H
trending
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Bosses at City & Guilds handed million-pound bonuses after training firm is privatised

about 6 hours ago
A picture


A pair of City & Guilds executives have each been awarded million-pound bonuses and sizeable salary increases after the skills charity’s business was acquired by an international company in October, the Guardian understands.The payments – which are understood to include a £1.7m award for the chief executive, Kirstie Donnelly, and £1.2m to the finance director, Abid Ismail – have emerged at a sensitive time for the training and qualifications business, as it navigates its first few months in the private sector.Last week it was revealed how City & Guilds has embarked on a £22m cost-cutting drive and is shrinking its UK workforce after being sold by its charity owner to PeopleCert, an international certification company.

Alongside the bonuses, the Guardian understands that Donnelly has also been granted a £100,000 increase to her salary, which now stands at about £430,000.Ismail’s salary is also believed to have been increased by 30%, rising by about £70,000 to £300,000.Founded in 1878 by the City of London and a group of 16 livery companies, the original institute developed a national system of technical education, offering qualifications and apprenticeships in fields ranging from manufacturing and mechanical engineering to hairdressing and horticulture.It was awarded a royal charter by Queen Victoria in 1900 and the body says that it helps about 1.1m people a year.

It has enjoyed a storied history with the body’s famous alumni including the chefs Jamie Oliver, Marcus Wareing and Gordon Ramsey, the former England football manager Gareth Southgate, as well as the celebrity gardener Alan Titchmarsh and the fashion designer Karen Millen.The institute’s business was owned under the umbrella of a charity, City & Guilds London Institute (CGLI), which announced in the autumn that it was selling its training and awards operation, City & Guilds (C&G), to PeopleCert.The sale gave the charity, which provides grants to people in need of vocational training, a cash windfall of between £180m and £200m, which was presented as ensuring the long-term future of the institution to pursue its charitable objectives, as well as providing increased opportunities and investment for the now-private training business.These ambitions appear to coincide with plans for a restructuring of the C&G training business.Earlier this month PeopleCert published a presentation aimed at its financial backers in which it said it had identified £22m of savings at C&G, of which £13m were “personnel cost synergies” that would largely be achieved by failing to replace staff leaving the institute with hires from the UK.

The document implied that C&G, which has more than 1,600 staff members and 1,800 “associates” on short-term contracts, has a “churn” rate equivalent to about 300 people leaving a year and outlined how PeopleCert plans to relocate a third of those jobs to Greece “at a cost [of] up to 50% lower”,The same quantity of roles “are due to not be replaced due to overlapping functions”, the presentation added, while the remainder of leavers will be replaced with hires in the UK,The presentation appears to have been removed from the PeopleCert website after the Guardian published the cost-cutting plans,Under the terms of the sale, the privatised City & Guilds will continue to use the brand that it shares with its former charity owner,A spokesperson for City & Guilds said: “[The charity] CGLI will be publishing its accounts in January 2026 and details on pay and remuneration will be reported appropriately in those accounts as always.

Bonuses for eligible employees reflecting performance in 2025 are payable in line with CGLI remuneration policy.No payments outside of CGLI’s existing bonus schemes have been made.The CGLI annual accounts will report on the long-term future that is now protected for the charity.At the same time, this transaction unlocks future investment for the commercial awarding and training businesses that continue to operate in a highly competitive marketplace.“The accounts for City & Guilds Ltd will be published at year end in 2026, as required for private limited companies.

