Terry Leahy Explained

Sir Terry Leahy
Birth Name:Terence Patrick Leahy
Birth Date:28 February 1956
Birth Place:Belle Vale, Liverpool, England
Other Names:Terry Tesco, Tesco Leahy
Known For:CEO of Tesco Stores
Spouse:Alison Leahy
Children:3

Sir Terence Patrick Leahy (born 28 February 1956)[1] is a British businessman, previously the CEO of Tesco,[1] the largest British retailer and the third-largest retailer in the world measured by revenues. In 2011, he became a senior advisor at private equity company Clayton Dubilier & Rice.

He now lives in Cuffley, Hertfordshire,[2] with his wife, Alison, and his three children.[3]

Early life

Born in Belle Vale, Liverpool to Irish immigrants, Leahy grew up in a prefabricated home in Endbrook Road. His father, a merchant seaman, was injured in World War II and worked as a bookmaker to support the family. Leahy attended Our Lady of the Assumption Primary School, L25. He passed the 11+ exam and earned a scholarship to attend St. Edward's College, Liverpool a direct grant grammar school. He credits these institutions as providing scaffolding for ascent out of an impoverished background. He began working (including a job stacking shelves at Tesco) and went on to study at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST) where he gained his BSc in Management Sciences and graduated in 1977. He earned a D.Sc. from Cranfield University.[4]

Career

Tesco

Following his then girlfriend to London, he applied to become a product manager for Turkey Foil but was turned down. He applied for a job at Tesco, but lost out to another candidate. After that candidate was quickly reassigned upwards, Leahy returned to Tesco in 1979 as a marketing executive.[1]

Tesco was a resolute market follower of the two leading brands, Marks & Spencer as the then world's most profitable retailer, and Sainsbury's as the world's most profitable food retailer. Leahy concluded that Tesco should stop following a strategy of catch-up and start leading through market knowledge, which led to his success in devising and implementing the Tesco Clubcard loyalty programme and also monitoring the shopping habits of Clubcard holders.

Leahy was appointed to the board in 1992, and in 1995 Tesco became the UK's biggest retailer. Leahy became chief executive in 1997,[1] on the retirement of Lord MacLaurin (formerly his mentor) who wanted to appoint a successor to lead international expansion and increased market share. Tesco stretched its lead as the UK's largest retailer and also grew internationally.

Following Tesco's announcement of £2 billion in profits in April 2005, Leahy hit back against protests that the company was "too successful". During his tenure, he increased the company's UK market share from 20pc to 30pc.[5]

On 8 June 2010, Tesco announced that Leahy was to retire as chief executive in March 2011.[6] Leahy has been paid £8.42m in performance related bonuses since his departure from Tesco, in addition to a pension pot worth £18.4m at the time of his departure.[7] Since then he has focused on startup investments.

B&M Retail

Following his departure from Tesco Leahy was appointed the chairman of the board of B&M Retail in December 2012. Sir Terry is a senior adviser to CD&R. In 2017, it was announced that he would step down as chairman from B&M after five years.[8] During this time, he steered the retailer on to the stock market.[9] Revenues also rose from £993m to £2.7bn as a result of an aggressive expansion plan, which also saw its store portfolio increase from 331 shops to 893.[10]

Honours

Leahy was chosen as Britain's "Business Leader of the Year" in 2003 and the Fortune European Businessman of the Year for 2004.[11] In 2005, he was selected as Britain's most admired business leader by Management Today,[12] and a Guardian Unlimited Politics panel found him to be the most influential non-elected person in Britain in 2007.[13]

Leahy was granted the freedom of the city of Liverpool and knighted in 2002.[3] In 2010 The Tablet named him as one of Britain's most influential Roman Catholics.[14]

Institutions

He was Chancellor of UMIST, his alma mater, from 2002 until 1 October 2004, when he became one of two co-chancellors of the University of Manchester, when UMIST and the Victoria University of Manchester were merged into a new university.[15] He was given an honorary Doctor of Science degree from Cranfield University on 7 June 2007.[16]

Leahy is an Everton Football Club supporter and is a special advisor to the club.[17] He was also part of a proposed ground move to Kirkby which would have a new ground with a Tesco supermarket, a hotel, a range of high street shops and extensive car parking.[18] This project was called in for government scrutiny and rejected when Communities secretary, John Denham, decided the £400m project would breach shopping policies which discourage supermarket chains from sucking business away from town and city centres.[19]

Books

Leahy's book Management in 10 Words was published by Random House Business Books in June 2012.

Notes and References

  1. News: Sir Terry Leahy. The Economist. 1 September 2008.
  2. News: Gran in Tesco boss planning war. BBC. 1 September 2008 . 12 April 2008.
  3. News: Profile: Tesco chief Sir Terry Leahy. BBC. 1 September 2008 . 20 April 2004 . Jorn . Madslien.
  4. Web site: January 25, 2023 . Clayton Dubilier and Rice Advisors . Clayton Dubilier and Rice.
  5. News: Sir Terry Leahy to return to stock market with B&M. 2 February 2014. The Daily Telegraph. 25 February 2014.
  6. News: Tesco chief Sir Terry Leahy to retire. 8 June 2010. BBC News. BBC. 8 June 2010.
  7. News: Payouts to former Tesco boss Sir Terry Leahy since retirement top £8m. 7 July 2013. The Guardian. 8 July 2013.
  8. News: Sir Terry Leahy to check out after five years as chairman of B&M. Belfast Telegraph. 16 January 2019.
  9. News: Retail veteran Sir Terry Leahy checks out of B&M Bargains. Daily Telegraph. 14 November 2017 . 16 January 2019. Armstrong . Ashley .
  10. Web site: Retailing veteran Sir Terry Leahy stepping down from B&M. Financial Times. 16 January 2019.
  11. Web site: Terry Leahy. University of Manchester. 1 September 2008.
  12. News: Retail star hit by tall poppy syndrome. The Times. 1 September 2008 . London . Graham . Searjeant . 11 November 2005.
  13. News: Guardian Unlimited Politics top 50. The Guardian. 1 September 2008 . London . 16 April 2007.
  14. The Tablet's Top 100. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160313083725/http://www.thetablet.co.uk/pdf/4283. 13 March 2016. dmy-all. The Tablet.
  15. Web site: Senior Officers. University of Manchester. 1 September 2008.
  16. Web site: Cranfield honours Tesco boss . 13 January 2009 . dead . https://archive.today/20120724004149/http://www.cranfield.ac.uk/news/pressreleases/2007/page4804.jsp . 24 July 2012 . dmy-all .
  17. Web site: Sir Terry joins blues. Everton F.C.. 1 September 2008.
  18. Web site: Blues choose Kirkby site. icLiverpool. 1 September 2008.
  19. News: BBC Sport - Football - Government reject Everton's Kirkby stadium plans. 26 November 2009 .