Jonathan Piers Daniel Linney (born 15 February 1971, in Stoke-on-Trent[2][3][4]) is a British businessman and investor with a professional background in the City.[5] Linney has been recognised as one of the top 100 Black Britons and is known as a champion of entrepreneurship and growth businesses.
| This article is an autobiography or has been extensively edited by the subject or by someone connected to the subject. (August 2018) |
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Linney is a non-executive director of the UK government-owned development bank, British Business Bank, which has facilitated over £12 billion[6] of financing for UK small and medium-sized businesses and also operates the StartUp Loan Company and British Patient Capital, a £2.5bn fund launched in 2018.
He was the co-CEO and owner of Genesis Communications [7] and was the co-CEO of cloud-based[7] IT business Outsourcery. He is best known for being a "dragon" on the BBC Two business series Dragons' Den (known as Shark Tank in the USA) from 2013 to 2015.
Linney also appeared on the Channel 4 series The Secret Millionaire in 2011, where he worked in Wolverhampton at a young offenders' institution.
In November 2018, Linney was named in the top 20 of Financial Times's list of the top 100 minority ethnic leaders in technology.[8] Linney was also named in the FT as one of the top 100 BAME Leaders in Tech.[9]
Linney is also content creator and public speaker focused on supporting entrepreneurs with ambitions to start-up or grow their businesses as part of his #ScaleUp initiative.[10]
Linney studied accounting and law at The University of Manchester, and subsequently qualified as a solicitor with SJ Berwin. He then worked in investment banking, first at Barclays de Zoete Wedd, followed by Credit Suisse. Linney left banking in 2000 to start an internet business and has since been involved in a number of technology, media and telecommunications businesses. After becoming the CEO of a corporate finance boutique, Linney specialised in technology venture capital and securing structured equity and debt finance from US hedge funds for small and mid-cap listed companies. Linney became a partner in a €90 million alternative investment fund providing structured debt and equity financing to small cap public companies.[citation needed]
In 2007, with his business partner Simon Newton, Linney led the buyout of Genesis Communications, a mobile voice and data resale company. In 2009 Genesis acquired Thus Mobile from Cable & Wireless and rebranded as Outsourcery to focus on cloud IT and communications. In 2012 the mobile business arm was sold to Daisy Group for £15 million.[12][13]
Outsourcery was floated on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in 2013 raising £13 million.[14] The business was provided with a debt facility by Vodafone.[clarification needed] In June 2016 the business was sold for an undisclosed sum and the company placed into administration, having reached revenues of £10m, but remaining unprofitable.[citation needed]
Linney was a founding member of the governance board of the UK's Cloud Industry Forum[15] and has made appearance in the media to discuss the benefits of cloud computing.[citation needed] In 2014, Linney joined the Cabinet Office SME Panel, advising on small and medium business issues.[16] Linney established the now defunct not-for-profit organisation workinsight.org, a national digital platform that connects young people to local employers.[17]
Linney is a founding trustee of the Powerlist Foundation,[18] and is also a trustee of both the innovation charity Nesta[19] and careers website Plotr.[20] Linney is involved with Virgin Unite[21] and a range of other charities as a donor or patron.
Awards
In 2013, Linney was recognised in the JP Morgan-sponsored Power List 2013 as one of the top 100 most influential black Britons.[22] In 2014, Linney was named Entrepreneur Leader of the Year at the first Black British Business Awards sponsored by EY.[23]
Dragons' Den
In 2013, Linney joined the panel on the BBC Two television series Dragons' Den, along with fellow new dragon Kelly Hoppen beginning in the eleventh series. In January 2015, Linney announced that he would be departing from the show at the end of series twelve, in order to focus on other projects.[24] Linney invested in Wonderbly (formerly Lost My Name), an award winning independent technology and publishing business that offers personalised children's picture books. Launched in 2012, Wonderbly has sold over 2.7 million books in over 200 countries around the world. Wonderbly raised $8.5m in 2017 from Ravensburger, a leading European publisher of games, puzzles, and children’s books and its existing investors include Google Ventures, Project A Ventures, Greycroft, The Chernin Group and Allen & Co.[25]