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Business Thinker
Deep dives on business and leadership
By Dougal Shaw
đ„ âUtterly obscene marginsâ: How Rightmove became such a hot property
The Telegraph has this interesting deep dive into the story of Rightmove, the UK property search portal that Rupert Murdoch is keen to buy (but was recently rebuffed). It speaks to founder Harry Hill, who founded the FTSE100 company âpartly by accidentâ. A big motive for setting up the website in the early 2000s was to gain leverage over regional newspapers that were charging high rates to list properties in their newspapers, the best way to do it in the pre-internet era. The website was an immediate hit and Hill said at the time: âWe seem to have caught a tiger by the tail here!â The rest is history.
đ âRightmove is my pornâ â the addiction to online property search
Staying with Rightmove, this BBC piece has some interesting case studies showing what compels people to visit the Rightmove site. Itâs not as straightforward as people simply looking to buy properties. For many, itâs a chance to fantasise or simply see how others decorate their homes. But all traffic can be monetised, eyeballs bring advertising revenue.
âȘ TikTok and the live shopping revolution
Itâs another trend that has slowly migrated from Asia to the West. Live shopping on apps like TikTok is generating huge sales for companies beloved by Gen Zers, but little-known to older people. Live shopping on satellite TV is often derided as naff. This version on social media has cachet and an air of exclusivity. Stockport-based beauty start-up P Louise recently broke TikTok UKâs record by generating more than $2m of sales in 12 hours. It sold products every second during its live stream, totalling 96,000 items.
Business Quote
Inspiration from leaders
âThe happiness of your life depends upon the quality of your thoughts.â
â Marcus Aurelius
Business Agenda
A summary of the most important business news
By Sarah Vizard
1. Channel 4 posted a loss of ÂŁ52m last year after experiencing the biggest fall in ad revenues since the financial crash. Revenues at the broadcaster fell to ÂŁ1bn, from ÂŁ1.1bn in the prior year. It has already announced plans to cut jobs and costs as it shifts focus to its digital offering. You can read more here.
2. The UK ad watchdog is cracking down on ad campaigns by some of the UKâs biggest telecoms companies for misleading consumers about price rises during contracts. The Advertising Standards Authority has issued rulings against BT, EE, Plusnet, TalkTalk, O2 and Virgin Media after new guidance was added to the UK ad code saying that prominence must be given to important information about future price rises when customers sign up. You can read more here.
3. KPMG, Natwest and the law firm Addleshaw Goddard have resumed their membership of the Confederation of British Industry 18 months after the organisation lost the trust of membership amid a sexual harassment and assault scandal. The involvement of these companies signals a renewed confidence in the CBIâs restructuring efforts and attempts to restore its position as the âvoice of businessâ. You can read more here.
4. The US government is considering whether to ask a judge to break up Google to prevent it. That maintains its âmonopolyâ in internet search. It comes after a court ruling in August found Google had maintained its dominance of online search through illegal practices. One remedy being considered by the Department of Justice would prevent Google from using products such as Chrome, Play and Android to benefit its search offering. You can read more here.
5. Sheinâs UK sales increased by 38 per cent to ÂŁ1.55bn last year, while pre-tax profit doubled to ÂŁ24.4m. The company has become one of the worldâs most valuable start-ups by focusing on high-volume, cheap fashion. It is currently awaiting regulatory approval in the UK and China to proceed with an IPO that could value it at ÂŁ50bn, according to Bloomberg. You can read more here.
Business Question
Who am I?
- I started my business in the West Midlands
- The company was founded in 2000 but had an older legacy
- I am a co-CEO
- Iâm one of the countryâs richest people
- I was awarded a CBE in 2012
- My company employs over 7,500 and has over 90 million customers
- Iâm betting that you think that business is a family affair
The answer can be found at the bottom of the page.
Business Leader
The best of our content
Why failure is key to greatness
As the temperatures subside and the autumnal hues take over, we can officially look back at the summer sporting extravaganza that was. Euro 2024 provided the highs and lows that weâve come to expect from a major competition and the Paris Olympics and Paralympics provided an all-day sporting viewing treat for a whole month.
But the headlines and focus have moved on to the next. One of the abandoned talking points left behind from this shift is Gareth Southgateâs departure as England manager. Despite guiding the side to back-to-back Euro finals and World Cup knockout stages, many England fans were happy to see the back of the 54-year-old.
Does this point to a larger issue around expectations? Business Leader Expert Jake Humphrey says that it may: âResearch by the University of Iowa found that people are more disappointed with silver than with bronze. The reason for this is psychological. If you win a bronze medal then your brain goes: âOh wow, I almost didnât win a medal at all. How cool, that I managed to get a bronze one.â
âObviously, if you win gold, youâre delighted. But the most dissatisfied person on that podium is the silver medal winner. They are the person who thinks: âOh, a little bit more and perhaps I could have got myself a gold medal.â The reason why we need to reframe the way we talk about success in sport is not necessarily for the people who are competing now, but for the next generation.â
You can read the full article here.
Other popular articles
đŻ Take responsibility, even if itâs not your fault â it can change your life
đž Great British Billion-Pound Businesses
â Virgin Groupâs CEO on why itâs important to be prepared to fail
And finallyâŠ
From Outliers to Talking to Strangers (which I personally listen to at least once a year), Malcom Gladwell has permeated the zeitgeist with his writing. Twenty-five years after The Tipping Point, Malcolm Gladwellâs new book revisits the concept of epidemics and explores how we have learnt to manipulate the spread of ideas, viruses and trends with mixed results.
Revenge of the Tipping Point delves into topics such as Los Angelesâ bank robbery crisis, the concept of the magic third, the connection between big cats and teenage suicides and much more. The audiobook is also available to listen to on Spotify. Itâs done in a beautifully creative way by including audio from his interviews for the book, along with recreations and actual news footage. I would highly recommend giving it a listen.
The answer to todayâs Business Question is Denise Coates