|
Sir Richard
Charles
Nicholas
Branson (born
18 July 1950
(1950-07-18) in
Shamley Green,
Surrey,
England), is an
English
entrepreneur,
best known for
his Virgin
brand of over
350 companies.
His first
successful
business
venture was at
age 16, when he
published a
magazine called
Student;
Branson then
set up a record
mail order
business in
1970, and then
a chain of
record stores
in 1971 now
known as Virgin
Megastores.
With a
flamboyant and
competitive
style,
Branson's
Virgin brand
grew rapidly
during the
1980s as he set
up Virgin
Atlantic
Airways and
expanded the
Virgin Records
music label.
Today, his
worth is
estimated at
over £4 billion
(equivalent to
US$7.8 billion)
according to
The Sunday
Times Rich List
2006.
Education
Branson was
educated at
Scaitcliffe
School (now
Bishopsgate
School) until
the age of
thirteen. He
then attended
Stowe School
until he was
fifteen.
Branson has
dyslexia,
resulting in
poor academic
performance as
a student. He
was the captain
of football and
cricket teams,
and by the age
of fifteen he
had started two
ventures that
eventually
failed: one
growing
Christmas trees
and another
raising
budgerigars.
At sixteen,
Branson left
school and
moved to
London, where
he began his
first
successful
business,
Student
magazine. When
he was
seventeen, he
opened his
first charity,
the "Student
Advisory
Centre."
Record
business
Branson started
his first
record business
after he
travelled
across the
English Channel
and purchased
crates of
"cut-out"
records from a
record
discounter. He
sold the
records out of
the boot of his
car to retail
outlets in
London. He
continued
selling
cut-outs
through a
record mail
order business
in 1969.
Trading under
the name
"Virgin" he
sold records
for
considerably
less than the
so-called "High
Street"
outlets,
especially the
chain W. H.
Smith. The name
'Virgin' was a
selling point
because records
were sold in a
new condition
(unlike in
other shops
where records
were being
handled when
listened to in
record booths).
At the time
many products
were sold under
restrictive
marketing
agreements
which limited
discounting,
despite efforts
in the 1950s
and 1960s to
limit so-called
resale price
maintenance. In
effect Branson
began the
series of
changes that
led to
large-scale
discounting of
recorded music.
Richard and
some colleagues
were discussing
a new name for
his business
when one
suggested that
it should be
called 'Virgin'
since they were
all virgins to
business.
Virgin logo
designed by
Roger Dean for
the fledgling
Virgin Records
labelBranson
eventually
started a
record shop in
Oxford Street
in London and,
shortly after,
launched the
record label
Virgin Records
with Nik
Powell. Branson
had earned
enough money
from his record
store to buy a
country estate,
in which he
installed a
recording
studio. He
leased out
studio time to
fledgling
artists,
including
multi-instrumentalist
Mike
Oldfield.
In 1971,
Branson was
arrested and
charged for
selling records
in Virgin
stores that had
been declared
as export
stock. He
settled
out-of-court
with UK Customs
and Excise with
an agreement to
repay the
unpaid tax and
fines.
Branson's
mother Eve
re-mortgaged
the family home
to help pay the
settlement.
Virgin Records'
first release
was Mike
Oldfield's
Tubular Bells,
which was a
best-seller and
British LP
chart topper.
The company
signed
controversial
bands such as
the Sex
Pistols, which
other companies
were reluctant
to sign. It
also won praise
for exposing
the public to
obscure
avant-garde
music such as
the krautrock
bands Faust and
Can. Virgin
Records also
introduced
Culture Club to
the music
world. In the
early 1980s,
Virgin
purchased the
gay nightclub
Heaven.
To keep his
airline company
afloat, Branson
sold the Virgin
label to EMI in
1992, a more
conservative
company which
previously had
rescinded a
contract with
the Sex
Pistols.
Branson is said
to have wept
when the sale
was completed
since the
record business
had been the
genesis of the
Virgin Empire.
He later formed
V2 Records to
re-enter the
music
business.
Business
exploits
Branson formed
Virgin Atlantic
Airways in
1984, launched
Virgin Mobile
in 1999, Virgin
Blue in
Australia in
2000, and later
failed in a
2000 bid to
handle the
National
Lottery.
In 1997,
Branson took
what many saw
as being one of
his riskier
business
exploits by
entering into
the railway
business.
