities that previous generations of entrepreneurs rarely encountered, from ESG considerations to hybrid working challenges. How has Helm evolved its support framework to address these contemporary pressures facing modern founders?
“The founder’s role has never been more demanding. Today, you’re expected not only to deliver growth, but to do so in a way that is sustainable, responsible, and aligned with shifting societal expectations. You have to think about ESG, diversity, hybrid working, global supply chains, and the wellbeing of your people, all while still chasing ambitious targets. It’s a far cry from the era when growth alone was the sole metric of success.
“At Helm, we’ve evolved to reflect this reality. Our sessions now routinely cover subjects that were barely on the radar ten years ago: how to structure ESG reporting, how to lead a hybrid or fully remote workforce, how to navigate geopolitical uncertainty, and even how to protect the founder’s own mental health. We also bring in external expertise where needed, but always through the lens of practical founder-to-founder dialogue. The key is recognising that founders today don’t just need commercial strategies, they need resilience frameworks, support systems, and candid conversations about how to lead responsibly. Helm has become as much about supporting the human behind the business as it is about the business itself.”
As someone shortlisted for City A.M.’s Entrepreneur of the Year award in 2025, you’ve experienced both the highs of successful exits and the pressures of rapid scaling. What specific insights from your own journey do you believe are most valuable to share with fellow founders navigating similar challenges?
“If I had to distil it down to one insight, it’s this: growth magnifies problems, it doesn’t solve them. When you’re small, you can often patch over weaknesses in culture, systems, or leadership. But once you start scaling, those cracks widen fast. I’ve lived this myself, from hiring too quickly, to underestimating the strain on cash flow, to not putting the right leadership frameworks in place early enough. The exhilaration of fast growth can blind you to these risks, but they always surface eventually.
“So the lesson I try to share with other founders is to invest early in resilience. Build robust systems before you desperately need them. Nurture a culture that can withstand stress, not just one that looks good on paper. And most importantly, take care of yourself. I’ve seen brilliant founders burn out because they treated themselves as expendable in service of the business. The truth is, you can’t lead others effectively if you’re running on empty. Scaling a business is one of the most rewarding things you can do, but it’s also one of the hardest. Preparing for the turbulence is what separates those who endure from those who don’t.”
The organisation is expanding internationally, building upon the successful foundation established in the UK. What opportunities does this growth present for strengthening the global founder community, and how do you see international expansion enhancing the value proposition for existing and new members?
“What excites me most about our international expansion is the opportunity to connect founders across borders. While every market has its own nuances, the core pressures of scaling, leadership, growth, resilience, are universal. By expanding beyond the UK, we can bring together diverse perspectives, helping founders see challenges and opportunities through a global lens. That makes the insights sharper and the conversations richer.
“For members, this means two things. First, access: you’re no longer limited to the experiences of UK founders, you gain insight from peers tackling similar challenges in entirely different contexts. Second, opportunity: international connections often spark partnerships, collaborations, and new markets. What doesn’t change, however, is our ethos. We will never sacrifice depth for breadth. Expansion for us isn’t about building the biggest network; it’s about creating the most valuable one. The quality of the community remains the priority, and that’s what ensures members continue to benefit even as we grow globally.”
You emphasise that growth should be measured beyond revenue and headcount, focusing on building “resilient, sustainable businesses led with responsibility and conviction.” What practical frameworks or approaches do you advocate for founders who want to scale responsibly without sacrificing growth ambitions?
“The danger is that founders often fall into the trap of chasing growth at all costs. Revenue and headcount are easy to measure, and they look impressive on a slide deck, but they don’t always reflect the health of a business. I encourage founders to adopt a broader lens, to think about their “balance sheets” in multiple dimensions. How resilient is your culture? How sustainable is your pace of work? How responsible are your practices? If the answers aren’t positive, growth will eventually stall.
“One practical approach I recommend is to build regular “health checks” into your strategy. Don’t just review financial performance; review the wellbeing of your people, the clarity of your purpose, and the sustainability of your operations. Create KPIs that track these areas alongside revenue, and treat them with the same seriousness. It’s not about slowing growth, it’s about ensuring that growth can endure. Businesses that scale responsibly are not only more sustainable, they’re also more attractive to investors, employees, and customers. In other words, responsible scaling isn’t a compromise on ambition, it’s the foundation for long-term success.”
Looking ahead to the next decade, what role do you envision founder networks playing in shaping entrepreneurial success, and how is Helm positioning itself to set the standard for peer learning and responsible business leadership?
“I believe founder networks will become more important, not less. The pressures facing entrepreneurs are only intensifying, global competition, societal expectations, technological disruption. Founders will need communities they can trust, where they can cut through the noise and focus on what really matters. That’s where networks like Helm come in. We provide the space for honest dialogue, practical solutions, and the kind of peer support that simply can’t be found anywhere else.
“Helm’s ambition is to set the standard for what a founder’s club should be in this new era. That means staying true to our ethos: depth over breadth, trust over transaction, candour over performance. It also means recognising that responsible leadership is not optional, it’s central to building resilient businesses. Our role is to champion that standard, to ensure the next generation of founders grows not just successful companies, but sustainable and responsible ones. If we can do that, then Helm will not only support entrepreneurs today but help shape the future of entrepreneurship itself.”