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How to be a CEO
Evening Standard
97 episodes
9 months ago

The Evening Standard invites you to join us in conversation with some of the most influential people in the world’s best city for business.

‘How to be a CEO’ gives you exclusive access to leading business people who will give you their tips on how to get to the top and stay there.

Networking is the key to creating a successful start-up, and once you’re up and running it’s essential to keeping your SME afloat.

Join us fornightly on Monday mornings for a brand new episode.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Business
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All content for How to be a CEO is the property of Evening Standard and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

The Evening Standard invites you to join us in conversation with some of the most influential people in the world’s best city for business.

‘How to be a CEO’ gives you exclusive access to leading business people who will give you their tips on how to get to the top and stay there.

Networking is the key to creating a successful start-up, and once you’re up and running it’s essential to keeping your SME afloat.

Join us fornightly on Monday mornings for a brand new episode.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Business
News,
Government
Episodes (20/97)
How to be a CEO
Motorway CEO Tom Leathes on the journey to Unicorn status

Tom Leathes is CEO of Motorway, the car buying and selling company that launched in 2017 and secured Unicorn status just four years later, after it was valued at over $1billion.


The brand itself has grown rapidly in the UK since it launched, with effective TV and radio marketing campaigns promoting a different way of selling your car.


In this episode Tom explains his journey to success with Motorway, reveals his customer-first approach for the business, and discusses the evolving market for used EVs.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page here or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.





Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
23 minutes 9 seconds

How to be a CEO
Salesforce CEO Zahra Bahrololoumi on investing in AI

Zahra Bahrololoumi is CEO of Salesforce UK & Ireland, dubbed the world's number one customer relationship management software company. 


The company has committed $4 billion towards AI innovation and growth in the United Kingdom over five years, and it’s building the company’s first AI Centre based in London.


Zahra herself has been named one of the best-known female leaders in the UK, and in this episode Zahra discusses how AI is ‘top of the agenda’ for businesses, why more investment is needed in digital skills in the UK, and how hugely talented women in tech can reach the top.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page here or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
22 minutes 48 seconds

How to be a CEO
IBM UK & Ireland CEO Nicola Hodson on the AI revolution in business

Nicola Hodson is UK & Ireland CEO of multinational corporation IBM. It is the largest industrial research organisation in the world, and has been making headlines for its computer technology for decades. Today though, the company is firmly in the midst of the AI revolution and Nicola has been put in charge of continuing to push forward their artificial intelligence offering. 


In this episode Nicola reveals a variety of use-cases for AI today, how they are focused on ethics, and why businesses want to use the technology to help employees and boost productivity.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page here or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
20 minutes 49 seconds

How to be a CEO
Red Carnation Hotels CEO Jonathan Raggett on the evolving hospitality sector

Jonathan Raggett is CEO of Red Carnation Hotels, an international hotel group designed to offer guests a luxurious, bespoke experience. It has accommodation in places including the UK, Switzerland and South Africa. In this episode, Jonathan explains his ‘back to the floor’ scheme for managers, and reveals how the business is adapting to new challenges around sustainability, maintaining a good reputation online, and providing the right career pathways for his staff.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page here or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.





Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
20 minutes 30 seconds

How to be a CEO
UKHospitality CEO Kate Nicholls on boosting the sector in 2024

Kate Nicholls is the CEO of UKHospitality: the lead trade body for the hospitality industry in the UK. It represents more than 750 companies operating around 100,000 venues, in a sector that employs 3.5 million people. In this episode Kate discusses how the sector's still recovering from Covid-19, why a VAT cut is the single best way to boost hospitality right now, and why she hates the term 'staycation'.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page at standard.co.uk/business, or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
18 minutes 20 seconds

How to be a CEO
SME Season: Axa UK & Ireland's Tara Foley on why people are starting small businesses today

In this edition of How to be a CEO we’re talking to the boss of AXA UK and Ireland, Tara Foley. She took up the position last year, so there’s lots to talk about there, including what her plans for her first year are. We'll also be looking at their recent survey, looking at who is starting up small businesses right now, and what challenges they're facing.


We’ll also be looking at the AXA Start-up Angel competition, which is run in partnership with the Evening Standard and gives budding entrepreneurs the chance to win capital, and get first-class mentoring. There are six opportunities to win, including two top prizes of £25,000 to fund your business idea, and you’ll get mentoring from the AXA Startup Angels along with business insurance for a year. Entries close on June 2nd 2024. For more details, and Ts and Cs, head over to the website.


