Tuesday, 27 March 2012

Mohammad Ibrahim

 Mohammad Ibrahim Biography
The scene is set in Alexandria, Egypt in the 1950s. A small boy sits with his meager meal in a shabby, rented flat but his thoughts are lofty, as he dreams of becoming an Einstein or a Marie Curie. Today Mohammad ‘Mo’ Ibrahim, founder and former chairman of Celtel, is one of the richest men in Britain and also the founder of the Mo Ibrahim Foundation for African development.


Ibrahim’s biography reads like a typical rags-to-riches story. Born the son of a clerk in Sudan, the young Mohammad moved with his family to Alexandria, Egypt where he grew up. His father sacrificed all he had to send him to school, in what Mo Ibrahim termed a “hand-to-mouth kind of life.” But Ibrahim did not disappoint as he completed his degree in electrical engineering at the University of Alexandria. After working briefly for Sudan Telecom, Ibrahim’s fascination with phones procured him an engineering scholarship in the U.K., where he acquired a Masters in electronics and electrical engineering from the University of Bradford, and a PhD in mobile communications from the University of Birmingham.

A brainwave during a taxi ride, as he saw the driver operating his radio, changed Ibrahim’s future. At a time when mobile phones were the stuff of science fiction, the budding engineer helped lay the foundations for the modern mobile phone. Impressed by his work, British Telecom (BT) lured Ibrahim away from academia to become the technical director for Cellnet, its in-car telephony company. In 1985, his team launched the company’s first cellular service in the U.K. But after six years with the telecom giant, Ibrahim left BT in 1989 to be his own boss. With just $50,000, he started his own telecommunications consultancy, Mobile Systems International (MSI), and in just under ten years, the firm boasted 800 employees and 17 international subsidiaries. In 2000, Mo Ibrahim sold MSI to Marconi Plc for $916 million, reinvesting the funds into Celtel, an earlier spin-off of MSI. Ibrahim’s Celtel was formed in 1998 to build and operate mobile networks in Africa.

But, in a brilliant stroke of timing, the launch of this mobile network company missed the internet bust by a few years. Africa had also just begun to liberalize and was seeking investment inflows. Add to this Ibrahim’s commitment to transparency and ethical business practices, and Celtel had a winning recipe for success. The company grew in popularity, changing the lives of people in more than 14 African countries. With its clean image and quality of service, Celtel’s users ballooned from 7.5 million in 1999 to 76.8 million in 2004, an average annual increase of 58%. In 2005, Celtel was bought by Mobile Telecommunications Company KSC (MTC Kuwait) for $3.4 billion. Ibrahim commented, “At the end of the day, the level of transparency and quality of corporate governance enhanced the value of the company. When we sold the company we received 8.5 times EBITDA.”

Despite this success, the pipe-smoking Ibrahim is one of the rare billionaires who has not lost his roots amidst immense wealth. He left Celtel and established the Mo Ibrahim Foundation, and initiative which encourages business and development in the continent and awards funding to African heads of state and governments that have demonstrated excellence in African leadership. The mobile telecom entrepreneur went on to develop the Ibrahim Prize and the Ibrahim Index that rates African countries according to their efficient governance.

In 2007, Joaquim Chissano, President of Mozambique, became the first recipient of the Ibrahim Prize, the world’s largest award amounting to $5 million. Ibrahim recognized Chissano for bringing his country out of starvation and violence in the 1980s, leaving the country politically stable and economically stronger when he stepped down voluntarily in 2005. But this year, the usually charming and smiling Ibrahim wore a disappointed look as he announced that there was no recipient deemed worthy of the prize.

In 2008, Ibrahim was named Britain's most influential black person. But he asserts in his quiet demeanor, “I'm the same African boy who grew up, came here and worked hard. And I was fortunate enough that things I have done worked. So there's nothing unusual or fantastic. I’m the same person. I still drive the same type of car. I live in the same house. Most of the money I made has gone back to Africa, or is going back to Africa.” And this humility is perhaps a greater wealth than Ibrahim could possibly imagine.
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Eike Batista

Eike Batista Biography
Today, the Eike Batista biography is the story of 52 year old Rio De Janeiro based entrepreneur, the wealthiest man in Brazil, with his property alone being valued at US $7.5 billion. A renowned, self made businessman whose net worth is pegged at US$ 27 billion, Batista was recently featured in Forbes magazine as the eighth richest person in the world. He is a man known to take business risks that have eventually always paid off.

