KINDLY doff your caps to Courtenay Morison, the acquisitive Edinburgh entrepreneur behind the Clockwork Removals group.
His London trading arm, Edwards Removals, has become only the second removals and storage company to be granted a Royal warran
t by the Queen after supplying the Royal household.
Warrants are awarded to companies who have regularly supplied goods or services to senior members of the Royal Family for at least five years and are prized as a mark of excellence and quality.
Morison says: "This is a wonderful New Year present and a great tribute to our dedicated staff."
Clockwork has ten UK branches and turns over in excess of £14 million a year, and has its eye on further acquisitions in early 2008.
FACT OF THE DAY
4%AVERAGE pay rises have increased to 4 per cent. IDS say November's 4.3 per cent retail prices index triggered several high-level wage increases in long-term pay deals.
KILLER QUOTE"YOU have to keep both feet on the ground. (Longer term goals] have to be achievable, because over-stretched targets can have a demotivating effect. Then people drop out."
Jeroen Van der Veer, chief executive of oil major Shell, on reducing greenhouse gas emissions
GOOD DAY
Online musicMUSIC downloads in the UK hit a record 2.94 million in the last week of 2007 – double the level of a year earlier – in contrast to the US where growth in the legal download market has been slowing.
BAD DAY
Debt markets LOANS raised by companies fell by 8 per cent last year, as the credit crunch wreaked havoc in the debt markets. Loans raised globally totalled $6 trillion compared with $6.5tn in 2006.
The full article contains 289 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.