'I stole £30,000 from my mum to make millions'

Kashif Rafiq

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
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لندن (نیٹ نیوز)برطانوی شہری اینڈریو مائیکل نے ماں کے کریڈٹ کارٹ سے 30 ہزار پاؤنڈ چرا کر کاروبار شروع کیا اور آج وہ کروڑوں پاؤنڈز کے مالک ہیں۔مائیکل نے بتایا کہ میں نے 1997 میں دوست کیساتھ مل کر ویب ہوسٹنگ کمپنی فاسٹ ہوسٹس قائم کی،

ہمیں تیزرفتار انٹرنیٹ کنکشن کی ضرورت تھی جسکی لاگت 30 ہزار پاؤنڈ تھی، ہمارے پاس رقم نہیں تھی تو میں نے اپنی والدہ کا کریڈٹ کارڈ چرا کر رقم استعمال کی، تاہم بعد میں والدہ کو بتا دیا جنہوں نے مجھے معاف کر دیا،جلد ہی ہمارا کاروبار چل نکلا، 9 سال بعد میں نے کمپنی کو 6 کروڑ 15 لاکھ پاؤنڈ میں بیچ دی،

پھر کلاؤڈ سٹوریج فرم ’’لائیو ڈرائیور‘‘ قائم کی اور اسے خطیر رقم کے عوض فروخت کر دیا۔میں نے کاروبار کے گر اپنے والد سے سیکھے ،شروع سے ہی میری ذہنیت کاروباری اور پیسے بنانے والی تھی۔مائیکل کا موجودہ کاروبار ’’بارک ڈاٹ کام‘‘ ہے ، یہ ایک ویب سائٹ ہے جو لوگوں کو گھر بیٹھے پلمبر سے لے کر گٹار سکھانے والے اور کتے کی دیکھ بھال کرنیوالے پیشہ ور افراد کی خدمات فراہم کرتی ہے ۔
https://roznama92news.com/ماں-کا-کری-کار-چرا-کر-کروں-کمانے-والا-برطانوی-نوجوان

The BBC's weekly The Boss series profiles different business leaders from around the world. This week we speak to serial technology entrepreneur Andrew Michael.

When Andrew Michael was 17 he gambled on changing his life by spending £30,000 on his mother's credit card without her knowledge.

In 1997 he was living at home with his mum in Cheltenham, in the west of England, when he spotted a business opportunity.

Wanting to set up his own website with a school friend, the self-confessed "computer boffin" realised that very few of the existing web-hosting companies were aimed at small businesses or members of the public.

"All of the web-hosting companies in the UK at the time were pitched at much bigger companies," says Andrew, now 39. "But we saw that small businesses and individuals wanted something self-service and easy to use."

So he and his friend decided to fill the gap in the market, and set up their own web-hosting company called Fasthosts.

"We had the computers we needed in my bedroom at Mum's house, and we had created the software ourselves," says Andrew.

"But what we really needed was a high-speed internet connection, which in those days involved digging up the road. It cost about 30 grand, but we had no money."

Thinking he had no other option, Andrew swiped his mother's credit card and ordered the internet upgrade. "We kind of blagged it over the phone," he says.

Also booking some magazine adverts - and explaining away the big new computer modem - the gamble was that the business would earn enough in its first month to pay off the credit card bill when it arrived.

Amazingly it worked. "By the end of the month we had enough clients and money to pay for the internet line and the advertising," says Andrew.

And just as importantly, his mother forgave him for the subterfuge.

While his friend went off to university, Andrew cancelled his own plans for higher education to focus full-time on growing Fasthosts instead.

He ended up selling it nine years later for £61.5m. Aged only 26 at the time, his 75% share of the business meant that he pocketed £46m.

Two years later Andrew set up a cloud storage firm called Livedrive, which he subsequently sold for an undisclosed sum also believed to be tens of millions.

While both businesses proved successful, Andrew also made newspaper headlines for throwing lavish, no-expense spared parties.

His work Christmas parties at Fasthosts were reported to have included performances by the likes of girlbands Girls Aloud and Sugababes, plus rockers The Darkness, and chat show host Jonathan Ross as the compère.

And he admits that he once paid for US R&B singer Usher to perform at a girlfriend's birthday party.

"I love a party, I love entertaining people," he says. "And I don't do things by halves."

Born in Cyprus but raised in Cheltenham, Andrew thinks he inherited his business drive and focus from his father.

"My father came over from Cyprus, and was very much a small business man," he says.

"Like many Cypriots, he opened up fish and chip shops and cafés, and so some of my childhood was spent driving around those sites, collecting takings, and discussing business ideas.

"From a very young age I had a trading, money-making, get-up-and-go mentality."

Looking back on how he expanded Fasthosts, he says that he was "laser focused", and that "nothing else mattered".

While the sale of the business in 2006 made him very rich, he says it also left him feeling unfulfilled.

"I remember being in the office when the money came into my bank account, and I thought it would make me really happy," he says.

"But I actually had a sinking feeling, as I walked through the office and realised I'd sold it all, that it all came down to a number on a spreadsheet."

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47156317
 
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IM SHAH

Senator (1k+ posts)
THIS IS WHAT SHARIEF FAMILY DID... THEY STOLE FROM PAKISTAN (MOTHERLAND) AND INVESTED INTO THEIR OWN BUSINESS........
 

Will_Bite

Prime Minister (20k+ posts)
THIS IS WHAT SHARIEF FAMILY DID... THEY STOLE FROM PAKISTAN (MOTHERLAND) AND INVESTED INTO THEIR OWN BUSINESS........

He stole money from his mother, but paid it back the very first month. So no harm, no foul.
In the case of Sharifs, they stole, and have lied through their teeth to pass on the blame to their father, son, pretty much whoever is not around.
 

IM SHAH

Senator (1k+ posts)
He stole money from his mother, but paid it back the very first month. So no harm, no foul.
In the case of Sharifs, they stole, and have lied through their teeth to pass on the blame to their father, son, pretty much whoever is not around.
basically i was mocking sharief family
 

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