{"id":7746,"date":"2014-08-12T12:41:12","date_gmt":"2014-08-12T11:41:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.elcrema.com\/?p=7746"},"modified":"2017-02-01T12:37:47","modified_gmt":"2017-02-01T11:37:47","slug":"5-british-billionaires-who-never-went-to-the-university","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.elcrema.com\/5-british-billionaires-who-never-went-to-the-university\/","title":{"rendered":"5 BRITISH BILLIONAIRES WHO NEVER WENT TO THE UNIVERSITY"},"content":{"rendered":"
Is going to the university criteria for success? These five British billionaires proved that lacking a degree doesn’t set back individuals with an entrepreneurial spirit. They proved that a degree isn’t the key to financial success.<\/p>\n
Below is the list of five British billionaires who never went to the university<\/p>\n
<\/a><\/p>\n 1. MIKE ASHLEY <\/b><\/p>\n Sports Direct founder and Newcastle united owner Mike Ashley, 49 is worth \u00a33.7 billion but never went to the university. He left grammar school aged 16 to play county level squash but an injury turned him from athlete to businessman.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n 2. RICHARD BRANSON <\/b><\/p>\n Richard Branson, 64 is worth \u00a32.7 billion and he never went to the university. He started his own business aged 16. He began selling records through his magazine – ironically called The Student – raking in sales by undercutting high street store prices. He launched Virgin records in 1972 aged just 21 from a country estate in Oxfordshire.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n 3. LAWRENCE GRAFF<\/b><\/p>\n Lawrence Graff, 76 is worth \u00a32.8 billion and he made his billions supplying jewellery and jewels to wealthy customers outside the UK. He started as a 15-year-old apprentice at a Hatton Garde jewellery stop. He started making his own designs after the shop went out of business and by the mid-1970s had began sourcing gems for clients in the middle east.<\/p>\n