º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

10 Questions with Scott Bullock, principal at Newcastle College

Mr Bullock is the latest business leader to answer our questions

Scott Bullock, principal of Newcastle College(Image: Newcastle College)

Scott Bullock joined Newcastle College in 2016 as vice principal and became principal in May 2021.

The college teaches more than 14,000 students each year from its city centre Rye Hill Campus and academies in Gateshead, North Tyneside and at Newcastle International Airport. Part of NCG, it offers a range of full-time and part-time courses, apprenticeships, employer training and professional qualifications. It also develops and awards its own Honours and Masters Degrees, delivered through Newcastle College University Centre.

What was your first job (and how much did it pay)?

My first paid job was a summer job at university, as a rather glamorously titled Seashell Operative. This was however, the least glamorous job I’ve ever had, involving removing the entrails of clams to provide clean shells for fine dining restaurants. My first full-time job was as a Health and Fitness Instructor paying £8,700 per year.

What is the best advice or support you’ve been given in business?

I think the best piece of advice I’ve received is to be true to your core values. Spend some time thinking about your personal values and carry them forward into your business decisions; don’t compromise what is important to you to fit someone else’s agenda. Alongside this, have a good ‘optician’ – someone who can help to see the potential impact of your business decisions on others and who you can trust to be honest with you and keep you informed of the ‘feeling on the ground’ in your organisation.

What are the main changes you’ve seen in your business/sector, and what are the challenges you’re facing?

Further Education and Skills is one of the most dynamic sectors, and it really needs to move and flex with the changing ideas and policies of the Government, much more than the school sector or the university sector where funding and conditions remain relatively constant. Right now, we’re seen to be really important to the Government’s priority to drive the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy and move the country forward as a modern, technical skills-based economy.