Born November 3, 1957, the son of Eliezer Batista da Silva (a well respected Brazilian government official and the then head of one of the world's largest mining companies Companhia Vale do Rio Doce - now Vale), Eike Batista now owns businesses in the oil, water and steel sectors. One of the first jobs Eike Batista took up was gold trading, after which he indulged in gold mining in the Amazon. The dense rainforests presented many dangers, and there was a time when his life was in grave danger. Fortunately, Batista fled away in his small plane with his two bodyguards and gold dust worth $200,000.

Brazil's richest and most influential businessman studied metallurgical engineering from the University of Aahen. As his stature grew, so did the number of gold mines that came under his management- from Russia to Argentina, Batista was carving a niche for himself. He also made headlines when his oil exploration findings off the coast of Brazil paid very rich dividends and made the nation one of the most promising countries as far the discovery of abundant oil is concerned.

Not many know that Eike Batista was a champion speedboat racer in his heyday, winning both national and international championships. He recently arranged for a national offshore powerboat championship in Brazil to popularize the sport, and since then, almost 26 powerful boats have participated in the championship. Batista's own boat, which is powered by a 1,100 horsepower engine, was among the ten superboats that participated in the New York Offshore Grand Prix on the Hudson River. Batista stated in one of his interviews that speed is in the blood of most Brazilians, and as a result, two of his close friends- Ayrton Senna and Nelson Piquet- were both world class Formula One Racing champions hailing from Brazil.

A college dropout, Eike Batista may well be on his way to becoming the world's richest man in due course of time. He has stated that he is looking to accumulate a net worth of approximately US$ 100 billion in the next ten years, and is keen to establish a healthy trading relationship with China.

However, life is not a bed of roses for everyone- not even Brazil's richest individual. There were allegations the billionaire was involved in gold smuggling. As a result, he was subjected to intense police investigations. Despite this phase in his life, Batista came out unscathed, as the accusations against him could never be proven.

He has come a long way in the last few years. One things is certain, the Eike Batista biography is not done yet.

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Re-thINC - Eike Batista at Zeitgeist Americas 2011
Lançamento da IMX de Eike Batista, com a IMG Worldwide
Eike Batista - Brazil's wealthiest man builds a super-port | Made in Germany


Monday, 26 March 2012

Lawrence Ellison

 Lawrence Ellison Biography
Larry Ellison is the founder and CEO of the enterprise software company Oracle Corporation. He is also a well known American billionaire and philanthropist.

Lawrence Joseph Ellison, better known as Larry Ellison, was born in New York City on August 17, 1944 to a young unwed Jewish mother. In order to provide her son with a better upbringing, Ellison's mother gave him to Lillian Spellman Ellison and Louis Ellison, her aunt and uncle in Chicago. They formally adopted Ellison when he was only nine months old. Ellison didn't meet or reunite with his birth mother until he was 48.

Ellison's adoptive father took the name Ellison when he entered the US from his native Crimea as a tribute to Ellis Island. He also hoped to conceal his Jewish heritage. In his early years, Ellison grew up in the middle-class neighborhood of Chicago's South Shore. Although he fondly recalls the nurturing and supportive nature of his adoptive mother, his adoptive father was often distant and cold.

Although he was labeled as an intelligent child, Larry Ellison was inattentive in his studies. After graduating from South Shore High School, Ellison attended the University of Illinois but left at the end of his second year after the death of his adoptive mother. He spent the summer living in Northern California with his friend Chuck Weiss then continued his studies at the University of Chicago. He only spent one term at the University during which time he discovered computer programming and permanently relocated to Northern California. He was 20 years old at the time.

Although his short attention span worked against him during his academic career, Ellison's drive and impatience worked perfectly in line with the needs of computer programming. He worked for a variety of companies as a computer programmer and spent his free time hiking and climbing in Yosemite. In 1967 he married Adda Quinn. The marriage lasted seven years and ended in a divorce in 1974.

