Tag Archives: business

UK’s greatest business disasters

At London Presence we want to lead you on your business journey by giving you the best possible insight and tips for your business ventures. That said here’s our top five monumental business cock-ups, in a rare post about what not to do:

5. Dasani – Coca Cola branded tap water

After going down a storm in the states with Americans drinking 1.3bn litres of Dasani a year, its reception in the UK sent Coca Cola’s ‘purified’ water back down the storm drains from whence it sprung; it emerged that a factory in Kent used ordinary tap water as the source. To make matters worse for the corporate giants, Thames Water admitted that the 95p bottles contained only 0.03p worth of water.

Within weeks of the $13m UK launch, Dasani was pulled from the shelves and it’s European venture cancelled. But come on Coca Cola, just because the Americans fell for it, did you really think we were going to stand around and let you sell our tap water back to us in a bottle?!

4. Boo.com – boo-hoo for the boo boom

Miraculously raising £100m from such notable investors as Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan, boo.com was once valued at £250m in the 1990s. However the lavish lifestyle that afforded the founders soon caught up with them.

Their excessive jet-setting and expensive way of life began to take it’s toll on the profit margins. The staff of 400 strong was equally spoiled with luxury offices and over-inflated salaries, typifying gross mismanagement and poor financial strategy.

After squandering £125 million, the company was sold for less than £2 million in assets.

3. Ratner’s jewellery – and thus the phrase ‘doing a Ratner’ was born

Everything was going fine: Gerald Ratner had been part of the family business for 25 years selling mid-level jewellery – he then built up a chain of stores during the 80s to the point where the company was thriving with pre-tax profits measuring £110 million. That is until 1991 when he said this:

“We also do cut-glass sherry decanters complete with six glasses on a silver-plated tray that your butler can serve you drinks on, all for £4.95. People say, ‘How can you sell this for such a low price?’ I say, because it’s total crap.”

This was followed up by his description of a pair of earrings as, “cheaper than an M&S prawn sandwich but probably wouldn’t last as long.”

Within weeks he had devalued the company by £500 million. He was paid off with £375,000 and the firm was renamed Signets to expunge all connection with Gerald Ratner altogether.

2. Equitable Life – “a decade of regulatory failure”

After almost collapsing in 2000, it emerged in Lord Pemrose’s critical report of 2004, that Equitable Life had been promising their policy holders more money than it actually had for over ten years. The report named the company as “the author of its own misfortunes.” This report was called by the Treasury department of the UK Government following the public outcry after pensions and retirement savings were cut dramatically. The controversy continued when the report’s findings spawned a £4 billion legal action in the High Court, when Equitable Life sued 15 ex-directors £2 billion for negligence. In 2005 the case was abandoned by Equitable Life.

In July this year and after a 4 year investigation, the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman issued her report “Equitable Life: a decade of regulatory failure”. In it she recommended that the government should issue a formal apology and set up a compensation scheme.

The saga continues…

1. Barings Bank – broken by the definitive rogue trader

At the heart of this story of Barings Bank and its cataclysmic £827 million plunge into bankruptcy is the tragic protagonist who had it all and blew a whole lot more. The derivatives trader Nick Leeson began out of Singapore by making successful speculative trades for the bank earning them £10 million in 1992. By the end of that year the pendulum had swung into the red by £2 million – owed by the bank unbeknownst to them. By 1994 the debt was £208 million.

In early 1995 the losses were so great he fled with his then wife before he was apprehended and extradited back to Singapore where he was charged for fraud and deception and sentenced to six and a half years in Changi Prison in Singapore.

The bank collapsed before a Dutch bank bought them and assumed all Barings’ liabilities for the nominal sum of £1.

The 5 best restaurants for your perfect business event!

Are you organising a dinner in London? Is it a business dinner?! Are you going to invite partners, clients or colleagues? In any case you need to find the most appropriate location. And the first things you need to decide (before the restaurant itself) are how many people you will invite and for what time of the day.

