Yorkshire Post

STEELED FOR THE FUTURE

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KEVIN TOMLINSON was 14 when his father took him to see the Templeboro­ugh steel mill where he toiled to earn a living. “When it really was in full flow it was a horrendous thing,” says Kevin, who was dumbstruck by the elemental power of the electric arc furnaces that made the Rotherham plant the biggest of its kind in the world.

“It was freezing cold in winter, boiling through the summer, and the heat, the smell and the sulphur the electric arcs generated was just intoxicati­ng. Unbelievab­le. I think he brought me to scare me – ‘Start working son, or else you’re going to end up doing what I’m doing’.”

As it happens, Kevin did choose British Steel, but went into IT – and after privatisat­ion found himself in charge of thousands of employees and computer systems for the likes of HMRC and the Metropolit­an Police. As a management consultant, he helped to turn round Tesco and led the team that wrote Trainline, the online ticket office that sold for £75 million.

Now he is back at Templeboro­ugh, having taken over as chief executive of Magna, the visitor experience and events venue that occupies the hulking former works. It opened in 2000 at a cost of £46m, winning the RIBA Stirling Prize for Britain’s best building 12 months later.

Funded by the Millennium Commission like the much-criticised Dome in London and the more successful Eden Project in Cornwall, it teaches people about South Yorkshire’s industrial might and the wonders of science with exhibits like the ‘Big Melt’, which recreates the steelmakin­g process using one of the original furnaces, kept following the factory’s closure in 1993.

Kevin succeeds John Silker, who died last year, and has big ambitions to grow Magna’s profits and invest in the attraction, a registered charity. “Its size, scale and uniqueness is its advantage, but also its disadvanta­ge,” he says. “We’ve got to be attracting people who want the most unique event space in the UK.”

Kevin is affable and admirably frank about the challenges of his new job. “Everybody who works here knows exactly what our ambition is – to double the number of people that come, the educationa­l visits and events. And we can only do that to create money to plough back in and then market it properly.”

The centre puts on around 100 events a year – ranging from concerts and product launches to conference­s and parties – and has 35,000 school visitors a year, together with 70,000 public admissions. “That needs to be more,” says Kevin. “In the first year, in 2000, we had 400,000 visitors.”

Utility bills alone amount to £250,000 annually. But there are early signs of improvemen­t. Events revenue is up by 33 per cent, and the money earned by the attraction­s and the educationa­l side is up by 20 per cent.

“I’m not saying I’ve got a magic wand, but I’ve got some basic principles of how we should do business. We must be doing something right.”

The corporate activity, he repeatedly stresses, is a means to an end. “The amount of money available in terms of grant funding has never been lower.”

Kevin is reviewing everything. He decided shelters were needed in the outside play area, prompted by the heatwave, and is even looking at changing the main draw. “The Big Melt takes 15 minutes – for the actual sparks to start flying takes seven minutes. To a seven-year-old, seven minutes is like a lifetime. We’re thinking of redoing that to get the exciting things in quicker.”

Kevin, aged 65, was born in Rotherham, attended grammar school and joined British Steel in 1970 as a commercial apprentice. “The men that worked in that period I have great admiration for. My dad was one of them for 35 years – 35 years doing a job that you only work for the money. That was a tough life but the community spirit it generated in the workforce was just enormous. And that’s what I walked into. The amount of training I got was absolutely fantastic, second to none.”

There were ‘bad times and good times’, he remembers. “One year we lost £700m. Did they lay anybody off? No. Because they knew next year, or the year after, the profitable times would come. It was a different time, a different culture – and obviously it really broke down with the strikes.”

In the IT division, however, Kevin prospered in an area ripe for expansion. Initially working with huge mainframes before computers began to slim down, he was rapidly promoted, becoming one of the youngest senior managers at the company. When the business was put up for sale, Kevin and others raised £25m to buy it, but instead the deal went to another firm that was then bought by French outfit Capgemini.

He transferre­d to the new owner in 1996, working with top advisers to rescue struggling businesses – as well as Tesco he turned round Network Rail, and is particular­ly proud of Trainline. “To build a contact centre based on the internet for the rail industry was an absolute first. Building a system for £25m and selling it for £75m was pretty impressive.”

In 2001 he was asked to run Capgemini’s outsourcin­g arm – a £350m operation with massive contracts worth as much as £1bn. Kevin left in 2008 and started his own management consultanc­y, but gave it up when he fell seriously ill. He had contracted blood clots in both lungs from deep vein thrombosis and needed a lifesaving 12hour operation. “It was a bit of a shock,” he says. “I was relieved to be well. But I don’t think it changed my outlook on life. My outlook on life has always been to do good stuff and try and do right by people.”

He thought his working days were behind him, reconciled to gardening and watching sport, but he was persuaded to become a Magna trustee in 2014 by friend and board member Brian Chapple. The attraction has ‘had its ups and downs’, Kevin admits – a low point was going ‘cap in hand’ to Rotherham Council for a loan of £440,000 in order to stay afloat. In 2015, when the debt was restructur­ed, the authority’s leader Chris Read said shutting the centre would be damaging and leave 80 staff jobless, but warned: “Neither can we afford to see more and more public money going into Magna.”

Kevin vows: “I hope we never have to get into a situation again where we’ve got to borrow money.”

Married to Paula, his second wife, with a grown-up daughter and three stepchildr­en, Kevin lives at Brookhouse, outside Rotherham. “This is my last chance to put something back into South Yorkshire. I’ve lived all my life here and yet I’ve worked away a lot. I used to work all over the world, come back at weekends, do my family stuff then just fly off to Chicago or wherever I was working at the time.”

The Magna trustees ‘work tirelessly for nothing’, he says. “There’s a group of us that really want to give something back to the town. I’m one of them and this is the best way I can think of doing it.”

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 ??  ?? Kevin Tomlinson is determined to double the number of visitors to Magna. Above, Pulp once performed at the venue.
Kevin Tomlinson is determined to double the number of visitors to Magna. Above, Pulp once performed at the venue.
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