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    Charlie Mullins: Britain’s richest plumber launches a new venture

    By Stuart Watkins,

    1 day ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2WQLU5_0uC8BbN200

    Charlie Mullins’ father worked in a toy car factory. His mother cleaned homes. Today, Mullins, 71, lives in a £10 million London penthouse with a view of the Thames, say Sabah Meddings and Michael Sasso on Bloomberg .

    He can credit his “dazzling rise to the unlikely intersection of high finance and blue-collar labour”. Mullins left school at 15 with no qualifications and became an apprentice to a plumber. Over four decades, he built a successful firm, Pimlico Plumbers, that sought to improve the industry’s reputation for poor service.

    Smartly dressed workers in clean vans would turn up promptly, for a premium price. In the year ending May 2021, Pimlico reported £49.2 million in revenue, distributing £3.2 million to Mullins in dividends . He sold out at the end of 2021 to Wall Street giant KKR for £140 million. Mullins now says he regrets selling.

    Sales have declined since the acquisition, a son and grandson have quit in frustration and Mullins says he hears complaints about service from customers who assume he’s still in charge. The American buyers lack the personal touch associated with smaller, British companies, he says, and so he is now planning to go “head to head with his former empire” by setting up a new company, says Lucy Burton in The Telegraph .

    WeFix will be trading when a non-compete clause agreed with Pimlico’s new owners ends this September. A fleet of distinctive vans is ready to be rolled out, and the plan is for the venture to repeat Mullin’s initial success and become the “Harrods of the handyman world”. Mullins, who has become a celebrity thanks to his rock-star looks and conservative commentary for the media, affirms there will be no “working from home” at WeFix. At Pimlico, he forbade workers to use their smartphones and is known for his no-nonsense approach.

    Workers at WeFix will, however, get a share of the profits after a year’s service. While most rich founders mumble about making a difference, Mullins is straightforward about what gets him out of bed in the morning, says Lucy Tobin on This Is Money . “Money motivates me,” he says. “Become an apprentice plumber and you’ll never run out of work, and you’ll earn loads of money.” It’s a strategy that’s worked, and he’s sticking with it.


    This article was first published in MoneyWeek's magazine. Enjoy exclusive early access to news, opinion and analysis from our team of financial experts with a MoneyWeek subscription .

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