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@h4jk3rn
@h4jk3rn 6 күн бұрын
We sell Innocent drinks at the hockey arena where I work in Sweden, it's a team that play in the highest league and it is the richest hockey club in the country, and this drink sells in every corner of the arena, so it's interesting to see the man and the people behind the product.
@HelenCrane-jl1nv
@HelenCrane-jl1nv 8 күн бұрын
Mone tho, what a wrongun she turned out to be
@Linz0440
@Linz0440 21 күн бұрын
In Michelle's case, she ripped off the British public during Covid and should be in jail.
@artbargestudio
@artbargestudio Ай бұрын
He looks very young there compared to Dragons Den! What happened!?
@emmafrost13333
@emmafrost13333 Ай бұрын
What they say is nice but it's down to: how bright you are (not 'school/book' smart, but overall intelligent); how good of a salesman you are of both yourself and others/your products - people need to like you; and LUCK that you are picked for investment that day vs the thousands others who tried and failed. Or bank of mum and dad.
@GilesHartop
@GilesHartop 4 ай бұрын
They did huge VAT frauds and flew out the country when it came to paying tax offshore havens The rest is bullshit
@MariaRussell-c4e
@MariaRussell-c4e 5 ай бұрын
Richard is nice honest guy. The laundry model went on to rob NHS of 170 million 🤔
@scottfreeman5289
@scottfreeman5289 5 ай бұрын
Waiting for The lingerie workplace compared to the Smoothie company looks so depressing, That draconian & outdated era of corporate structure needs to be dropped out this day and age.
@alfiospuson7165
@alfiospuson7165 5 ай бұрын
Successful people are to intelligent with eight iq i just work for other people unfortunately this is my life but whoever always be happy what you got and take with you a lot of humility sorry amin humour 😂😂
@robert-anthonybrowne8727
@robert-anthonybrowne8727 8 ай бұрын
Helpful and insightful. NEVER give up on your dream. The journey might be circuitous, but keep on going, refining your rough edges to become the great person that you WILL become.
@bd1845
@bd1845 8 ай бұрын
Should re title Mone’s segment to.. Ripping off the NHS with sub standard PPE that could not be used during a Pandemic by constant aggressive lobbying of our contacts in the Government.
@londoner9355
@londoner9355 8 ай бұрын
i like that they can wear anything they like, so uncomfortable the leather shoe and shirt .... maybe i should be the boss lololol
@felix1974
@felix1974 8 ай бұрын
I;d like to see this one re-done in the light of Michelle Mone and what she has been up to lately
@dulcettonezzz8229
@dulcettonezzz8229 9 ай бұрын
Love these riches to riches stories. So inspiring
@paramedicchrisbookseries
@paramedicchrisbookseries 10 ай бұрын
Really interesting
@alisonsarahcarroll6063
@alisonsarahcarroll6063 10 ай бұрын
Great clip I enjoy the “innocent “ smoothies
@googleuser4720
@googleuser4720 11 ай бұрын
Is British TV always this terrible video quality?
@bagpussmacfarlan9008
@bagpussmacfarlan9008 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, we still record everything on VHS and communicate via pigeons
@Nataliegggggg
@Nataliegggggg Жыл бұрын
Yellow blouse boobs put lady has no understanding how to dress
@Nataliegggggg
@Nataliegggggg Жыл бұрын
If your boobs are out you are a mess and your home look like the greatest distaste I ever seen terrible taste
@denisehobbs8984
@denisehobbs8984 Жыл бұрын
What do you think of Michelle Mone now- what a disgusting individual and somebody who lies!!!!
@daveygee434
@daveygee434 Жыл бұрын
The same Mone who is now linked to the corrupt get rich scheme off the back of Covid victims? The same one who continues to lie? The same one who should be in Prison? Yeah, let’s talk about getting rich…
@John-ny7jn
@John-ny7jn 8 ай бұрын
Was looking for this comment - that vile woman should be in jail and the money she stole returned
@andrewclarke2472
@andrewclarke2472 Жыл бұрын
ok at her position lol
@andrewclarke2472
@andrewclarke2472 Жыл бұрын
me too from Hudds from colne valley.
@Miketyson121
@Miketyson121 Жыл бұрын
Vat fraudster in mobile phone
@Miketyson121
@Miketyson121 Жыл бұрын
VAT FRAUD AND GOT AWAY
@kevinscott8267
@kevinscott8267 Жыл бұрын
Mone is just a crook
@utv5490
@utv5490 Жыл бұрын
Every entrepreneur I have met has coke dealing involvement.......every single one bar none. And dangerous kids as well.
