Each week, we dig into the memory bank of the City’s great and good. Today, William Reeve, CEO of Goodlord and founder of Lovefilm and Secret Escapes, tells us about his career, what he loves about the City, and the Renters Rights’ Bill in Square Mile and Me
Software programmer – I worked as a 15-year-old for a local networking company in Cambridge as a summer job. Not exactly a paper round, I realise!
Depends a bit how you define it but my first graduate job was as a business snalyst at McKinsey & Co, the management consulting firm, in London.
I sort of stumbled into moving to London as an 18-year-old when I went to work for IBM on the South Bank pre-university. I loved my year there, and being in London, and never really looked back. London was always where I saw the best opportunities and where the people I liked hanging out with seemed to want to be.
I absolutely love the City. I love its blend of deep history – some of the most interesting in England – and modernity, again up there with the best in the world. The City is both timeless and bang up to date, all at once.
As a cyclist, I would love to see better provision in the City for cyclists. In my opinion, it’s the perfect way to travel around town and we should make it easier. It is improving, but parking bikes can be a real pain. It’s almost impossible near the Bank of England, for instance.
I remember interviewing a candidate in the late 1990s for a research job. He was quite experienced – something of a name in our field – but I was a bit concerned about his numeracy. So I asked him (in a roundabout way, I concede) what 2+2 was. He couldn’t answer the question. The interview didn’t last much longer.
I remember being invited to Wimbledon by American Express. They had a senior big-wig stand up to say a few words. I didn’t know who she was, so I asked my host “who is this lady?” “Oh, that’s Virginia Wade, you know – the former Wimbledon champion…”
For me, my proudest achievements aren’t ‘moments’. They come about from years of work.
For instance I’m proud of what I’ve helped Goodlord achieve. I joined the business in 2018 when it faced some survival questions, and now it is leading the way in improving the residential renting experience across the UK as a thriving, profitable business. What makes me proudest there is how many of the key people making it happen now were there when I joined – it’s really their success story, not mine.I just helped them to make it happen. And we have a lot we still want to do!
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