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Richard Branson
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Image:RichardBranson.jpg right|thumb|200px|Sir Richard Branson during the announcement of the Virgin Express airline which would compete with [[Ryanair and
EasyJet.]]
'''Sir Richard Charles Nicholas Branson''' (born
18 July 1950) is an
England English entrepreneur, best known for his wildly successful
Virgin Group Virgin brand, a banner that encompasses a variety of business organisations. The name ''Virgin'' was chosen because a female friend involved in setting up the initial record label commented "''We're all virgins at business''".
Life and career
Sir Richard Branson was educated at
Stowe School Stowe until he was 16 years old, and he began his entrepreneurial activities there by the setting up of Student Magazine. When he was 17, he opened a Student Advisory Centre, his first charity institution. Branson set up a record mail order business in 1970, started a record shop in
London shortly afterwards, and then in 1972 the record label
Virgin Records with
Nik Powell, opening a recording studio. The company's first issue was multi-instrumentalist
Mike Oldfield Mike Oldfield's ''
Tubular Bells'', which was to be a best-seller. Branson's company also courted controversy by signing bands like the
Sex Pistols, whose contract more conventional companies had dispensed with. Virgin also introduced
Culture Club to the music world. Later, in 1992, Branson sold the Virgin label to
EMI, a more conservatively-minded company which had rescinded the contract of the Pistols. Branson is said to have wept when the sale was completed since the record busines had been the genesis of the Virgin empire. He later formed
V2 Records to re-enter the music business.
Branson has rarely worn the conventional businessman's uniform of shirt, tie and suit, preferring a more relaxed image. He was initially known for sporting a wide range of pullovers - which he later discarded after press reports pointed out they were less than fashionable. He then went through a period of wearing predominately black.
Image:richardper.jpg left|200 px|thumb|Richard Branson (left) with Per Lindstrand and the ''Virgin Pacific Flyer'' capsule in [[Miyakonojo,
Japan in 1990]]
Image:virgin_atlantic.jpg right|200 px|thumb|Virgin Atlantic aircraft with ''flying angel'' decalDescribed as "flamboyant" by the mainstream media, Branson's personality can partly be credited for his successful career. Branson is known for his outlandish media events used to promote his businesses. He is keen on playful antagonisms, exemplified by his "Mine is bigger than yours" decals on the new
Airbus A340 Airbus A340-600 airliner jets used by his
Virgin Atlantic Airways airline. Also
Virgin Atlantic Airways Virgin Atlantic aircraft displayed a
Alberto Vargas Vargas-designed ''Scarlet Lady'' painted near the cockpit. This scantily-clad woman originally held a Virgin headscarf firmly on one hand (representing ''the future'') and the airline's main rival, British Airways' headscarf in the other, which she is discarding (to represent ''the past''). The design has since been adapted to make the image more "British" as she now holds a
Union Jack flag.
Record breaking exploits
With balloon designer and builder,
Per Lindstrand, Branson successfully flew in the first hot air balloon to cross the Atlantic Ocean. The ''Virgin Atlantic Flyer'', was the most advanced hot air balloon ever built, and was then the largest ever flown at 60,513 m³ (2,137,000 ft³) volume. Designed as the first hot air balloon to fly in the
jetstream jetstreams (high speed upper winds, often used by long-haul commercial aircraft to save fuel), the balloon reached ground speeds in excess of 130 mph (209 km/h). In 1991, again with Lindstrand, Branson crossed the Pacific Ocean from Japan to Arctic Canada, a distance of 7,672 km (4,767 miles), but their track took them a claimed 10,885 km. This again broke all existing records with speeds of up to 245 mph (394 km/h) in an even larger hot air balloon that still remains the largest ever built — measuring 74,000 m³ (2,600,000 ft³). In December 1998, Branson, partnered by Lindstrand and adventurer
Steve Fossett, flew for 7 days and covered over 20,000 km in a
Rozière balloon, launching from Morocco and landing in Hawaii.
In October 2003, he again teamed up with Steve Fossett as lead sponsor for an attempt to break the record for a non-stop flight around the world. A new aircraft, the
Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer GlobalFlyer, was built specially for the attempt by
Scaled Composites, and on
March 3,
2005, at about 01:50pm
Central Standard Time CST, Fossett completed the record-breaking flight after 67 hours and 1 minute, with an average speed of nearly 300
Miles per hour mph (480 km/h).
Business exploits
Image:private_eye_branson.jpg left|300 px|thumb|Front covers from ''[[Private Eye'' featuring Richard Branson. Left (
September 8,
2000): caption reads: ''I'm sorry, your winnings have been delayed'' - referring to Virgin's unsuccessful bid for the UK National Lottery, and
Virgin Trains' poor time-keeping record. Right (
December 29,
2000): caption reads: ''No-one believes in you anymore'']]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. He has also started a European
short-haul airline,
Virgin Express, and a national airline based in Nigeria, called
Virgin Nigeria. Another airline,
Virgin America, is set to launch out of
San Francisco International Airport San Francisco in 2006. Branson also attempted to develop a ''Virgin Cola'' brand, which was not a successful enterprise. Satirical British fortnightly magazine, ''
Private Eye'', has been critical of Branson's companies. ''(see Private Eye picture caption)''
After the so-called campaign of "dirty tricks" ''(see expanded reference in
Virgin Atlantic Airways)'', Branson sued rival airline
British Airways (BA) for
libel in 1992.
