Ivan Massow: Difference between revisions
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Massow has raised funds for charity and founded the April Bombing Appeal for victims of the April 1999 [[David Copeland#Bombings|nail-bombings in Soho, Brixton and Brick Lane]] in London, raising funds to provide wheelchair access in homes and financial support for people unable to work as a result of their injuries.<ref>{{cite news|title=Appeal for the Victims of the Three London Bombs|last=OutRage! London|year=1999|url=http://rosecottage.me.uk/OutRage-archives/bombvigil.htm}}</ref> |
Massow has raised funds for charity and founded the April Bombing Appeal for victims of the April 1999 [[David Copeland#Bombings|nail-bombings in Soho, Brixton and Brick Lane]] in London, raising funds to provide wheelchair access in homes and financial support for people unable to work as a result of their injuries.<ref>{{cite news|title=Appeal for the Victims of the Three London Bombs|last=OutRage! London|year=1999|url=http://rosecottage.me.uk/OutRage-archives/bombvigil.htm}}</ref> |
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In partnership with [[Oxfam]] and Beat That Quote, Massow developed ''Compare for Good'', a charity fundraising price comparison website which promised to pay 2/3rds of the money raised by the site to Oxfam.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2010/mar/14/oxfam-compare-for-good|title=Oxfam launches comparison site|publisher=The Guardian/The Observer|accessdate=27 July 2012}}</ref><ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20110207155401/http://compareforgood.com/ compareforgood.com] 7 February 2011. Retrieved from Internet Archive 28 August 2013.</ref> The site only lasted for a little over one year, however, before being redirected to beatthatquote.com which was sold to [[Google]] |
In partnership with [[Oxfam]] and [[BeatThatQuote.com|Beat That Quote]], Massow developed ''Compare for Good'', a charity fundraising price comparison website which promised to pay 2/3rds of the money raised by the site to Oxfam.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2010/mar/14/oxfam-compare-for-good|title=Oxfam launches comparison site|publisher=The Guardian/The Observer|accessdate=27 July 2012}}</ref><ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20110207155401/http://compareforgood.com/ compareforgood.com] 7 February 2011. Retrieved from Internet Archive 28 August 2013.</ref> The site only lasted for a little over one year, however, before being redirected to beatthatquote.com which was subsequently sold to [[Google]].<ref>http://web.archive.org/web/20111026094235/http://www.beatthatquote.com/ beatthatquote.com] 26 October 2011. Retrieved from Internet Archive 28 August 2013.</ref> |
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Massow Financial Services was the first mainstream business to sponsor London's [[Pride London|Gay Pride]] in 1990 which it continued to do in subsequent years.<ref name=Lacey/> |
Massow Financial Services was the first mainstream business to sponsor London's [[Pride London|Gay Pride]] in 1990 which it continued to do in subsequent years.<ref name=Lacey/> |
Revision as of 00:43, 28 August 2013
Ivan Massow | |
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Born | Ivan Field 11 September 1967 |
Occupation(s) | Entrepreneur, activist |
Ivan Julian Massow (born 11 September 1967) is a British financial services entrepreneur, gay rights campaigner, and media personality.[1][2][3] He is also a former Chairman of the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, and has been active in UK politics.[1][4]
Early life
Massow was born Ivan Field in Brighton, East Sussex.[1] His relationships with his father and subsequently his stepfather were poor;[5] as a boy he ended up being cared for by social services,[6] before being adopted as a pre-teenager by a Mr John Massow.[6][1] Commenting on his life prior to his adoption, Massow has stated that "My life up to then is a bit of a blur. I had four different families, my name changed from Field to Mitchell to Massow, I was moved around for various reasons."[7]
Massow is dyslexic[5] and left school at 16 with one O-level in metalwork,[5] with possibly others in photography[6] and history,[7] however information regarding his early qualifications is ambiguous, and Massow himself has commented that "I lied about them so much, I can't remember what's actually true."[6] He studied at Eastbourne for a BTEC in art and design,[5] then moved to Bristol and was employed by an insurance firm.[Note 1][5] In 1990 Massow moved to London and started his own financial services business.[5]
Business career
Massow Financial Services