@tarquinbullocks1703
@tarquinbullocks1703 Жыл бұрын
Yes! Michelle Mone, who stole millions from the taxpayers from her company's sales of substandard PPE to the NHS during the covid crisis, all aided by her Tory cronies. Admirable!
@krisb-travel
@krisb-travel Жыл бұрын
Peter jones is so awkward but it makes good content
@krisb-travel
@krisb-travel Жыл бұрын
I don’t think I’d want to work in that lingerie office
@krisb-travel
@krisb-travel Жыл бұрын
This show was soooo good why did they stop
@TonBil1
@TonBil1 Жыл бұрын
Why does Peter Jones stress the letter M every time he says 'multi-million'? Must I be impressed?
@khinmaungwin9830
@khinmaungwin9830 Жыл бұрын
So, just before watching this video, I feel exited and find and buy the book written by Mrs. Michelle Mone.
@khinmaungwin9830
@khinmaungwin9830 Жыл бұрын
Yes Peter is not only a businessman and billionaire but also a good story teller and presenter. Since I used to watch Dragons Den, I felt he was the most experienced man although he seems tough. Comments and suggestions, analysis are good and fast.
@ren11479
@ren11479 Жыл бұрын
Interesting and major point about him saying he doesn't agree the main driver of business is profit, imo. You can get with the objective of profit quite far, and become rich. But with a real mission and vision, you connect with much wider audience, and connect in much more sustainable way. And ultimately you generate a massive amount of wealth if you are a good businessman too.
@salikakhoonbarthao8177
@salikakhoonbarthao8177 Жыл бұрын
I am from Huddersfield too 😅
@SoloBench
@SoloBench Жыл бұрын
"it's all about being natural" - but I'm sure if you had some opinions that aren't lefty aligned you'd be expelled immediately
@AbdJiA
@AbdJiA Жыл бұрын
Scottish accent ❤😂
@Sam-bz4hf
@Sam-bz4hf Жыл бұрын
🐶 Oi 🔥 Michelle 🐶 my 🔥 name 🐶 is 🔥 Sam 🐶 Oates 🔥 bideford 🐶 and 🔥 demi 🐶 the 🔥 dog 🐶🔥
@petergardner6756
@petergardner6756 Жыл бұрын
Where is the PPE money !!!!!!!!
@Brizlebird
@Brizlebird Жыл бұрын
I’ll never forgive Michelle for ripping off the taxpayer during Covid. Fraud is too kind a term.
@mac-vl4ib
@mac-vl4ib Жыл бұрын
It felt to good to be true because it IS MAKES CASH FROM PUBLIC PURSE LOOK AFTER YOUR TEAM MY ARSE JAIL TIME NEXT HOPEFULLY
@tacocat717
@tacocat717 Жыл бұрын
This editing is awful. Sound and picture.
@jakethistle9071
@jakethistle9071 Жыл бұрын
One is still a successful businessman today... the other is a criminal on the run! Where's our money, Mone?
@andrewclarke6916
@andrewclarke6916 Жыл бұрын
And where's Michelle Mone now? And where is the £133.6m she owes the British taxpayer from her failed PPE company?
@plummetplum
@plummetplum Жыл бұрын
Michelle Malone manipulative? Ha ha ha
@nomore6939
@nomore6939 Жыл бұрын
Peter Jones had a rich mummy and daddy ... that helps
@galaxion62
@galaxion62 Жыл бұрын
Hmm.... & now Michelle Mone is at the center of a 200 million Medpro Covid PPE contract scandal, being investigated by the NCA. Mone & her husband received tens of millions in profits from this 🤔 . So what you see in this interview is merely a front put on to cover up what has really generated her wealth!.