During the later years of his marriage, Larry Ellison began working for Ampex Corporation as a programmer on a database project for the CIA. Ellison named the project "Oracle", a name he would later use to signify his own company. While working on the project, Ellison read "A Relational Model of Data for Large Shared Data Banks" by Edgar F. Codd which inspired him to front the initial $2000 as the start-up fee for his own database systems company named Software Development Laboratories. It switched names a few times and ended up as Oracle.

Larry Ellison wanted his Oracle database system to be compatible with the IBM System R, but IBM refused to share the code necessary to make this possible. So Ellison was forced to release his system as a singular data sharing system. The original release was called Oracle 2, despite the lack of an original Oracle or Oracle 1. During this time Ellison also married Nancy Wheeler Jenkins from whom he divorced one year later.

IBM, Ellison's initial rival, was the primary database system for companies but failed to initiate a system for smaller companies and microcomputers. Ellison, along with other entrepreneurs took advantage of the void and flooded the market with their systems. Oracle, Sybase, and eventually Microsoft took over the market.

Just before the rise of Oracle, Larry Ellison met and married his third wife, Barbara Boothe, with whom he had two children. They divorced in 1986 after three years of marriage.

As Oracle rose to power along with other database systems, its primary competitor, Sybase, was taken over by PowerSoft and lost some of its hold on the market. Although the original Sybase software was sold to Microsoft and turned into the well known "SQL Server", this merger allowed Oracle to recover from a financial fall and lead the open market in database systems.

For a short time Larry Ellison served as director of Apple Computer when Steve Jobs returned to the company in 1997. He resigned the position in 2002, sighting his inability to attend formal meetings, and one year later married his fourth wife, Melanie Craft. Steve Jobs served as the official photographer at the wedding.

Lawrence Ellison has five children, two with his third wife and three with Melanie Craft.

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#4 Lawrence Ellison
How to Pronounce Lawrence Ellison Oracle USA Forbes List of Billionaires Net Worth House Richest Man

Mukesh Ambani

 Mukesh Ambani Biography
With a net worth of around $45-billion, Mukesh Ambani is the richest man in Asia and the fifth richest in the world. He was selected as the Businessman of the Year in 2007 and is the proud owner of the world's most expensive private residence, Antilla, which he had built for a mind-blowing $2-billion.

The home is 27-stories high (actually 60-stories in true height, but only 27 floors) and features 7 separate floors for his car collection alone. Ambani is known worldwide for being one of the toughest and most savvy businessmen of the modern era. Although his position was inherited, his wealth wasn't. Ambani worked hard and amassed one of the world's largest fortunes.

Mukesh Ambani was born April 19, 1957 in Yemen, India. His father, a prominent businessman in his own right, Dhirubhai Ambani, was the founder of Reliance Industries. Ambani grew up surrounded by business. When he was only a child, he was already the next in line to keep the family company thriving not only in the area, but on a world scale.

Mukesh excelled in school when he was young. He attended the Abaay Morischa School in Mumbai and eventually completed his graduation with a bachelor's degree in chemical engineering from the UDCT. He even enrolled in Stanford University, hoping to receive an MBA, but left the school after one year.

In 1981, a 24-year-old Ambani joined his father's company, Reliance, and initiated a few key moves for the company, including the backward integration from textiles into polyester and further into petrochemicals. His father's dream of a global expansion came to fruition a few years later when Mukesh helped to create 60 brand new, world-class manufacturing facilities that all involved very diverse technologies. This raised the profile of Reliance and also their production. Reliance's manufacturing capacities went from a few hundred thousand tons to over twelve million annually.

Ambani then directed the creation of the world's largest “grassroots” petroleum refinery in Gujarat, India. The capacity was amazing for a grassroots organization, producing a capacity of 660,000 barrels daily, all integrated with petrochemicals. Ambani then went on to setup one of India's largest telecommunications companies in history, Reliance Communications Limited. Mukesh set this up with his brother, Anil, and the company was once known as Reliance Infocom. The two brothers parted ways, each taking an equal share of the revenue. If they had not split up, Ambani's net worth would be around $85-billion.

Ambani is one of the world's best and brightest businessmen. Under his leadership, Reliance constructed a retail division and launched a new chain, Delight stores, and also signed a letter of intent to make energy-efficient structures with NOVA Chemicals.