In 1990 and with less than £5,000 Massow started Bowater Massow, later to become Massow Financial Services Ltd, running it initially from a squat in Kentish Town, London, using just a mobile phone.[1][8] Massow specialised in offering financial services to gay people,[1] in particular sourcing competitively priced insurance and mortgages for customers whose sexuality previously resulted in their being charged much higher premiums.[5] Massow claims he was dismayed to see the prejudicial attitude within the insurance industry towards gay men and people with HIV and AIDS,[7] hence "what I decided to do was set up this company to try and help these people."[7] Accompanied by imaginative advertising that included a poster campaign depicting Massow embracing his then boyfriend,[1] Massow's company soon attracted customers and expanded; the success and high profile of the business resulted in Massow being voted Man of the Year by the Pink Paper in 1996,[7] and by 1997 Massow had become a multi-millionaire.[7] At the end of the decade his company had several offices, including branches in Edinburgh, Manchester and Liverpool,[7][9] and was at the forefront of the 'gay finance' sector.[8]
At the end of 2000 Massow merged his company with another gay-orientated finance company, Rainbow Finance of Oxford, thereby creating Rainbow Massow, one of the largest independent financial advice firms in the UK.[8] Massow took the role of Chairman and was superseded as Managing Director by Louis Letourneau, who had owned Rainbow Finance.[8] The market value of the new company was £20M, and Massow claimed that turnover would rise from £2M per annum to over £3.5M.[8] However within one year the firm ran out of money and went out of business.[8] Shortly afterwards Massow described the decision to stop trading as "the most terrible thing that has happened in my entire business life".[8] Both parties blamed the other for the new firm's demise. Letourneau claimed that the merger had happened after Massow had endured two years of heavy losses (£700,000 in 1998-99 and £465,777 in 1999-2000),[9] and that he (Letourneau) had been made a scapegoat for Massow's failures.[8] He claimed that Massow's accounts had not been properly maintained and that Massow didn't fulfill promises of extra finance for expansion.[8] He said "the basic problem was that we were suffering from falling sales in a falling market and fundamentally we needed more funding. In my opinion [Massow] was quite happy to see it go into receivership and then buy it back cheaply."[8] Massow claimed that Letourneau had incurred excessive costs on staff and offices, stating that new regional offices "only had one person working in them yet they were stuffed full of brand new furniture and new photocopiers" and that "around half the costs of the company were going to pay the salaries of managers".[8] Massow eventually bought the company back from the receiver for about £1.5M[5][8] and subsequently restabilised it.[5]
Jake
In 2001 Massow set up Jake, an online social networking site for gay professionals.[10]
Allied Dunbar and Zurich
Between 2003 and 2004 Massow was Director of another financial adviser firm, this time a tied agent of the Zurich Advice Network (previously Allied Dunbar). Massow had previously campaigned against what he saw as Allied Dunbar's anti-gay underwriting practices,[1] but he claimed that "they've moved on and, for the sake of my customers, so must I [...] if other gay financial advisers think they're doing the best for their customers by blackballing all the companies that were once out of line (there were about eight of them) when it came to gay issues - then their priorities are very strange. Financial advice is about getting the best product - not petty grudge bearing." [11] Massow accepted a transitional loan of £330,000 to enable office relocation and staff training.[12] However the arrangement was short-lived and ironically ended after a dispute between Massow and Zurich over Zurich's approach to insuring the gay clients in which the firm specialised. A long £13m legal case followed which, ultimately, Massow lost.[1]
Pay Me My
In September 2011 Massow set up Pay Me My, a trading name of Massows Limited, which offered customers a rebate of 80% of the 'trail' commission paid to their existing advisers if the customer switched their insurance, pension and investment policies to the agency of Pay Me My, who would take 20% as their fee.[13] Massow defended the business model of the firm from suggestions that it would not be viable following changes to financial regulation in the U.K. due to start on 1 January 2013,[14] however, it ceased trading in August 2013 after it announced that its business model was loss making and could not be sustained.[15] The firm informed its clients that, should they choose to remain with the company, all future trail commissions would be retained and not rebated.[16]
Others
Other Massow businesses include Halos and Horns and Massows Angels.
