Bear Stearns Technology Conference: Bear Stearns Technology Conference Presented by
Greg Netland CEO, Vedior North America
John Nurthen Director of Corporate Affairs, Vedior NV
8 June 2005
Slide2: This presentation includes forward-looking statements that reflect our intentions, beliefs or current expectations and projections about our future results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, performance, prospects, growth, strategies, opportunities and the industry in which we operate. Forward-looking statements include all matters that are not historical fact. We have tried to identify these forward-looking statements by using words including “may”, “will”, “should”, “expect”, “intend”, “estimate”, “project”, “believe”, “plan”, “seek”, “continue”, “appears” and similar expressions or their negative.
These forward-looking statements are subject to a number of risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors that could cause our actual results of operations, financial condition, liquidity, performance, prospects or opportunities, as well as those of the markets we serve or intend to serve, to differ materially from those expressed in, or suggested by these forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause those differences include, but are not limited to our financial position and our ability to implement our business strategy and plans and objectives of management for future operations, our ability to develop, balance and expand our business, our ability to implement our long-term growth strategy (including through organic growth and acquisitions), our ability to make improvements to our capital structure, industry and market trends and volumes, including the speed and strength at which the staffing services industry and the sectors in which we operate, rebound from economic slowdowns and recessions, the effects of regulation (including employment and tax regulations), our ability to improve the efficiency of our operations and to reduce expenses in our operating companies and their network of offices, litigation and our ability to take advantage of new technologies.
In light of these risks, uncertainties, assumptions and other factors, the forward-looking events described in this presentation might not occur. Additional risks that we may deem immaterial or that are not presently known to us could also cause the forward-looking events discussed in this presentation not to occur. Except as otherwise required by applicable law, we undertake no obligation to update publicly or revise publicly any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events, changed circumstances or any other reason after the date of this presentation.
Slide3: Recruitment Industry Snapshot
Vedior Overview and Strategy
Technology Recruitment Presentation Agenda
Slide4: Temporary Workers Worldwide Netherlands 3% France 9% UK
16% US
38% Other Europe 3% Rest of World
9% 7.5million people working through recruitment agencies
100 countries still closed to the recruitment industry due to lack of regulation or prohibition
Total market value = $188bn Source: ING, March 2004 Germany 3% Australia 4% Japan
8% Italy 2% Canada
2% Belgium
1% Spain
2%
Market Segmentation: Market Segmentation Professional/executive recruitment as
a percentage of the total recruitment market US 60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0 Australia UK Japan NL Belgium Germany France World Source: ING, March 2004
Growth Factors: Growth Factors Economic growth
GDP and job creation activity
Seasonality - holidays and peaks in demand
Structural growth
Societal acceptance
Changing perceptions of work
Work/life balance
Requirement for more flexible cost structures
Growth of the Service sector
Legislative growth
Increasing deregulation but with appropriate protections for temporary workers
Current Growth Drivers by Market: Current Growth Drivers by Market US
UK
France
Japan
Australia
Netherlands
Germany
Economic Structural Legislative Source: Vedior estimates, May 2005 J J L K K K J K J J J J K L L K J J K J J
Slide8: 2002 2003 Staffing Market Revenue Growth Source: Deutsche Bank +30%
+25%
+20%
+15%
+10%
+5%
0
-5
-10
-15% 2004 2001 1998 1999 2000 1997 1996
Slide9: Recruitment Industry Snapshot
Vedior Overview and Strategy
Technology Recruitment Presentation Agenda
Profile: One of the World’s largest recruitment companies
2004 sales of €6,467m and operating income of €240m
2,200 offices operating in 37 countries
Europe, North America, Australasia, Asia, South America and Africa
Diversified portfolio of brands targeting a broad range of staffing services
Temporary and permanent recruitment
Complementary employment-related services such as outplacement, HR outsourcing, payrolling and training
World’s largest provider of professional/ executive recruitment
Listed on Euronext, Amsterdam
AEX Index of 25 most actively traded stocks
Trading Symbol: VDOR
Profile
Slide11: Geographic Breakdown – Q1 2005 Netherlands
7% France
43% UK
14% US 9% ROE
20% ROW 7% Sales Operating income Netherlands
6% France
30% UK
30% US 13% ROW
10% ROE 11%
Slide12: Sector Breakdown – Q1 2005 Engineering 6% Other
Sectors
6% Accounting
4% Healthcare 6% IT 10% Traditional
66% Sales Operating income Engineering
11% Healthcare
12% Traditional
39% Education
2% Education
8% IT 16% Other
Sectors
9% Accounting
5%
Sector/Country Matrix: KEY
Yes
No Sector/Country Matrix Andorra
Argentina
Australia
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Czech Republic
Eire
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hungary
India
Italy
Japan
Luxembourg
Malaysia
Mexico
Monaco
Netherlands
New Zealand
Poland
Portugal
Singapore
Slovakia
South Africa
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Switzerland
Turkey
UAE
UK
US Accounting
Audio Visual
Catering/Hospitality
Education
Engineering
Executive
Finance/Banking
Healthcare
HR
Industrial
IT
Insurance
Interim Management
Legal
Office Admin
Outplacement
Sales & Marketing
Teleservices
Travel Leisure
Other HR Sector
Primary Objectives: Primary Objectives Establish Vedior as THE premium staffing stock
Extend leading position in professional/ executive sectors
Improve our business mix
Mixture of organic and acquisitive growth
2005 target markets
US, Asia, Eastern Europe, UK and Germany
Take advantage of cyclical shift in business mix to improve gross margin
Strategy: Strategy Recruitment as our core business
Low risk complementary services which add value
Decentralised operating structure
Entrepreneurial culture
Local equity incentives
Relative operational autonomy
Flat management structure
Multi-branding philosophy
Brands that target specific markets and specific industry sectors
Focus on profitability
Slide16: Conversion Ratio = EBITA/Gross Profit* 2002 2003 Efficiency Advantage *Including impact of one-off and unusual gains or charges 30
25
20
15
10
5
0
-5 2004 2005 2001 Q1 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q2 Q3 Q1 Q4 Q1 Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q2 Q3 Q4
Slide17: Recruitment Industry Snapshot
Vedior Overview and Strategy
Technology Recruitment Presentation Agenda
Global IT Staffing Capability: Global IT Staffing Capability Argentina
Australia
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Finland
France
Germany
India
Malaysia Netherlands
New Zealand
Portugal
Singapore
Spain
Sri Lanka
Switzerland
UK
United Arab Emirates
US
Slide19: IT Staffing Expertise Information Systems
Telecommunications Support
Software Engineering
Hardware Engineering
Technical Writing
Web/eCommerce
Project Management
Any Questions?: Any Questions?