Virgin Trains
won the
franchises for
the former
Intercity West
Coast and
Cross-Country
sectors of
British Rail.
Launched with
the usual
Branson fanfare
with promises
of new
high-tech
tilting trains
and enhanced
levels of
service, Virgin
Trains soon ran
into problems
with the aging
rolling stock
and crumbling
infrastructure
it had
inherited from
British Rail.
The company's
reputation was
almost
irreversibly
damaged in the
late 1990s as
it struggled to
make trains
reliably run on
time while it
awaited the
modernisation
of the West
Coast Main
Line, and the
arrival of new
rolling
stock.
Front covers
from Private
Eye featuring
Richard
Branson. Left
(8 September
2000): caption
reads: "I'm
sorry, your
winnings have
been
delayed"—referring
to Virgin's
unsuccessful
bid for the
franchise to
manage the UK
National
Lottery, and
Virgin Trains'
poor
time-keeping
record. Right
(29 December
2000): Richard
Branson dressed
as Santa Claus,
with the
caption:
"No-one
believes in you
anymore".Virgin
acquired
European
short-haul
airline Euro
Belgian
Airlines in
1996 and
renamed it
Virgin Express.
In 2006 the
airline was
merged with SN
Brussels. It
also started a
national
airline based
in Nigeria,
called Virgin
Nigeria.
Another
airline, Virgin
America, is set
to launch out
of San
Francisco
International
Airport in
2007. Branson
has also
developed a
Virgin Cola
brand and even
a Virgin Vodka
brand, which
has not been a
very successful
enterprise. As
a consequence
of these
lacklustre
performers and
perceived
obscure
accounting
practices, the
satirical
British
fortnightly
magazine
Private Eye has
been critical
of Branson and
his companies
(see Private
Eye image
caption).
After the
so-called
campaign of
"dirty tricks"
(see expanded
reference in
Virgin Atlantic
Airways),
Branson sued
rival airline
British Airways
for libel in
1992. John
King,
then-chairman
of British
Airways,
counter-sued,
and the case
went to trial
in 1993.
British
Airways, faced
with likely
defeat, settled
the case,
giving £500,000
to Branson and
a further
£110,000 to his
airline and had
to pay legal
fees of up to
£3 million.
Branson divided
his
compensation
(the so-called
"BA bonus")
among his
staff.
On 25 September
2004, Branson
announced the
signing of a
deal under
which a new
space tourism
company, Virgin
Galactic, will
license the
technology
behind
Spaceship One -
funded by
Microsoft
co-Founder Paul
Allen and
designed by
legendary
American
aeronautical
engineer and
visionary Burt
Rutan - to take
paying
passengers into
suborbital
space. Virgin
Galactic
(wholly owned
by Virgin
Group) plans to
make flights
available to
the public by
late 2009 with
tickets priced
at
US$200,000.
Branson's next
venture with
the Virgin
group is Virgin
Fuels, which is
set to respond
to global
warming and
exploit the
recent spike in
fuel costs by
offering a
revolutionary,
cheaper fuel
for automobiles
and, in the
near future,
aircraft.
Branson has
stated that he
was formerly a
global warming
skeptic and was
influenced in
his decision by
a breakfast
meeting with Al
Gore.
Virgin Atlantic
Boeing
747Branson has
been tagged as
a
"transformational
leader" in the
management
lexicon, with
his maverick
strategies and
his stress on
the Virgin
Group as an
organization
driven on
informality and
information,
one that is
bottom-heavy
rather than
strangled by
top-level
management.
He was 9th in
the Sunday
Times Rich List
2006, worth
just over £3
billion.
On 21 September
2006, Branson
pledged to
invest the
profits of
Virgin Atlantic
and Virgin
Trains in
research for
environmentally
friendly fuels.
The investment
is estimated to
be worth $3
billion.
On 4 July 2006,
Branson sold
his Virgin
Mobile company
to UK cable TV,
broadband, and
telephone
company
NTL/NTL:Telewest
for almost £1
billion. As
part of the
sale, the
company pays a
minimum of £8.5
million per
year to use the
Virgin name and
Branson became
the company's
largest
shareholder.
The new company
was launched
with much
fanfare and
publicity on 8
February 2007,
under the name
Virgin Media.
The decision to
merge his
Virgin Media
Company with
NTL was in
order to
integrate both
of the
companies'
compatible
parts of
commerce.
