Luke Ward
Luke is an investment manager in the Private Companies Team and co-manager of the Edinburgh Worldwide Investment Trust.

As an engineer, I’m drawn to teams who think in terms of systems. Those who see not just what their technology can do, but how it can reshape entire industries. The most exciting companies emerge when breakthrough products unlock completely new ways of doing business.
From blueprints to business models
Growing up on science fiction, I was captivated by technology’s potential to solve humanity’s biggest challenges. Pursuing this passion with an engineering degree became an unexpectedly global education. I found myself taking architecture classes at The University of Texas at Austin, then working alongside founders at a product design consultancy in Brisbane.
Each stop taught me something different about turning ambitious ideas into reality. In Australia, participating in the daily challenges of startup life – from customer demands to cash flow pressures to whose turn it was to make the sandwiches – gave me an appreciation for the group effort needed to maintain an innovative culture while building sustainable operations.
Better, not just bigger
Much like we had to optimise our designs for both form and function while considering cost and manufacturing constraints, successful businesses also think in terms of whole systems. They see not just individual problems but interconnected challenges, finding ways for product innovations to unlock new business models. When these dynamics complement rather than compromise each other at scale, companies have an enviable opportunity to expand their scope and get better, not just bigger, over time.
The expanding toolkit
I’ve spent the past decade applying this approach within Baillie Gifford’s Discovery Team, focusing on emerging technologies and the high-growth companies pioneering them within public and private markets. From SpaceX’s reusable rockets unlocking operating leverage and a global communications network, to Axon’s hardware integration enabling subscription models and software opportunities, to PsiQuantum’s photonics platform opening the door to commercial quantum computing – new capabilities make it easier for entrepreneurs to build scalable systems and have an outsized impact.
Practical optimism
Having had a front-row seat to many such businesses and witnessed how they have evolved, I find it hard not to be optimistic about the future, even in areas we might not typically associate with rapid transformation today. Our job as investors is to remain open to these possibilities, but discerning about what’s practical and profitable. We’re trying to identify this potential in advance – to find a collection of endeavours where our clients can contribute to positive outcomes and benefit from the long-term value that this creates.
Location
Edinburgh, Scotland
Favourite book
Richard Feynman, Robert Leighton and Matthew Sands: The Feynman Lectures on Physics
