Tim Hely Hutchinson

Timothy Mark Hely Hutchinson CBE (born 26 October 1953) is a British publisher, a former group CEO of the second largest British publisher, Hachette UK.

Tim Hely Hutchinson

Life

Hely Hutchinson is the second son of The 8th Earl of Donoughmore and Sheila Parsons, daughter of Frank Frederick Parsons, entitling him to the honorific "The Honourable". Educated at Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford,[1] where he edited the student magazine Isis, Hely Hutchinson was employed by Macmillan Publishers in Britain and Australia before working for Robert Maxwell as Managing Director of Macdonald Futura in 1982.

In 1986 he co-founded Headline Publishing Group, which floated on the London Stock Exchange in 1991 and was voted publisher of the year in 1992. In 1993 Headline bought the long-established firm of Hodder & Stoughton, creating Hodder Headline PLC, the fourth largest British publisher at that time. Hodder Headline was the subject of an agreed bid of £185 million from W.H. Smith in 1999. Having been a director of W.H. Smith and Chairman of W.H.Smith News, he engineered the sale of W. H. Smith's publishing business to Hachette Livre in 2004, staying on to run Hachette UK, which became Britain's biggest publisher when it acquired Little, Brown in 2006, also becoming a director of the American company.[2] He subsequently acquired around 20 additional publishing businesses for Hachette.

His policies of industry-leading service to authors and involvement for every member of staff were successful and the company regularly published around one in four of all British bestsellers. Hachette UK’s author list included Martina Cole, Cressida Cowell, Ian Rankin, Val McDermid, Stephen King and J. K. Rowling. Hely Hutchinson retired from Hachette UK in December 2017, being succeeded by David Shelley.[3]

Hely Hutchinson was appointed a Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur in 2018 (investiture 2019) for the promotion of international literature and Anglo-French relations.[4]

He was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2019 Birthday Honours for services to publishing and literature.[5]

gollark: Blame heavpoot. I am stuck looking at his awful code whenever it does things.
gollark: By character, I think?
gollark: I could turn up the order but I think that might break on the already-trained instances.
gollark: It isn't very coherent, it was only good before because overfitting or something.
gollark: My data is 550KB in size.

References


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