Seb Bishop

Sebastian Luke (Seb) Bishop (born 1974)[1] was the CEO of GOOP, Gwyneth Paltrow's lifestyle company, from 2011 to 2014.[2] Prior to joining GOOP, Bishop was the International CEO of (RED), the organisation created by Bono and Bobby Shriver to raise money for The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. He had previously started the firm Espotting at the age of 26.[3]

Bishop was educated at Highgate School[1] and began Espotting with his school-friend Daniel Ishag in a basement flat in 2000. He expanded the business across Europe before merging with US based FindWhat.com in June 2004 in a deal which valued the company at $186m.[3] He is also the Chairman of Steak, a search-inspired communications agency.

In 2007 Bishop was one of 8 British entrepreneurs featured in the Channel 4 documentary 'Millionaires' Mission.' He spent 3 weeks in a remote region of Uganda, using Western entrepreneurial skills to try and bring sustainable relief from poverty to affected communities.[4]

Bishop and (RED)

He joined (RED) as their International CEO in September 2008.[5]

The idea of (RED) was that the companies could make products using the (RED) logo in exchange for donating up to half their profits from those products directly to the Global Fund for AIDS programs in Africa.

Since launch (RED) has grown to 9 partners (and growing): American Express (UK only), Converse, Gap, Emporio Armani, Dell, Windows, Apple, Hallmark and Starbucks. On 1 December 2008 (World AIDS Day), (RED)wire was launched – (RED)'s music subscription service.

(RED) partners and events have generated over $120 million to help eliminate AIDS in Africa through The Global Fund (January 2009).

Espotting and MIVA (now Vertro)

In 2000, at the age of 26, Bishop founded Espotting – the company that pioneered search marketing and Pay-Per-Click advertising in Europe. He expanded the business across Europe before merging with US based FindWhat.com in June 2004 in a deal which valued the company at $186m.[3] In 2005, he led the global rebrand of the combined company under the MIVA name. Following the merger Bishop became President and chief marketing officer of MIVA (NASDAQ: MIVA). The online advertising model of Pay-Per-Click advertising which Luke pioneered in 2000 has driven much of the growth in the online advertising market, and in 2003 both Google (with their AdWords programme)[6] and Yahoo![7] subsequently followed Espotting into the UK market.

One of the youngest presidents of a NASDAQ listed company (appointed to the role at the age of 31), Bishop began working in advertising at the age of 14 at Yellowhammer during his summer holidays and at 19 joined Publicis as an art director. From Publicis he moved on to Rainey Kelly Campbell Rolfe and was part of the company when they successfully took over Y&R London. During his advertising agency years, Luke created the award-winning campaign that launched Coca-Cola in Russia as well as campaigns for some of the world's most famous brands including Virgin, Diet Coke, HP, Renault and Nintendo.

Under Bishop's leadership, Espotting and MIVA have won a number of industry awards including 'Most Dynamic UK Media Company' (Media Momentum Awards), 'Fastest growing IT company' (Europe's 500 Awards) and 'Top 50 Creative Business' (Financial Times).

Millionaires' Mission

In 2007 Bishop featured in Millionairess' Mission,[4] a new Channel 4 documentary in which eight British business leaders spend three weeks in a remote region of Uganda, using Western entrepreneurial skills to try and bring sustainable relief from poverty to affected communities.

In the programme, Bishop helped create two businesses within the local communities – a farmer's co-operative and Teach Inn, an innovative eco-tourism hotel.

The first episode of the 4-part series aired on Channel 4 in the UK on 19 September 2007.[4]

Awards

  • Financial Times' "Top 50" Creative Businesses (2004)
  • Campaign Magazine's "A List" (2005)
  • Campaign Magazine's "Faces to Watch" (1998)
  • Media Week's "30 Under 30" (2002)
  • Media & Marketing Europe's "40 Under 40" (2002)
  • London Stock Exchange sponsored "Technology Entrepreneur of the Year" (finalist) (2005)
gollark: As I said, rednet runs over modems.
gollark: Ender modems can send and receive at arbitrary distances.
gollark: You can use a regular wireless modem on the other end.
gollark: Honestly, I would have liked it more if the unlimited range modems were big structures of some sort so routing actually existed.
gollark: Yes, wireless modems can only go some amount of blocks depending on their height and the weather.

References

  1. Hughes, Patrick; Davies, Ian F. Highgate School Register 1833-1988 (7th ed.). p. 432.
  2. Smith, Emily (17 April 2014). "Goop CEO quits after Paltrow's 'uncoupling'". Page Six. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  3. "Miva Merchant | Ecommerce Software and Hosting". Miva.com. Archived from the original on 21 January 2016. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  4. "Millionaires' Mission". Channel 4. Archived from the original on 26 May 2009. Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  5. "Luke Heads (RED)" (PDF). The Cholmeleian (Winter 2009): 7. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 May 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2016.
  6. "U.K. news announcements – News from Google – Google". Retrieved 9 August 2014.
  7. Archived 8 April 2005 at the Wayback Machine

Millionaires' Mission

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