Wolfson an unlikely boss

Simon Wolfson is an unlikely boss of one of the UK's most successful fashion chains

Simon Wolfson is an unlikely boss of one of the UK's most successful fashion chains. Contemporaries at Cambridge, where he read law, remember him as a "messy, jeans and T-shirt sort of bloke. A bit of a geek."

Even now, after 10 years at the chain, he is hardly the epitome of a fashion leader. He wears sober suits and is a quiet, bookish-looking man.

He is also rich, holding 1.7 million shares in Next, worth more than £16 million sterling - more than twice as many as outgoing chief executive David Jones - and most were bought with his own cash. "We all knew he had a lot of shares," said one company insider. "But it was only when he was made a director that he was forced to disclose his holdings. When it came out, it was like "bloody hell!'. Everyone was gobsmacked."

Mr Jones reckons his successor's shareholdings are a sign of his commitment. "There aren't many companies where the chief executive will put his hand in his own pocket." Wolfson junior's road to riches started with a holiday job at Next, fixed up when his father David Wolfson was chairman.