So here you are 5 tips for your perfect business meeting:

If you want to win over a small group of people (or a beautiful woman) the best place is The Sketch. Apart from the jaguar on the wall you can’t see anything from outside… it looks like a normal tea room but if you go with it you get to the hall you’ll find yourself akin to Alice in Wonderland. Strange pictures and sculptures and it has three different areas for different occasions. The ambience is as unique as the food and drinks! But if those are not enough: take a trip to the toilet, you’ll understand when you get there…

If you’re going for a big event you should check out the Skylon Restaurant. You can’t miss it, it’s inside the Royal Festival Hall, on the second floor of the Southbank Centre and it has an unparalleled view of the riverside. Here you can have three different kinds of meetings: a quiet lunch in a good brasserie, a smart dinner in a nice restaurant or a larger event in which you and your guests are the main stars.

If you are looking for a good lunch or dinner, in which the food will speak more than words, check out The Ivy. This restaurant offers a rich menu perfect for every taste and every season: good food for good people. Now The Ivy is a member of a larger group that includes Urban Caprice, the J Sheekey, the BamBoo and Scott’s.

If you want to surprise your guests, you should try the Hakkasan, it’s a dimly lit but smart Chinese restaurant hidden away just two minutes from Tottenham Court Road. It’s one of only two Michelin-starred Chinese restaurants in London and it offers gorgeous selection of dishes and tastey wines served with charm in a low-lit atmosphere.

If you are organising a fun and busy night the right place for you is the garden of the Victoria and Albert Museum. It may be a museum but it hides a lovely garden where you can host your guests, offering a canape dinner, live music and other surprises.

Would you like more suggestions? Would you like to be updated on offers and restaurants?! Use Top Table website and you won’t be disappointed. Let us know how you get on.

Postal procedure: all you have to know

So you’ve signed up for a mail forwarding account with us and now you’re curious as to how exactly we handle your mail. Here you go:

  • Your mail arrives at one of our two available addresses, 145-157 St John Street, or 26 York Street (both in London).
  • Our dedicated post team then sort through the mail, separating it depending on size and weight.
  • All the mail is then sorted again and each piece of mail is stamped with the relevant 4-digit account number.
  • The mail is then placed in pigeonholes where it is ordered numerically. This is done to ensure that all your mail is sent out together rather than in multiple batches, saving on your postage costs.
  • Once ordered it is posted using our up-to-date database to your requested forwarding address, anywhere in the world. Once this is done we send you an email letting you know how many letters you are due to receive.

Remember, posting your mail isn’t the only thing we can do with it. If you are in the London area you can come and collect it (as long as notice is given to us) at our 145-157 St John Street address anytime between 9 and 5.30 Monday to Friday. If you choose this option we will email you letting you know that mail is ready to be collected. You can also have your mail scanned to your email address before we either post it on or you collect it. Finally, if you are not expecting a great deal of mail we can send it out to you once a week, also saving on the cost of postage. If in doubt, then browse the site or just email us at [email protected]. Ciao for now.

A great solution: a virtual office!

A physical London office has a great impact on business, but it’s very expensive. Cost and quality of life are not the least significant factors to decide on having a virtual office in such an expensive and important city of the world. A Virtual Office is a guarantee of a high level of communication (dedicated receptionists answer calls in your company name), a prestigious business address, corporate boardrooms, meeting rooms and office space.

A Virtual Office give clients the impression that you operate from the heart of London and protect your home address, it doesn’t have any setup fees and has a low monthly cost. A Virtual Office is the best solution to have the prestige of a multinational corporation, without the cost: the cheapest chance for a global future.

How can you rent a Virtual Office in London? Joining londonpresence.com is easy and fast: you just need to fill the form online! Choose your package from the list and follow the easy instructions and in three days you can have an address in London for your company.

Why London?!

Why have a business operating out of London? That’s easy; because London is once again at the top of the list of best cities for business in Europe, according to the European Cities Monitor (ECM).

The head of the office responsible for this survey had these words to say: “From year to year London is consolidating its position as part of an elite group of global cities, together with New York and Tokyo. With the Olympic Games on the horizon in 2012, providing there is no major global economic turndown, London’s future seems to be only in one direction: up.”

Still not convinced? Okay. How about some stats… Over 20% of Europe’s top 500 companies are in London and 25% of the world’s largest financial companies have their main offices in London. $504 billion is turned over here every single day in the largest foreign exchange market in the world. So- doing business here in London… you’re in good company (pun intended!)

London is brave, it provides new contacts and partnerships everyday, it is an open minded society where everybody can work and find their way. London hosts events, conferences and exhibitions that can provide an appropriate venue for every occasion. London is smart! And it is your best chance of success. Set your sights high and optimise the potential of your business by basing your company here in London.