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to the business page at standard.co.uk/business, or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.







Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
12 minutes 41 seconds

How to be a CEO
SME Season: Sorting personal money while starting a business

On this edition of How to be a CEO, we’re talking to Octopus Money CEO Ruth Handcock to get tips on sorting out your finances when you’re trying to start a business. In this episode, we're talking about:


  • Why people think they’re bad with money, but many aren’t any worse than others
  • Why the cost of living crisis “feels like it’s got worse” for many people 
  • How to sort your personal finances and start a business at the same time
  • Why there are fewer start-ups founded by working class people
  • Why you should take your credit card details off Amazon
  • Why talking about money is so important
  • Why Ruth took the job as CEO of Octopus Money, and what she thinks the job really is
  • What she did on day one and how the job’s changed since then
  • The value of offering financial advice as a workplace benefit


Ruth will also be appearing at the Watercooler Event, which is being held alongside the Evening Standard’s SME Expo at Excel London on the 23rd and 24th of April. Tickets are free. Click the links to find out more.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
22 minutes 33 seconds

How to be a CEO
The Apprentice winner Tom Pellereau: how to succeed after the show

Continuing our SME season, looking at successful start-ups, we speak with 2011 The Apprentice winner Tom Pellereau, whose business is thriving, 13 years later.


Tom’s beauty innovation business Stylideas has made millions since launching in 2012, in part thanks to Lord Alan Sugar’s support and investment.


In this episode we talk about:


  • What Tom would have done if he didn’t make it on the show
  • Tom reflects on his record as the first Apprentice finalist to lose eight tasks 
  • How Lord Sugar has supported Tom’s business
  • The impact of the pandemic on Stylideas
  • How Tom has had to adapt to managing people
  • Tom explains how he deals with copycat products
  • Why Tom is focusing on the UK and Europe
  • Tom’s mission to make skin therapy tools more accessible
  • Can Tom become bigger than James Dyson?


For more interviews, news and analysis from the Evening Standard's business team, go to standard.co.uk/business or pick up the newspaper. How to be a CEO is released every second Monday, hit your follow button so you never miss out.




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
21 minutes 58 seconds

How to be a CEO
SME Season: Pip Hare Ocean Racing and How to Stay Calm Under Pressure

We're continuing our SME season on How to be a CEO with solo round the world sailor Pip Hare. In this episode:


  • Pip's 30 year journey to become a round the globe sailor
  • What is “flow state” and how did it help her accomplish her dream?
  • The problems trying to make her way in the sailing world as a young woman
  • The “knackered old boat” she had to use to sail solo around the world
  • Why winning was less important than “outperforming my boat”
  • The importance of keeping perspective on her achievements in times of stress
  • How to stay calm when your boat breaks down in the middle of the ocean with no-one to help
  • Why she’s the ultimate home worker, and the advice she can give to businesses


Pip’s going to be appearing at the Watercooler, a two day event about workplace wellbeing being held alongside the Evening Standard’s SME Expo on April 23rd and 24th at Excel London. To register and get FREE tickets to the Watercooler go to watercoolerevent.com, and and to learn more about the SME Expo, head to smexpo.co.uk. 



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
31 minutes 22 seconds

How to be a CEO
SME Season: So your start-up's a success... now what?

Continuing our season looking at the SME market, we're looking at what happens when you're start-up is a hit? What do you do next? 

 

Joining the show is Making Moves founder and CEO Tobi Crosbie. His office space rental company is about to celebrate its tenth anniversary, having come through the pandemic-induced era of home working. In this episode we talk about:

 

  • Why Tobi sold his flat to start up a new company
  • How he encouraged people to work for a small firm 
  • The big deal that changed everything
  • Is home working on its way out?
  • How do you celebrate ten years in business?
  • What's next for the company?

 

For more interviews, news and analysis from the Evening Standard's business team, go to standard.co.uk/business or pick up the newspaper. How to be a CEO is released every second Monday, hit your follow button so you never miss out. 



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
20 minutes 21 seconds

How to be a CEO
Pockit’s Virraj Jatania: How he got through a crisis “out of our control”

On this episode of How to be a CEO we’re continuing our series looking at start-up success stories.

Pockit is a London-based fintech, serving customers left behind by mainstream banks. It was launched in 2014, has more than 900 thousand customers, and last summer it raised ten million dollars in funding – but it hasn’t been all plain sailing.