Mukesh Ambaini is also the owner of the Indian Premier League team, the Mumbai Indians, and he's married to Nita Ambani, a well-known philanthropist, and mother to his three children, Akash, Anant, and Isha.

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Mukesh Ambani's residence Antilia
Tv9 Gujarat - Mukesh Ambani arrived Chorwad with Family





Warren Buffett

Warren Buffett Biography
Warren Edward Buffett was born August 30th, 1930, to Howard and Leila Buffett, in Omaha, Nebraska. Warren's parents met while working on the school paper at the University of Nebraska, but when Warren, the middle child of the Buffetts' three, was born, Howard was a stockbroker turned US Congressman.

A young Buffett was always fascinated by numbers and always had a keen eye for business, as seen in his business ventures as a child; he sold soda pop door-to-door, sold tip sheets for horseracing, worked at his grandfather's grocery store (his family comes from a line of grocers), and impressed his friends by knowing the population of numerous US cities by heart.

a billionaire in the making

By age 11, Buffett had purchased his first stock at his father's brokerage -- three shares of Cities Service Preferred -- at $38 a share. Even at age 11, he wasn't too young to learn that patience is a virtue, and could have made the difference between his $5 profit (from selling too early) to hundreds more, after the stock soon rose to $200.

Warren Buffett
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EIC - Warren Buffett Biography #1 - einvestclub.com
Warren Buffett Biography #1/6 Mercury Business Group

Bernard Arnault

Bernard Arnault Biography
Bernard Arnault is the primary shareholder, chairman, and chief executive officer of the Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton company which focuses on producing and marketing a variety of luxury goods including the popular brands Moet champagne, Christian Dior, Dom Perignon, and Louis Vuitton.

Bernard Arnault was born on March 5, 1949 and grew up in Roubaix in the north of France. He attended the Ecole Polytechnique, an engineering school, and helped run his family's construction and property business firm after graduation. The company, named Ferret-Savinel, surged under Arnault's supervision and began building time shares on the French Riviera. After the French Socialist rise to power in 1981, Arnault, along with his wife and children, moved to the United States where he continued his construction business in Palm Beach, Florida.

When the political atmosphere in France changed in 1983, Arnault moved his family back to his native country and took over the struggling textile firm, Boussac which owned the brand Christian Dior. It was the French government who had been looking for someone to acquire the company and Bernard Arnault put up $15 million of his own money with some additional finances to purchase it. His entire reasoning behind the acquisition was to gain control of the Dior label and gain a foothold on the luxury market.

Arnault began building his empire by selling off various divisions of the Boussac company that had nothing to do with his luxury business goals. Much of that money went to purchasing 24% of the controlling shares of the LVMH enterprise. After a bitter battle with the executive staff, Arnault eventually gained control over the company and laid off a number of managing executives in order to rebuild the company to meet his vision.

Bernard Arnault shifted the company's focus away from the traditional trends and onto the new and creative energies that were immerging within France. He wanted to harness the creativity of the fashion world and bring it to the luxury marketplace. Part of this change included hiring a new designer by the name of John Galliano. Arnault's experience with business gave him the strength and knowledge he needed to rebuild the company and his training as a classical pianist gave him an understanding of the creative arts. This combination provided Arnault with a powerful foundation on which to build the future of LVMH.

Arnault continued to acquire brands throughout the 1990s and purchased luxury names such as Givenchy, TAG Heuer, Sephora, and a number of wine and spirit labels. He was criticized for his large luxury conglomerate but many of his competitors found that Arnault was making both business and financial strides with his decisions.

With the changing economies of the 21st century, however, Bernard Arnault found that much of the world was not purchasing the luxury goods they had craved in past years. As a result, many of the brands under the LVMH company struggled to make money and stay afloat. Arnault, however, was not dissuaded and continued to focus on quality and luxury while realizing that some of his brands and stores needed to be downsized. Despite any financial problems, Arnault still managed to keep a tight hold over some of the world's most well-known luxury brands in the industry.
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Superyacht Amadeus Owned by French Industrialist Bernard Arnault.wmv
Bernard Arnault Lagardère