Branson used to
own three
quarters of
Virgin Mobile,
whereas now he
owns 15 percent
of the new
Virgin Media
company.
In 2006,
Branson formed
Virgin Comics
and Virgin
Animation an
entertainment
company
focussed on
creating new
stories and
characters for
a global
audience. The
Company was
founded with
author Deepak
Chopra,
filmmaker
Shekhar Kapur
and
entrepreneurs
Sharad
Devarajan and
Gotham
Chopra.
Branson also
launched the
Virgin Health
Bank on 1
February 2007,
offering
parents-to-be
the opportunity
of storing
their baby's
umbilical cord
blood stem
cells in
private and
public stem
cell banks
after their
baby's
birth.
On 9 February
2007, Sir
Richard Branson
announced the
setting up of a
new Global
science and
technology
prize – The
Virgin Earth
Challenge – in
the belief that
history has
shown that
prizes of this
nature
encourage
technological
advancements
for the good of
mankind. The
Virgin Earth
Challenge will
award $25
million to the
individual or
group who are
able to
demonstrate a
commercially
viable design
which will
result in the
net removal of
anthropogenic,
atmospheric
greenhouse
gases each year
for at least
ten years
without
countervailing
harmful
effects. This
removal must
have long term
effects and
contribute
materially to
the stability
of the Earth’s
climate.
Sir Richard
also announced
that he would
be joined in
the
adjudication of
the Prize by a
panel of five
judges - all
world
authorities in
their
respective
fields: Al
Gore, Sir
Crispin
Tickell, Tim
Flannery, Jim
Hansen and
James Lovelock.
The panel of
judges will be
assisted in
their
deliberations
by The Climate
Group and
Special Advisor
to The Virgin
Earth Prize
Judges, Steve
Howard.
World
record
attempts Richard
Branson
has been
involved
in a
number of
world
record-breaking
attempts
since
1985, when
in the
spirit of
the Blue
Riband he
attempted
to cross
the
Atlantic
Ocean in
the
fastest
recorded
time. His
first
attempt in
the
"Virgin
Atlantic
Challenger"
led to the
boat
capsizing
in British
waters and
a rescue
by RAF
helicopter,
which
received
wide media
coverage.
Some
newspapers
called for
Richard
Branson to
reimburse
the
British
government
for the
cost of
his
rescue. In
1986, his
"Virgin
Atlantic
Challenger
II" made a
successful
crossing,
beating
previous
records by
two hours.
This was
followed a
year later
by the
epic hot
air
balloon
crossing
of the
same ocean
in "Virgin
Atlantic
Flyer".
This was
not only
the first
hot-air
balloon to
cross the
Atlantic,
but was
the
largest
ever flown
at 2.3
million
cubic feet
(65,000
m³)
capacity,
reaching
speeds in
excess of
130 miles
per hour
(209
km/h).
In January
1991, Branson
crossed the
Pacific Ocean
from Japan to
Arctic Canada,
the furthest
distance of
6,700 miles.
Again, he broke
all existing
records, with
speeds of up to
245 miles per
hour in a
balloon of 2.6
million cubic
feet (73,600
m³).
Between 1995
and 1998
Richard
Branson, Per
Lindstrand and
Steve Fossett,
made a number
of attempts to
circumnavigate
the globe by
balloon. In
late 1998 they
made a
record-breaking
flight from
Morocco to
Hawaii but were
unable to
complete a
global flight
before Bertrand
Piccard and
Brian Jones in
Breitling
Orbiter
achieved the
first
circumnavigation
in March
1999.
Television,
film, and
print
Branson has
guest starred,
usually playing
himself, on
several
television
shows,
including
Friends,
Baywatch, Birds
of a Feather,
Only Fools and
Horses, The Day
Today, a
special episode
of the comedy
Goodness
Gracious Me and
Tripping Over.
Branson made
several
appearances
during the
nineties on the
BBC Saturday
morning show
Live &
Kicking, where
he was referred
to as 'the
pickle man' by
comedy act Trev
and Simon (in
reference to
Branston
pickle).
Branson also
appears in a
cameo early in
XTC's "Generals
and Major's"
video.
He also was the
star of a
reality
television show
on Fox called
The Rebel
Billionaire, in
which sixteen
contestants
were tested for
their
entrepreneurship
and sense of
adventure. It
did not succeed
as a rival show
to Donald
Trump's The
Apprentice and
only lasted one
season.