@paullangton-rogers2390
@paullangton-rogers2390 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating series. Entrepreneurs do share common traits that make them successful individuals but often have very different personalities and drivers. Remember the story of Larry Page at Google and Bill Gates at Microsoft. Their stories started somewhat similar, they were young guys fascinated by computers and coding, money came secondary at the start for Google. However for Bill Gates, money was a major driver from an early age. Even when him and his school-friend coded BASIC they were focused on selling and licensing their software. Whereas for a long time Google made no profit and was mainly driven by collecting and organising data, indexing the Web. They probably had no idea of the enormous value Google would eventually have in the early days, they just saw a need for something and started doing it, the money came as a by-product of that as their userbase grew. Initially from advertising around search results. Now it's got a monopoly on the mobile operating system and grown bigger than Microsoft and is arguably one of the most important and influential businesses that ever existed. What fascinates me is that Bill Gates was in a position to buy Google 10,000 times over without even thinking about it. Google was not even close to being a revenue generating profitable business for a decade and Microsoft was already a giant. And although Gates during that decade recognized early on the future commercial value of the Internet (he even wrote books about it), he stood by, and let Google grow and grow and didn't try to acquire it cheap when he had the chance to. That mistake cost him not only the mobile operating system market, but also began to eat into Microsoft's core business model eventually, Windows operating system and Microsoft applications software sales. Another individual and story that fascinates me is Warren Buffet the world's most successful equity manager and stockmarket investor. He started out with $15,000 in the 1950's as a young green investor. Initially he made his money buying penny stocks (junk stock) and trying to invest in and acquire a controlling interest in companies in distress..he was the original Gordon Gecco, a corporate raider who would liquidate businesses ruthlessly and asset strip them after accquiring them. Buffet had already started to change his approach to investing after feeling bad about putting people out of jobs. When along comes Charlie Mung and they enter a partnership and lifelong friendship as they share and develop a distinctly unique approach to stockmarket investing, resulting in them building the world's largest private equity fund, Berkshire Hathaway worth around $400 billion. Buffet and Munger came up with the idea of 'brand moat investing' selectively investing in companies with very established strong brands giving them large market share and few competitors. Berkshire also do value investing..they buy into solid businesses that are performing well over time but when the stockmarket or their stock prices are down, kind of like bargain shopping in a sale, buying an asset for less than its really worth. And they always take a long-term view and rarely sell stocks. This approach has meant Berkshire has not only out-performed the stockmarket indexes but also most other private equity management funds, averaging over 27% a year for 50 years straight. Add to that their compounding philosophy of re-investing all stock dividends and that's why Berkshire has grown so large. What puzzles me about Buffet and Munger is that they seem to have recently broke away from the philosophy and approach to stocks investing that has served them well for so long. I noticed the Berkshire fund although very well diversified across 7 industry sectors, has liquidated nearly all its technology and financial sector stocks and has moved a massive 40% of its entire equity fund into Apple stock, nearly half the entire fund. That much exposure in one sector is unusual, let alone one stock. What is it about Apple that makes Buffet and Munger so confident to put nearly half their equity fund into Apple stock? It seems entirely at odds with over half a century of successful investing and a huge gamble. They must either know something about Apple, or are simply taking a long-term view that Apple stock at its present price is a bargain and the future stock price is likely to grow 1,000 times higher, as we've seen happen with other big brand companies. In the 1990's Next plc was a modest but high quality highstreet clothing retailer in UK (with a 100 year history as tailors of men's clothing) which had just floated on the stockmarket as a penny stock with a listing valuing the stock at around 92p a share. In the days before Internet and the ease of buying stocks commission-free from your smartphone with a single click, I contacted a stock brokerage firm, setup an account and bought 1,000 stocks in Next, since I just had a strong instinct that one day Next would be a major retail brand beyond clothing, and its chain of stores and market share would grow considerably. I used to shop exclusively back then at Next for my own clothes and totally believed in the brand. The quality of its clothes and unique attention to design detail and style, plus a proven long established family business in tailoring behind it made me confident it was a sound investment. And I liked the idea of owning part of the business that I bought all my clothes from every year and wanted to share in the company's growth and success. Another factor in my deciding to invest in Next was because around the time it floated, it had just launched its mail order operation with an exclusive hardback catalogue, which they actually SOLD to customers for £4 because their clothing catalogues were so expensive to make, and also it was a clever marketing strategy, of luxury and exclusivity, by making customers pay just to receive their catalogues, it made customers feel they were part of something exclusive, whilst helping Next finance its mail order operation, or at least off-set some of the operational costs. This was in the days before Internet shopping and websites existed. Next was already expanding beyond clothing and starting to manufacture and sell Next brand fragrances, cosmetics, even furniture and household items, a wide range of items via those hardback catalogues. Today, 30 years later, Next plc is the largest retailer in the UK far surpassing my expectations. With its stock price currently trading at a staggering £6,472 a stock. The 1,000 stocks I bought for pennies (£920, a third of my savings at that time) would today be worth £6.4 million. Enough wealth to last a lifetime probably twice over if used sensibly from that one decision and a fairly small capital risk. The moral of the story here, which applies in all these examples and individuals, is to trust your instinct in business, follow your passion, and invest in something you believe in or do something you believe in. Take action, don't just think about it.. Be prepared to take a risk if your instinct feels right. You might only get one chance in a lifetime like my Next opportunity. Don't pass it up.
@waffle_chair9269
@waffle_chair9269 Жыл бұрын
Stunned bbc allowed a random youtuber to put this up.