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News > Arts & Culture > Sir Tim Waterstone: 'Rarely does your first love make you your fortune'

Sir Tim Waterstone: 'Rarely does your first love make you your fortune'

Sir Tim Waterstone (JH 52-57) explains how his success proved the cultural health of the country in March's The Big Issue
 
The following article was published in The Big Issue, March 2019:

At the age of 42, Tim Waterstone emptied his bank account and launched Waterstones with a view to bringing a quality bookshop to every town. In a page-turning interview with The Big Issue, Tim explains how his success proved the cultural health of the country.

My family only owned three books when I was growing up,” recalls Tim Waterstone, businessman, author and philanthropist, but perhaps most notably, founder of Europe’s biggest bookchain, Waterstones.

“One was called Heroes of The Great War, which was an illustrated book about people who’d won medals and things. The other was an encyclopaedia sponsored by Pears soap. And the third was an illustrated copy of Dickens’ The Old Curiosity Shop. I still have that one. God knows how it’s survived all these years and all the moves.”

By six, Waterstone was reading confidently; “reading reading reading” as he puts it. By “10 or 11” he was helping out in his local bookshop, The Book Club, in his home village of Crowborough in East Sussex.

“I’d get on my bike and deliver books to little old ladies who’d placed orders,” he laughs. “I loved how much pleasure the deliveries would give them.” He sighs. “I actually looked up whether the shop still existed the other day. I’m really sad to say that it doesn’t.”

 

"I think this is a moment of extraordinary political significance"



Yes there have been other obsessions. Classical music (“Again, there was a shop in my village that helped me work out what I liked; I think good record shops and good bookshops have an awful lot in common”). Politics as well; a long-time Labour supporter, Waterstone marched against the Iraq War in 2003, says Clement Attlee is his hero, and when we speak, is trying to decide how he feels about the breakaway Independent Group of MPs, whose formation was revealed the day prior to our conversation. (“I think we’re seeing the collapse of the Labour and Conservative parties. I think this is a moment of extraordinary political significance. There’s a desperate need for a centrist party for the many people with centrist views.”)

But books were always there, right from the start. Born in Glasgow, on May 30 1939, months before the outbreak of war, Waterstone’s family were your archetypal lower middle class, colonial family. “It wasn’t an easy childhood,” he recalls, “but then a lot of childhoods from that time weren’t. My father was a tea planter and my parents were in India for great amounts of time. I vividly remember them telling me when I was six that they’d be back in two-and-a-half years!

And my father had fought in the war, so I had to get to know him when he came back.” Books, or at least the three the Waterstone family home held under its roof, were there to absorb his loneliness – and to suggest a life bigger and better.

You never forget your first love, goes the old adage, but rarely does your first love make you your fortune. And yet, after spells working for a broking firm in Calcutta, India, then as marketing manager for the now-gone Allied Breweries, then WHSmith (he was sacked, he was delighted; “They were right to fire me, now I can do what I want to do!”), in 1982, at the age of 42, he emptied his bank account and launched Waterstones with a view to bringing a quality bookshop to every town.

“I wrote a business plan,” he remembers, “and I remember saying in it that within 10 years we’d be the biggest booksellers in Europe. It was a ridiculous thing to say, but I knew we could do it. I knew what we were doing was right.”


Above: High Street Kensington branch, near the original Old Brompton Road branch

The vision was “big shops, absolutely packed with books, open for hours and hours, seven days a week and staffed with young staff who loved books, who really knew what they were on about.” The first store would be at Old Brompton Road in Kensington in West London, which remains to this day.

Once he’d reached “five or six stores”, with help from his own staff, many of whom invested their own money in their boss’s vision, the big investment started to come. “And then it never really stopped,” he says. Plenty of people launch businesses on loves and obsessions – there’s a nail salon filled with broken dreams in every town in Britain. There must be more to it than just loving books? “Not really,” he says. “We just knew what people wanted. When we started the business bookselling had been awful for a long time.”

Now 79, his eighth decade looming, Waterstone’s breathless love of books is still at the forefront of every utterance today. He describes launching the business as the greatest fun he’s ever had. That the success of the chain “proved the cultural health of the country”. He says: “Bookshops are fantastic places for the community to enjoy.”

Just last Saturday he popped into Waterstones’ Piccadilly branch in central London. It’s Europe’s largest bookstore, with more than eight miles of shelving spread over six floors. There he sat, in one of the shop’s large comfy armchairs, unannounced, watching the crowds. “I can’t even explain the pleasure I felt watching people browse. But people love what we do. We’re extremely lucky to have such a large share of the market, but we have it because we do what we do really, really well.”

Tangentially, we discuss the state of record shops in 2019. Waterstone reluctantly expresses a view that he believes music retail is “completely doomed”. Fuel for the fire for those who believe HMV’s failing began when its record shops started to feel more like gadget emporiums (the company bought Waterstones in 1998 before eventually selling in 2011; Waterstone was founder chairman of the ill-fated alliance between 1998 and 2001, and says he hated going into branches of the store during this time). The central tenet to his business philosophy remains “Make it good”.

Asked about libraries and their importance to communities and the cultural health of those who live around them, and he tells a story about recently waiting for his daughter in a library in Kilburn, North London. “It was a cracking place, it really was,” he gushes. “Loads of children, librarians working hard, an exuberantly happy place.” He won’t take the easy shot of blaming Tory cuts for their failing. “I want libraries to survive,” he says. “But I want them to be as good as the library I was in when I was in Kilburn.”
 

"If you know what you want, you’re going to go to Amazon. I do it myself numerous times a year! But we all know online can’t replicate the same feelings of pleasure you get in a great bookshop"


He’s worried about the high street, though feels some comfort that landlords are now having to reassess their rents. He’s confident that Waterstones will exist. He’s not so sure about the high street itself. He’s less concerned about Amazon. To an extent, he can see how the two brands complement each other. “We have exactly the same market share now,” he says. “We’re the two dominant brands.

But here’s the thing, I believe the nature of book buying, online and in person, are completely different. If you know what you want, you’re going to go to Amazon. I do it myself numerous times a year! But we all know online can’t replicate the same feelings of pleasure you get in a great bookshop. Our research tells us that well over 70 per cent of purchases at Waterstones were bought on impulse. Even when people had come in to buy a book, they’d left with five more they hadn’t intended on buying when they came in.”

Waterstone hopes one impulse purchase that might be plucked from the shelves of his empire might be his memoir, released this month, entitled The Face Pressed Against A Window. “I think when you’re approaching 80, most of the battles you’re going to face in your life are behind you and it’s a good time to take stock,” he says.

And yet, as well as being an unflinching account of his life from childhood to the present day – taking in a failed marriage, as well as a brief stay in a psychiatric unit – the book also features his first published fiction, in the form of two short stories contained within the book’s appendix, since the publication of his fourth novel, In For a Penny, In For A Pound in 2010. “Hemingway once said that fiction told more truth than most people’s truth,” he says, in explanation. “I’m still learning new ways to write, books are still teaching me things even now.”


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