Tag Archives: history

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.

Welcome to Clerkenwell

If you were to find yourself strolling in Clerkenwell there are some lovely sites and historic areas surrounding your virtual office in the Borough of Islington. Clerkenwell is an area of rich history: it first became an area of notoriety in the Middle Ages when the parish clerks performed mystery plays, particular theatre shows based on biblical themes. Though the name derives from that period, it is also known as Little Italy, because – as the name suggests – it was a settling area in London for Italian immigrants for almost a century from the 1850s to the 1960s.

Located in the epicentre of four tube stations (Farringdon, Barbican, Chancery Lane, Holborn) and two rail stations (Farringdon and Barbican), Clerkenwell has very quick and easy connections to all parts of the city. Though it is primarily an area of business, you can find plenty of deli/sandwich shops, restaurants and bars, as well as one of the superclubs of London – Fabric on Charterhouse St.

The area is famous for the old village in its heart, between St. James’ Church and Clerkenwell Green – a park without grass for over 300 years, where Four Weddings and a Funeral and Shakespeare in Love have been filmed and Oliver Twist learned to pickpocket! The Eagle on Farringdon Road was the first gastropub in London and opened in 1991 to start the trend. The Clerkenwell is an excellent restaurant and also worth visiting for good food – a great place for a business lunch! Clerkenwell is the perfect place to live and work – Daniel Defoe knew this in the 1700s, as does Zaha Hadid knows it very well right now. There is a significant political past to the area surrounding Clerkenwell Green as noted by Wikipedia. Here’s an excerpt from the page:

“Clerkenwell Green has historically been associated with radicalism, from the Lollards in the 16th century, the Chartists in the 19th century and communists in the early 20th century.[1] In 1902, Vladimir Lenin moved the publication of the Iskra (Spark) to the British Social Democratic Federation at 37a Clerkenwell Green, and issues 22 to 38 were indeed edited there. At that time Lenin resided on Percy Circus, less than half a mile north of Clerkenwell Green. In 1903 the newspaper was moved to Geneva. It is said that Lenin and a young Stalin met in the Crown and Anchor pub (now known as The Crown Tavern) on the Green when the latter was visiting London in 1903. In the 1920s and 1930s, 37a Clerkenwell Green was a venue for Communist Party meetings, and the Marx Memorial Library was founded on the same site in 1933. Clerkenwell’s tradition of left-leaning publication continues today, with The Guardian and The Observer having their headquarters a short walk away – although both papers will move to Kings Cross in 2008.”

London Presence however is not affiliated with any radicalist party today (!)

For more information on the area go to the Wikipedia page here.

Top 10 museums in London

Let’s start the week with something fun… Here at London presence, we know that most of our clients live outside of London, so here is a guide of the London museums if you are visiting this great city as a tourist. London is the city of business, lifestyle and culture so, after the economic news, here we are the top 10 of the museums, draft by monthly visitors:

Tate Gallery – 6,025,888

The first position is a double position, because it involves two museums: Tate Britain and Tate modern are the home of British art from the sixteenth century to the present day and of international modern and contemporary art. From one side of the river to the other one, they offer collective and individual exhibitions to convey British art, discover new artists and increase public knowledge.

British Museum – 4,492,852

British Museum tells the histories of the world, looking into the past to understand the present and discover the future. It offers a vast display from every country and every age. From Thursday 24th of July to Sunday 26 October 2008 the new major exhibition will be dedicated to the Roman Emperor Hadrian, his life, his emperor and his conflict.

National Gallery – 3,557,839

Fine arts and portraits are kept in the main building of Trafalgar Square: this museum is a great opportunity for every kind of visitors to discover art, through pictures. It offers a permanent collection and few temporary exhibitions (at the moment you shouldn’t miss the Radical Light: Italy’s Divisionist Painters 1891-1910).

Natural History Museum – 3,200,645

Natural History Museum promotes the discovery, understanding and enjoyment of the natural world. Children and adults can explore a landmark buildings and all its secrets about the universe and the human being.

Science Museum – 2,019,931

Science and technology for all the family, this museum offers interactive exhibits – fun for groups and families to see the world in a new and different way.

Victoria & Albert Museum – 1,902,587

This enormous museum is stuffed with different collections broken up into continents of the world that cover all manner of historical artifacts and art works: Architecture, Asia, British Galleries, Ceramics, Childhood, Contemporary, Fashion, Jewellery & Accessories, Furniture, Glass, Metalwork, Paintings & Drawings, Photography, Prints & Books, Sculpture, Textiles and Theatre & Performance.

National Maritime Museum – 1,493,042

This museum dedicated to the sea and to the stars, comprises three sites: The Maritime Galleries, the Royal Observatory and the Queen’s House. One huge museum that illustrates to everyone the importance of the sea, ships, time and the stars and their relationship with people: it is the largest number of visitors of the museum far from the centre and located in Greenwhich.

Imperial War Museum – 690,529

At the moment it offers 2 big exhibitions: For Your Eyes Only: Ian Fleming and James Bond (from 17th April 2008 to 1st March 2009) – to celebrate the centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth, and From War to Windrush (from 13th June 2008 to 29th March 2009) – to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the arrival of the MV Empire Windrush in Britain in 1948.

Museum of London – 375,013

This museum found in the Docklands tells the story of the city. At the moment we return to the scene of London’s most infamous crimes of Jack the Ripper and the East End, the first exhibition to explore the Jack the Ripper murders and their enduring legacy.

All museums in London are free (you have to pay to visit the temporary events) and are open 7 days a week. You justneed to plan your visit!