Its CEO Virraj Jatania spoke to the Evening Standard’s business editor, Jonathan Prynn about:

  • How Virraj’s childhood growing up in a family business shaped his entrepreneurship
  • Why seeing the struggles of people restricted from mainstream banking made him want to launch Pockit
  • The chance meeting with Sir Alex Ferguson that led to him becoming an early investor
  • How his role as CEO changed as the company scaled up
  • What happened when a big funding round collapsed just as the pandemic arrived
  • How the Wirecard scandal led to a crisis at Pockit
  • The “two primary objectives” he has for the company’s future

How to be a CEO drops every second Monday. Hit your follow button to make sure you don’t miss an episode. You can read more from Jonathan Prynn at standard.co.uk/business



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
18 minutes 2 seconds

How to be a CEO
Theo Paphitis: How to Start a Business

Kickstarting a season of shows looking at the SME market, we speak to Theo Paphitis, the former Dragon's Den star whose retail group includes companies like Ryman Stationery, Robert Dyas, Boux Avenue and London Graphic Centre. He's also the man behind the phenomenally popular Small Business Sunday network, which he started from his kitchen table in 2010. In this episode we talk about:


  • Why starting a business makes you “bounce out of bed in the morning” 
  • How to deal with the curveballs when they come an SME’s way.
  • Why you should wear your business scars as a “badge of honour”
  • Could he do today what he did when he first started out as a young man?
  • The simple tweet that started the Small Business Sunday phenomenon
  • How he overcame “incredible shyness” to develop a network when he first started in business
  • The “chance network meeting” that led to Ryman Stationery helping him out in his early days
  • Why he runs the Theo Paphitis Retail Group as a small, family business
  • Who’s really making money from online retailing… and why it’s not the retailers?
  • Why retailers need to “have a reason to exist” to get people through the door
  • Ryman's "unique" approach to disrupting the greetings card market
  • Why business rates are "the most unfit tax known to man"


Theo will be appearing at the Evening Standard's SME Expo, where there’ll be 4,000 SME founders and decision makers hearing from keynote speakers and joining in the workshops and networking events taking place over the two days. It’s free, go to smexpo.co.uk for more details. 




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
24 minutes 38 seconds

How to be a CEO
How to build a better bank, with ex-Barclays boss Antony Jenkins

Formerly group CEO of Barclays, Antony Jenkins is the founder and CEO of 10x Banking. It's a tech company created in 2016 with an ambition to “build better banks”. In this conversation we talk about:


• The future of banking

•The influence of big tech in finance with innovations like Apple Pay

•Why he founded 10x Banking with his own money and the difficulty developing new technologies

•The ageing banking technology and why it’s difficult to replace

•How neobanks are able to take business away from traditional banks


For more interviews, news and features, check out standard.co.uk/business or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
20 minutes 28 seconds

How to be a CEO
New Year's Resolutions with McCann London's Polly McMorrow

Polly McMorrow is CEO of McCann London, part of one of the biggest advertising agencies in the world. Clients include Xbox, Aldi, Just Eat and Wimbledon. In this episode we talk about:

  • What her New Year Resolutions for business are
  • How to make a great marketing campaign 
  • Why she nearly turned the job down as soon as she was offered it
  • The future of marketing 

 

For more interviews, news and analysis go to standard.co.uk/business or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
30 minutes 54 seconds

How to be a CEO
Tips on How to be a CEO in 2024

It's been an extraordinary year, with extremely challenging conditions for businesses large and small across all sectors. In this edition of How to be a CEO we're joined by the Standard's business editor Jonathan Prynn and Business and Tech correspondent Simon Hunt. 

 

  • What's going to get better in 2024?
  • What sectors will thrive in the next twelve months?
  • The opportunities in sectors like tech, hospitality and finance
  • How will AI evolve, and will it still dominate the conversation?
  • Is social media going to change even more?
  • Why is Jonathan "optimistically pessimistic" about 2024?

 

For more interviews, news and analysis go to standard.co.uk/business



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
22 minutes 23 seconds

How to be a CEO
Comic Relief's Samir Patel: Running a charity in a cost-of-living crisis

This is a special edition of How to be a CEO, in support of the Evening Standard and Comic Relief’s Winter Survival Campaign. To donate go to comicrelief.com/winterdonate. The campaign continues until December 22nd.