Any awards to employees are a matter for City & Guilds Ltd and are guided by standard commercial practice to ensure critical expertise and experience is retained.”
technologySee all
A picture

‘It can be quite a thankless job’: why driving examiners are quitting

It has long been a stressful rite of passage for many young people but, in recent years, passing the actual driving test is the easy part. Now, many people seeking a test need to wake up early to snag a date before the bots do and, even then, they are looking at a long and arduous wait.Despite moves from the government to address the issue, an audit report released this week found plans to cut the wait for a driving test to seven weeks by the end of the year would not be achieved until November 2027.One of the main barriers is an exodus of driving examiners. Only a net 83 more driving test examiners have been hired despite 19 recruitment campaigns since 2021, with the average wait for a practical test now at 22 weeks across Great Britain, according to the National Audit Office

1 day ago
A picture

Tinsel and Home Alone back in style as TikTok seeks comfort in #90sChristmas

Tinsel, DIY tree decorations, deep burgundy drapes – and Home Alone on VHS. Christmas has gone retro on TikTok, and in people’s living rooms.The app has reported a surge in Christmas decor videos, with an emphasis on nostalgia as users embrace festive looks from bygone eras. For younger TikTokers, that means the 90s.More than 8,000 videos have been posted under the hashtag #90sChristmas, celebrating a look that includes multicoloured tree lights, homemade felt ornaments and – in a post with nearly 4m views – VHS tapes of Christmas classics such as the Macaulay Culkin caper

2 days ago
A picture

Elon Musk’s massive 2018 Tesla pay package restored by Delaware court

Elon Musk’s controversial $56bn pay package from Tesla was reinstated by the Delaware supreme court on Friday, two years after a lower court struck down the vast compensation deal as “unfathomable”.The reinstated pay package could be worth as much as $139bn today, according to the New York Times. The decision comes less than two months after Tesla shareholders approved a new plan that could be worth $1tn to Musk, already the world’s richest person, in a decade’s time. Musk’s fortune currently stands at an estimated $600bn.Rescinding the pay deal would be “inequitable”, and would leave Musk “uncompensated for his time and efforts over a period of six years”, the Delaware supreme court justices wrote, echoing arguments from Tesla board members earlier this year

3 days ago
A picture

‘A black hole’: families and police say tech giants delay investigations in child abuse and drug cases

Max Osterman was 18 when he connected with a drug dealer on Snapchat who used the handle skyhigh.303. Max would message him whenever he wanted to buy Percocet, and they would meet. After about a year, and just days after their last exchange, Max collapsed. The pills he ordered had been laced with fentanyl

3 days ago
A picture

The Com: the growing cybercrime network behind recent Pornhub hack

Ransomware hacks, data theft, crypto scams and sextortion cover a broad range of cybercrimes carried out by an equally varied list of assailants.But there is also an English-speaking criminal ecosystem carrying out these activities that defies conventional categorisation. Nonetheless, it does have a name: the Com.Short for community, the Com is a loose affiliation of cybercriminals, largely native English language speakers typically aged from 16 to 25. Its activities run from crippling the IT systems of British retailers to phoning in bomb threats to schools and encouraging teenage girls to harm themselves

3 days ago
A picture

Sony collars Snoopy in £340m deal to take control of Peanuts franchise

Sony has taken control of Charles Schulz’s Peanuts franchise including Snoopy and Charlie Brown in a deal worth C$630m (£340m).The Japanese conglomerate has bought 41% of Peanuts Holdings, which owns the intellectual property Schulz created, from the Canadian children’s entertainment company WildBrain.The deal raises Sony’s total stake, which it began building in 2018, to 80%. The Schulz family owns the remaining 20%.Peanuts, which first appeared as a comic strip in seven newspapers in 1950 and ran daily until the cartoonist’s death in 2000, has gone on to become a global franchise spanning TV, toys, films and theme park attractions

3 days ago
cultureSee all
A picture

The Guide #222: From Celebrity Traitors to The Brutalist via Bad Bunny – our roundup of the culture that mattered in 2025

2 days ago
A picture

From Avatar to Amadeus: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

2 days ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on a tumultuous year: ‘Don’t know what the American way even is any more’

3 days ago
A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s speech: ‘Surprise primetime episode of The Worst Wing’

4 days ago
A picture

Stephen Colbert on Susie Wiles’s candid interviews: ‘She dished, bish’

5 days ago
A picture

The 50 best albums of 2025: No 3 – Blood Orange: Essex Honey

5 days ago