º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

The Geordie businessman who has returned to inspire the region's young people into entrepreneurship

Tom Keighley speaks to Rob Wood about the Enterprising Futures Academy he has set up in the city

Entrepreneur Rob Wood, who grew up in Newcastle.(Image: Rob Wood)

“There’s nothing particularly special about me,” claims Rob Wood, ignoring the fact that the Newcastle born-and-raised businessman is a highly successful entrepreneur with an £84m deal to his name.

The 59 year-old was born on the city’s Stanhope Street, just a stone’s throw away from St James’ Park to a coal miner dad and betting shop clerk mother. He took his wife back to visit the council terraced house - now demolished - and jokes that he was stopped by the police who thought his new car looked out of place.

Having grown up without much money, it was the unlikely event of joining a squash club that introduced him to businesspeople and what they did. “All of a sudden there were people wearing suits in this completely different world that I didn’t know about,” he says.

His school performance was, by his own admission, unremarkable, but a stint in retail led him to become the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s top-performing shoe salesman for Topshop. Later he followed a friend into pharmaceutical sales. The job further developed his natural talent for selling - and he went on to cultivate a well paid, senior career in the industry, eventually running a major division for AstraZeneca. But the self effacing, mild mannered Geordie recognised an itch that needed to be scratched - an ambition to be his own man and start a business.

“I got to the stage when I was about 41 when I didn’t want the second half of my working life to be the same as the first - working for big corporate organisations. I’d always had a craving to do something on my own. So, I gave myself a year, while I was still at AstraZeneca, to think of an idea that might work. I came up with something new but it was a bit of a risk because maybe it had been tried and failed or maybe it was just a silly idea. But it struck a nerve.”

Newcastle-born Rob Wood sold STEM Healthcare in 2016 and has gone on to build an investment portfolio in the healthcare sector.(Image: Chris Bishop)

Mr Wood quit corporate life to act on his idea. After a “wobbly” first six months, it took off and went global with nearly every pharmaceutical company becoming a client. He spent most of the time outside of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, particularly in Asia, before successfully selling the business nine years later in that multimillion-pound deal.

Since then, he has built a global investment portfolio, one in which he’s very much hands on as a consultant and mentor to technology companies. It has seen him rub shoulders with a multitude of entrepreneurs and get a keen sense of what drives them. Now, he wants to “plant the seed” in a broader spectrum of people.

“I wanted to leave a legacy and after I sold my company I gave a lot of thought to what I could do and I came up with this idea. I thought: 'What am I good at?' I’m good at selling, entrepreneurship, setting up a business and helping lots of other people with their businesses. So I realised that’s where I could help, and give back something.”