Running a business in a cost of living crisis is hard. Imagine running a charity? Samir Patel’s the CEO of Comic Relief, which last year raised fifty million pounds to help causes addressing poverty and injustice. But the crises just keep coming, and economies around the world remain volatile. So, in all that, how do you persuade people with less money in their own pockets to give you something?  


In this episode we talk about: 

•How Comic Relief believes charity can be fun and the need to inspire hope

•The constant change required to stay relevant

•How global crises are affecting donations to the charity sector

•The shocking deprivation this year's Evening Standard & Comic Relief Winter Survival campaign is trying to tackle


For more on the campaign go to standard.co.uk. To donate, go to comicrelief.com/winterdonate 

Get more interviews, news and analysis at standard.co.uk/business




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
15 minutes 26 seconds

How to be a CEO
GoPro CEO Nick Woodman on luck, AI and beating the competition

It was 2002 when entrepreneur Nick Woodman first set up his GoPro business, something he calls today "the realisation of a dream".


What was only intended to be a small, niche business offering a new way of filming for surfers, grew into a household name synonymous with action cameras for extreme sports, adventuring and capturing footage in all conditions.


In this episode Nick tells us about his 21-year journey with GoPro, how he deals with competition in the secctor, the company's ethos of helping creators do more, and his future plans for the brand.


In this episode:


  • Nick's belief in 'a great deal of lucky timing'
  • Why he was 'terrified' of hiring people at the start
  • Nick's fear of competition and what he does to stay on top
  • Plans for desktop video editing software, and AI to make editing easier
  • 'Stay tuned' for new types of camera from GoPro
  • Why being passionate about a business is key to success


For more news, interviews and analysis go to standard.co.uk/business.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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1 year ago
23 minutes 30 seconds

How to be a CEO
B&Q CEO Graham Bell's blueprint for the future

Graham Bell took the reigns at B&Q in 2018, and has seen the company through a rapid evolution.


In this episode we talk about: 

  • His first day on the job and what his priorities were
  • How the Covid pandemic turbocharged their development
  • What the company's priorities are now
  • How customer demands led to them opening smaller stores
  • Why he's grateful to the person who bought the diy.com URL all those years ago


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to standard.co.uk/business




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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2 years ago
25 minutes 32 seconds

How to be a CEO
Joseph Joseph: From 'Gremlinesque' mistakes to global success

Twenty years ago Richard and his twin brother Anthony Joseph set up their company, Joseph Joseph, with an idea to revolutionise tasks in the home. Simple things like making better chopping boards for the kitchen, ironing boards that fold, and all sorts of ways to tidy up those kitchen drawers. Of course, not everything worked out. Yet, even with a few missteps here and there, Richard’s now CEO of a company that made a pre-tax profit of 20 million pounds last year, with 75% of their sales coming from outside of the UK. Not bad for a couple of brothers whose first steps into the international market involved loading a small car with chopping boards and driving around Europe for three weeks. In this episode we talk about:


·      How Joseph Joseph was formed

·      The kitchenware buyer that saved the company with one order

·      Why Richard’s been buying up their old designs on ebay, and what they’re worth today

·      Why product prices are “quite far down the track” during development

·      How their homes are all full of prototypes of failed experiments

·      The “gremlinesque” story of the spring-activated potato masher that didn’t go to plan

·      How online reviews have transformed how they listen to customers

·      How they got to a point where 75% of their sales are international


For more interviews, news and analysis, go to standard.co.uk/business.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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2 years ago
21 minutes 34 seconds

How to be a CEO
Charlie Bigham: The beauty of simplicity  

Charlie Bigham is the founder of the food company that bears his own name. Created in 1996 in his own kitchen, it now employs 700 people and sells dishes from chicken and mushroom pies you put in the oven to pan-fried Pad Thais. In this episode we talk about: 


  • Why he gave up his career as a management consultant to pursue his own business
  • The importance of keeping things simple, from business ideas to recipes
  • Why it would have been harder to set up a company like his in France or Italy
  • How the business is adapting to new technology and AI


For more business interviews, news and analysis, go to standard.co.uk or pick up the Evening Standard newspaper. 



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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2 years ago
25 minutes 7 seconds

How to be a CEO

The Evening Standard invites you to join us in conversation with some of the most influential people in the world’s best city for business.

‘How to be a CEO’ gives you exclusive access to leading business people who will give you their tips on how to get to the top and stay there.

Networking is the key to creating a successful start-up, and once you’re up and running it’s essential to keeping your SME afloat.

Join us fornightly on Monday mornings for a brand new episode.



Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.