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The Sunday Business Post November 16, 2014 ‘I am a great devotee and supporter of Mrs Tatcher. She has done a wonderful job over the past ten years’ Tony Ryan, chairman and chief executive of Guinness Peat Aviation: published November 26, 1989 2 Ireland Interviewed: Business T he rst edition o Te Sunday Business Post was pub- lished on November 26, 1989, and contained an in- terview with ony Ryan, the aviation tycoon. It was Ryan’s rst major interview with an Irish news - paper or seven years, and in it, he talked candidly about his plans or Guinness Peat Aviation and his thoughts on the Irish economy. Te interview set a tone and tradition: in the 25 years since the Ryan interview, this newspaper has continued to inter - view the most prominent and powerul men and women in business. Interviewing business leaders has always been a core component o the newspaper, and will remain so. In the last month alone, we have carried interviews with the billionaire businessman Richard Branson, airline boss Willie Walsh and the ormer president o Coca-Cola, Neville Isdell. oday, we are reproducing 21 interviews rom our archive, starting with the ony Ryan interview. Each o the interviews comes rom a particular point in time and in history. Te ortunes o those we have interviewed have fuctuated: some have made vast sums o money, while others have lost heav - ily – two o the 21 were later declared bankrupt (Ivan Yates and Sean Quinn), while one is now ghting attempts to have him declared bankrupt (David Drumm). In 2001, Jennier O’Connell interviewed Harry Crosbie, where, or the rst time, he revealed the scale o his property and business interests. During the interview, Crosbie said the ollowing: “Cities were built by guys like me. Merrion Square and Georgian Dublin didn’t come rom heaven, you know. Tey were built by someone like me.’’ It is a quote that has stayed with me since: the idea o a de - veloper attempting to orge a city through building. Crosbie’s ortunes, as we now know, would eventually come unstuck, but not beore he managed to leave a lasting presence in Dublin’s docklands. Another thing that struck me rom the selection process was the lack o emale interviews. Five o the interviews which eature in these pages are with women, but they are all drawn rom more recent years. Tis is a refection o business culture and a business world dominated or so long by men. However, things are starting to change, and that is refected more in the paper today. One o the most recent in - terviews in this supplement is with Siobhan albot, the chie executive o Glanbia and arguably the most infuential wom- an in Irish business. During the interview, I asked her about the lack o women in the boardroom. Her reply was stark: “My daughter is 18. My son is 20. She eels as empowered to do whatever she wants as he does. Tat is right. You will see a natural evolu - tion o more women participating in business, because that is how it is evolving. Full stop.” We selected 21 interviews, but we could have picked a multiple o that. We hope you have as much un reading them as we had deciding who to put in and who to leave out. Ian Kehoe Editor The Sunday Business Post Ian Kehoe: these 21 interviews capture the changing face of Irish business as the years roll by
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