Sir Alan Sugar

Sir Alan Sugar

Entrepreneur, football club owner. Host of BBC TV show The Apprentice.

Sir Alan Sugar founded the electronics group Amstrad in 1968 that became a billon pound company and his private fortune placed him on the The Times Richlist in 2004. In 2005 he hosted the BBC version of Donald Trump’s successful TV show.

Sir Alan Sugar went to Brooke House School in London but left at 16 and was briefly a civil service statistician.

It wasnt long before Alan Sugar went into business selling products such as cigarette lighters, intercoms and TV aerials. Sugar founded the home electronics group Amstrad in 1968.

In 1985 Sugar had a major breakthrough with the launch of the PCW8256 word processor which, although made of very cheap components, retailed at over £300.

At its peak Amstrad achieved a stock market valuation of £1.2 billion, but the nineties proved a troubled time. In 1997 Amstrad divided into Betacom and Viglen.

Sir Alan Sugars business empire was (as at 2005) estimated to be worth £700 million and he was 25th on The Times Richlist in 2004. In 1991 he took over Tottenham Hotspur Football Club, although he did claim later that the investment in the club was "a waste of my life".

In 2005 Sir Alan Sugar entered the world of reality TV when he tested 14 apprentices in a new BBC TV series based on Donald Trumps successful US show The Apprentice. A second series of the programme was broadcast in 2006.

Sir Alan Sugar

Sir Alan Sugar

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