Losing
My Virginity: How I've Survived, Had Fun, and
Made a Fortune Doing Business My Way (Paperback)
(Credit:
Amazon.com)
Amazon.com
In this autobiography, Virgin Group founder Richard
Branson says one of his prime business criteria
is "fun." Fun made Branson a billionaire,
and few business memoirs are one-billionth as
fun as Branson's, nor as niftily written. Not
only does it relate his side of near-death corporate
experiences, it tells how the chairman literally
cheated death by gun, shipwreck, and balloon crash.
Branson's
empire--now encompassing interests in an airline,
pop music, soda pop, e-commerce, and financial
services--began when the dyslexic 16-year-old
dropped out of school in 1968 to found the British
magazine Student. His headmaster said, "I
predict that you will either go to prison or become
a millionaire." Briefly imprisoned for dodging
customs selling records, Branson got his first
million by releasing Tubular Bells, a maverick
recording all the stuffy executives rejected.
(1998's Tubular Bells III puts the series' sales
over 20 million.)
Despite
wild tales of Branson's wife-swapping and Keith
Richards fleeing naked from Branson's studio at
gunpoint with another man's woman, the most shocking
parts of the memoir concern British Airways' James
Bond-like "dirty tricks" campaign against
Virgin Atlantic, resulting in the biggest award
for damages in English history.
Though
it's filled with famous names, witty quotes, and
pulse-pounding accounts of lunatic balloon adventures,
it is as a business thriller that the book really
scores. His instinctive bet-the-ranch tactics
could cost him all, or earn another billion. Either
way, Branson will likely remain the most entertaining
entrepreneur in Europe. --Tim Appelo --This text
refers to an out of print or unavailable edition
of this title.
Profiles
Richard
Branson
Virgin
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