His high public
profile often
leaves him open
as a figure of
satire — the
2000 AD series
Zenith featured
a parody of
Branson as a
super villain,
as the comic's
publisher and
favoured
distributor and
the Virgin
group were in
competition at
the time. He is
also
caricatured in
The Simpson's
episode "Monty
Can't Buy Me
Love" as the
tycoon Arthur
Fortune, and as
the ballooning
megalomaniac
Richard Chutney
(a pun on
Branson) in
Believe
Nothing. The
character
Grandson
Richard 39 in
Terry
Pratchett's
Wings is
modelled on
Branson.
He has a cameo
appearance in
several films,
Around the
World in 80
Days (2004)
where he played
a hot air
balloon
operator,
Superman
Returns, where
he was credited
as a "Shuttle
Engineer",
alongside his
son Sam, with
Virgin
Galactic-esque
commercial
suborbital
shuttle at the
centre of his
storyline. He
also had a
cameo in James
Bond film
Casino Royale
in which
Branson played
a passenger
going through
airport
security. He
makes a number
of brief and
disjointed
appearances in
the cult
classic
documentary
Derek and Clive
Get the Horn
which follows
the exploits of
Peter Cook and
Dudley Moore
recording their
last comedy
album.
In early 2006
on Rove Live,
Rove McManus
and Sir Richard
pushed each
other into a
swimming pool
fully clothed
live on TV
during a "Live
at your house"
episode.
Branson is a
Star Trek fan,
so much that he
named his new
spaceship VSS
Enterprise in
honour of the
famous Star
Trek ships, and
in 2006,
offered actor
William Shatner
a free ride on
the inaugural
space launch of
Virgin
Galactic.
Politics
Branson was
honoured by the
Conservative
government in
the 1980s, and
was briefly
given the post
of "litter
tsar" by
Margaret
Thatcher –
charged with
"keeping
Britain tidy."
He was again
seen as close
to the
government when
the Labour
Party came to
power in 1997.
In 2005 he
declared that
there were only
negligible
differences
between the two
main parties on
economic
matters. He
reputedly
considered
running for
Mayor of London
in 2004, but
decided not to.
Branson has
described
himself as a
libertarian.
Business
practices
Branson's
business empire
is owned by a
complicated
series of
offshore trusts
and companies.
The Sunday
Times stated
that his wealth
is calculated
at £3.065
billion; if he
were to retire
to his
Caribbean
island and
liquidate all
of this he
would pay
relatively
little in
tax.
When Virgin
Mobile launched
its service in
Canada on 1
March 2005, the
use of "naughty
nurses" in its
advertising
triggered "The
Registered
Nurses
Association of
Ontario" to
demand an
apology from
Branson and an
immediate stop
to the
campaign, and
called on
members to
boycott Virgin
Mobile. Virgin
Mobile
spokeswoman
Paula Lash said
the company
never intended
to offend
anyone, but was
not about to
pull the
advertising.
When Virgin
Mobile included
"super hot
holiday"
wrapping paper
with the
December 2005
issue of youth
magazine Vice,
as part of the
Hot Box
promotion, the
wrapping paper
contained
illustrated
holiday angels,
where the male
angel is
touching the
female's
breast, while
the female
angel has her
hand on the
male's
genitals.
Famous Players
stopped its
partnership
deal with
Virgin Mobile
after a
complaint.
Honours
In 1993,
Branson
received the
honorary degree
of Doctor of
Technology from
Loughborough
University.
He became Sir
Richard Branson
when he was
knighted by the
Queen in 1999
for "services
to
entrepreneurship".
Branson is the
patron of
several
charities,
including the
International
Rescue Corps
and Prisoners
Abroad, a
registered
charity which
supports
Britons who are
detained
outside of the
UK.
Sir Richard
appears at No.
85 on the 2002
list of "100
Greatest
Britons"
(sponsored by
the BBC and
voted for by
the public).
Sir Richard
also ranks No.
86 on Channel
4's 2003 list
of "100 Worst
Britons". Sir
Richard was
also ranked in
2007's Time
Magazine Top
100 Most
Influential
People in the
World.
Source : Some
of the
information on
this page came
from a
Wikipedia
article and is
licensed under
the GNU
Documentation
License.
©2008
www.geneticmatrix.com
.
|