Lord Alan Sugar revives Amstrad brand with new marketing agency led by grandson

4 March 2024, 06:54

Lord Alan Sugar
Lord Alan Sugar revives Amstrad brand. Picture: PA

The business mogul, who fronts The Apprentice, bought back the rights to the household brand name for new agency Amstrad Digital.

Lord Alan Sugar is set to revive his famous brand Amstrad with the launch of a new digital marketing company led by his grandson, 17 years after selling the business to Sky.

The business mogul, who fronts BBC One reality series The Apprentice, bought back the rights to the household brand name for new agency Amstrad Digital.

Lord Sugar criticised the “belligerent” old management at Sky, prior to it being taken over by US media giant Comcast in 2018, for not allowing him to buy back the name.

Lord Alan Sugar
Lord Alan Sugar is launching a new digital marketing company led by his grandson (Ian West/PA)

“I had always asked, since 2007, to have it back because I want to give it down to the family to use in their business,” he told the PA news agency.

The businessman founded electronics company Amstrad in 1968, at the age of 21, selling audio and computer equipment before making the first range of Sky receivers and dishes.

It was eventually sold to the broadcasting giant for £125 million, who still uses the software but not the brand name.

The new performance marketing agency Amstrad Digital will be headed up by Lord Sugar’s grandson Joe Baron, and Tom D’Arcy, who both worked at rival digital marketing agency Climb Online.

Climb Online was launched by The Apprentice winner Mark Wright with the investment of Lord Sugar, and sold in 2022 for a reported £10 million.

“They’ve got the brand name, that in itself is worth a fortune, and they’ve got to exploit it. And I want to see some money,” Lord Sugar told PA.

He also criticised working from home culture, brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic, adding: “These two lads are not going to sit in their pyjamas working from home, they’ve got to get out there and do some business.”

Meanwhile, Lord Sugar acknowledged that television advertising has “suffered badly”, amid reports that the sector has faced tougher conditions in recent years amid rising costs and as consumer viewing habits shift.

Lord Alan Sugar
The new digital marketing company is launching 17 years after Lord Sugar sold Amstrad to Sky (Ian West/PA)

“TV companies have cut back tremendously, and the reason for that is because the power of television advertising is not as big as it was,” he told PA.

“It is now digital marketing, digital advertising and social media that are actually pulling in sales.”

Mr D’Arcy said: “The digital marketing landscape is ever-changing, which we see as a huge opportunity.”

He added: “The last thing someone should be doing is cutting back on marketing spend.”

Mr Baron said the new agency will have “exactly the same values” as the old Amstrad, which was widely known for making personal computers more affordable and accessible.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Google CEO visit to UK

Google boss ‘cautiously optimistic’ about protecting elections from deepfakes

Radio Frequency Directed Energy Weapon

New weapon being developed to blast drones out of sky with radio waves, says MoD

Google I/O developer conference

Google tackles phone theft with new safety features coming to Android

Apple iPhone 15s on display

Apple brings eye tracking to iPhone and iPad in accessibility update

Google I/O developer conference

What do Google’s AI updates mean for everyday users?

Person running

Technology cannot replace human coaches in obesity treatment – study

Google I/O developer conference

The key announcements from Google’s I/O conference

Google discussing new AI tools during its Google I/O developer conference

Google AI updates a ‘direct response’ to ChatGPT dominance, experts say

Google chief executive Sundar Pichai speaking on stage at the firm's Google I/O developer conference

Google rebuilds search engine around AI and unveils new image and video tools

A person using a smartphone

Children ‘blackmailed into stripping for strangers’ on daily basis, says MP

Intelligence community ethnic minorities positions

China poses ‘genuine and increasing’ cyber risk to UK, GCHQ chief warns

Someone at a laptop

Research team finds AI slashes carbon capture and storage design time

AI chatbot eye problem assessing

New free ChatGPT model can teach maths, sing and even flirt

Open AI ChatGPT Update

OpenAI unveils new ‘smarter, faster’ version of ChatGPT

Google Stock

Google I/O: Tech conference expected to be dominated by AI

Claude 2 AI and ChatGPT icons seen in an iPhone

OpenAI rival Anthropic launches AI assistant Claude in European Union