Contemporary art
In 1999, Massow became Chairman of the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London. He was brought in by Director Philip Dodd to increase sponsorship and patronage for the organisation. Dodd claimed that Massow was a "mass of contradictions, just like the ICA. He's a risky choice for us, but the ICA should always live dangerously."[5] However the working relationship between Massow and Dodd subsequently proved to be not wholly successful, as Dodd increasingly disliked Massow's knack for self-promotion[5] and perceived him to be taking over the role of being the organisation's public face.[17] The situation deteriorated irreparably when in January 2002 Massow wrote an article in New Statesman magazine, attacking the predominance of conceptual art in the art world. He described modern concept art as "pretentious, self-indulgent, craftless tat" and "the product of over-indulged, middle-class [...], bloated egos who patronise real people with fake understanding". He called the ICA a "pillar of the shock establishment". He attacked Tracey Emin saying she "couldn't think her way out of a paper bag",[18] though he admitted this comment was "a little below the belt".[17]
In February 2002, Massow resigned as Chairman of the ICA, after the board unanimously requested him to.[19] Board member Ekow Eshun was quoted in The Guardian as saying "I have no problem with Ivan bringing up this debate. But Ivan has been ramping up the story all week. I think he's been a little bit of a pillock.". There was speculation that Massow had deliberately been as provocative as possible in order to engineer his own sacking.[20] Massow claims he spoke out in order to redress the imbalance between the promotion of conceptual and more traditional art in the British art scene.[20] His views have engendered strong feelings about him amongst the art world; a year after his resignation one artist commented that "they treat him like the Black Death round here", although Massow has received less vocal support from many artists who fear they will never achieve recognition unless they follow the conceptual route.[5]
Massow collects figurative contemporary art and claims that he visits art colleges and artists' studios regularly. In a 2003 interview he stated that "I visit at least one a week, quietly, on my own. It helps to see how people work. How they define themselves. I rarely buy from galleries."[5] Massow has had his portrait painted nearly 30 times,[21] including a double nude diptych by Jonathan Yeo, son of Conservative MP Tim Yeo.[5] Massow has personally provided regular financial support for some artists, to assist them in their lives and work.[21][5]
Politics
Massow was first attracted to the politics of the Conservative Party when he was a boy.[6] He joined his local Young Conservatives and at age 14 became its chairman, the youngest in the country at the time.[6]
In the 1990s Massow's flatmates were for a time current Conservative Secretary of State for Education, Michael Gove and MP and former head of Conservative policy Nicholas Boles, a situation Massow described as "Tory Friends".[22][23]
However Massow, along with many espousing "compassionate conservatism", was frustrated by the Party's apparent reluctance to alter its stance on gay rights issues and discrimination in general. In 2000, following John Bercow MP's resignation from the front bench and the defection of Shaun Woodward MP to Labour, Massow too left the Conservative Party to join the Labour Party,[24] where he was welcomed by Mo Mowlam.[22] However Massow later returned to the Conservatives, subsequently claiming that the brief defection to Labour had a particular motivation: "I knew if I switched it would be front page news. I thought it would help the party focus on repealing Section 28. I had one meeting with Labour, that's all. I never wanted to be a candidate."[1]
Massow is currently head of the Conservative Technology Initiative for London.[25]
Media
In November 2005, Massow was the winning mentor on Channel 4's Make Me a Million.[26]
Massow produced the film Banksy's Coming For Dinner, starring Joan Collins.[27]
Charity work
Massow has raised funds for charity and founded the April Bombing Appeal for victims of the April 1999 nail-bombings in Soho, Brixton and Brick Lane in London, raising funds to provide wheelchair access in homes and financial support for people unable to work as a result of their injuries.[28]
In partnership with Oxfam and Beat That Quote, Massow developed Compare for Good, a charity fundraising price comparison website which promised to pay 2/3rds of the money raised by the site to Oxfam.[29][30] The site only lasted for a little over one year, however, before being redirected to beatthatquote.com which was subsequently sold to Google.[31]
Massow Financial Services was the first mainstream business to sponsor London's Gay Pride in 1990 which it continued to do in subsequent years.[7]
Personal life
Massow is openly gay and as of 2011 is in a relationship with an Oxford graduate named Jason.[10]
Massow lives in Hoxton, in London's East End.[21]
Massow enjoys horse riding and foxhunting.[10]
In the aftermath of the Zurich case, Massow moved to Spain.[10] He began to drink heavily and became an alcoholic. However he has not drunk since 2008 and now chairs an Alcoholics Anonymous group in Soho.[1]
In 2010 Massow developed an aneurysm and became seriously ill. He required urgent hospital treatment, including at one point being operated on without anaesthetic, which saved his life.[10]
Notes
- ^ Sources are divided over which insurance firm Massow worked in, either Friends Provident or National Provident
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "The fall and rise of Ivan Massow". The Guardian. 2 September 2011.