John King, Baron King of Wartnaby John King, then-chairman of BA, countersued Branson, 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; further, BA was to pay the legal fees of up to £3 million. Branson divided his compensation among his staff, the so-called "BA bonus."
Besides his activity in business, in 1987 he started Virgin Healthcare Foundation, a charity foundation that helps people with AIDS. In July 2003, Branson flew a replica of the first heavier-than-air flying machine, the
glider designed by
George Cayley Sir George Cayley, at the original site in
Yorkshire.
On
September 25,
2004 he announced the signing of a deal under which a new
space tourism company,
Virgin Galactic, will license the technology behind
SpaceShipOne to take paying passengers into
suborbital space. The group plans to make flights available to the public by late 2007 with tickets priced at $200,000. The deal was mostly financed by
Microsoft co-founder
Paul Allen, and the modern
United States American space engineer & visionary,
Burt Rutan.
Image:richardcapsule.jpg right|250 px|thumb|Richard Branson sitting astride a giant ''Virgin Cola''-branded propane tank - part of the ''Virgin Global Flyer'' balloon in [[Marrakech,
Morocco in 1997]]
Branson has been tagged as a 'transformational leader' by management lexicon, with his maverick strategies and his stress on the
Virgin Group as an organization driven on informality and information, one that's bottom heavy rather than strangled by top-level management.
Although Branson says his success was not planned, and it just happened, he has said that he has 10 secrets to success:
#You've got to challenge the big ones.
#Keep it casual.
#Haggle: everything is negotiable.
#Have fun working.
#Do the right things for the brand.
#Smile for the cameras!
#Don't lead "sheep", herd "cats".
#Move like a bullet.
#Size does matter.
#Be a common, regular person.
He was 7th in the
Sunday Times Rich List 2005.
Politics
Branson was fêted by the
Conservative Party (UK) 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 (UK) 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.[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/vote_2005/frontpage/4450641.stm] He reputedly considered running for
Mayor of London in 2004, but decided not to. Branson has described himself as a
libertarian.
Honours
In 1993, Branson received the
honorary degree of Doctor of Technology from
Loughborough University.
He became Sir Richard Branson when he was
Knight Bachelor knighted by the
Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom Queen in 1999 for "services to entrepreneurship"[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1999/12/99/new_years_honours/584131.stm].
He is the Patron of the ''
International Rescue Corps'' which is one of the few truly independent front-line search and rescue organisations in the world - a UK registered charity, financed solely by donations and their own fund raising, and manned totally by volunteers.
He has guest starred, playing himself, on several television shows, including ''
Friends'', ''
Baywatch'', ''
Birds of a Feather'', ''
The Daily Show'', ''
Only Fools and Horses'', ''
The Day Today'' and a special episode of the comedy
Goodness Gracious Me. He also was the star of a
reality television show on
Fox Television 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.
Sir Richard appears at No. 85 on the 2002 list of "
100 Greatest Britons" (sponsored by the
BBC and voted for by the public). His high public profile often leaves him open as a figure of satire — the
2000 AD (comic) 2000 AD series ''
Zenith (comic) Zenith'' featured a parody of Branson as a
supervillain, as the comic's publisher and favoured distributor and the Virgin group were in competition at the time. He is also caricatured in ''
The Simpsons'' episode
Monty Can't Buy Me Love as the tycoon Arthur Fortune.
See also
*
Virgin Group
*
List of Richard Branson's business ventures
References
* Branson, Richard. ''Losing My Virginity: How I've Survived, Had Fun, And Made a Fortune Doing Business My Way'', 1999, Three Rivers Press. ISBN 0812932293
* Branson, Richard. ''Losing My Virginity'', Revised Edition First Published in Great Britain by Virgin Books Limited, London, 2002
* Branson, Sir Richard and Prescot, Colin. ''To the Edge of Space: The Adventures of a Balloonist'', 2000, Boxtree. ISBN 0752218654
* Branson, Sir Richard. ''Sir Richard Branson, the Autobiography'', 2002, Longman. ISBN 0582512247
* Branson, Sir Richard. ''Losing my virginity — The autobiography'', 2005, ISBN 0753510200
* Bower, Tom. ''Branson'', 2001, ISBN 1841154008
External links
-
Virgin Corporate Website
-
virginbrand.com Unofficial blog of the Virgin Group
-
International Rescue Corps
-
Gonzo Way of Branding Fast Company magazine article on Sir Richard Branson
-
Unofficial blog of Sir Richard Branson
-
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI)
-
International Ballooning Commission (CIA) notable flights
-
Svenska Ballongfederationen, Pacific ocean flights
-
Profile on
BBC News dated September 27, 2004
-
Video Interview on
CBC News: The Hour dated November 21, 2005
-
Richard Branson - TV Tome profile
-
Unofficial Branson "Quest For The Best" website - Media Man Australia
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