Onside | Page 15

ONSIDE / INTERVIEW “Sometimes it’s about what’s hurting them, having a balance, family, relationships, which I find over 25 years is that by getting these things right you focus on real business issues. “If you want to teach your kids, then be the Dad who is seen as a successful role model. “We got IKEA – one of the directors worked with me when we were working with Rolls Royce. They knew me well enough to let me get on with it. I tell stories, I lift people out of the mire, they get won over. Be a great bloke and apply being a great bloke to everything you do.” And his central message, the name of his business: “Treat the impossible as if it’s inevitable.” He says it’s irrelevant what the business does. “I don’t know how nuclear fuel works, but I worked with British Nuclear Fuels for years.” But even though business takes up 95 per cent of his time, the sports that make up the rest provide him with some incredible stories. Sport is also a great shop window for i2i. His stories have certainly illuminated some of the recent Seneca networking lunches. “We got an intro to Wigan Athletic through the Bridgewater private hospital and met with Roberto Martinez who asked us to do two hours with the team before the semi-final with Millwall. It was the players who then got us back as they were daunted at the prospect of facing Manchester City in the final.” “We used the same exercise we used with Bolton Wanderers before their play off final win over Preston in 2001.” He tells me what it is and it is so obvious, so simple to execute and you can see why it was effective, but he swears me to secrecy. Then there’s the cricket. “One of our first sports jobs was with a young Lancashire cricketer called Andrew Flintoff. He had done everything. It was like Alexander the Great, he