- ^ "Out, proud and very rich". The Guardian. 26 October 2000.
- ^ http://www.channel4.com/programmes/the-secret-millionaire/episode-guide/series-14/episode-1
- ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/1801503.stm
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Aspects of me". The Guardian. 26 April 2003. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f "Gay who lost heart for the Tory fight". The Guardian. 5 August 2000. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Lacey, Hester (23 November 1997). "Ivan Massow; Mr Pink goes to work". The Independent.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Collinson, Patrick (12 January 2002). "Rainbow warrior in stormy waters". The Guardian.
- ^ a b "One time political golden boy saves his ailing firm". The Daily Telegraph. 6 October 2001.
- ^ a b c d e "Ivan Massow: 'The prospect of dying wasn't frightening, there was nothing in my life to be ashamed of'". London Evening Standard. 21 March 2011. Retrieved 28 July 2012.
- ^ "The gay cash clash". The Guardian. 31 May 2003. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- ^ "Massow claims Zurich tried to ruin him". Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- ^ Massow's trail commission firm was 'doomed from the start' by Sam Macdonald, Money Marketing, 22 August 2013. Retrieved 28 August 2013. Archived here.
- ^ A Q&A with Ivan Massow by Scott Sinclair, ifaonline.co.uk, 9 September 2011. Retrieved 20 August 2013. Archived at WebCite
- ^ Ivan Massow's trail rebate firm goes out of business by Laura Miller, ifaonline.co.uk, 20 August 2013. Archived at WebCite.
- ^ Ivan Massow firm to keep 100% of trail if clients don't move by Sam Macdonald, www.fundweb.co.uk, 21 August 2013. Retrieved 21 August 2013. Archived at WebCite
- ^ a b "Gunfight at the ICA". The Guardian. 30 January 2002. Retrieved 24 July 2012.
- ^ Massow, Ivan (21 January 2002). "Why I hate our official art". New Statesman.
- ^ "ICA chairman resigns". BBC. 5 February 2002.
- ^ a b Gibbons, Fiachra (5 February 2002). "ICA fires chairman over 'tat' art jibe". The Guardian.
- ^ a b c "House & Home". Financial Times. 21 April 2012.
- ^ a b "Ivan Massow:Gay abandon". BBC. 2 August 2000.
- ^ Teeman, Tim (16 June 2009). "Ivan Massow: the never-ending Tory". The Times.
- ^ "Tory adviser defects to Labour". BBC News. 2 August 2000.
- ^ "Stansted should become London's global magnet". London Evening Standard. 11 June 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
- ^ Max, James (23 November 2005). "Massow cleans up on reality TV". The Times.
- ^ Banksy's Coming for Dinner
- ^ OutRage! London (1999). "Appeal for the Victims of the Three London Bombs".
- ^ "Oxfam launches comparison site". The Guardian/The Observer. Retrieved 27 July 2012.
- ^ compareforgood.com 7 February 2011. Retrieved from Internet Archive 28 August 2013.
- ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20111026094235/http://www.beatthatquote.com/ beatthatquote.com] 26 October 2011. Retrieved from Internet Archive 28 August 2013.
External links
- Banksy's Coming for Dinner, Massow's film, which premiered at Marbella International Film Festival 2009.