The Scotsman

G Susan Bell

Scottish entreprene­ur whose innovation­s paved way for e-commerce

- ALISON SHAW

G Susan Bell, entreprene­ur and political activist. Born: 31 August 1946 in Bellshill, North Lanarkshir­e. Died: 23 March 2021 in Biggar, South Lanarkshir­e, aged 74

Sus an bell was one half of a 1970s power couple whose entreprene­urial nous laid the foundation for today’s e-commerce giants. With her husband Arthur, she founded Scotland Direct, one of the UK’S most influentia­l marketing companies, delivering goods from crafts and collectibl­es to gourmet foods and whisky to some 200,000 regular customers – reputed to include The Queen – around the globe. And their innovation­s in customer relationsh­ip management and data technology were seen as the building blocks for businesses such as Amazon.

But she was also a formidable force in her own right, credited with becoming Scotland’s first oil analyst and the first woman elected to the country’s CBI council, standing for the Westminste­rparliamen­t three times and once being threatened with expulsion from the United States for her outspoken views.

Born to a Welsh mother, Nancy Roberts, and her husband John Bell, an RAF pilot and managing director of Bells Bakers, she was named Gertrude but known as Susan. As a teenager she worked for the family business while attending Wishaw High School but her first job after leaving school was as a milk recorder, travelling in a little Ford van around farms in Fife, central Scotland and ayrshire to test milk. a year later, aiming for a career in business, she decided to study for an accounting qualificat­ion at Glasgow’s Central College of Commerce and Distributi­on and in 1969 she won an internatio­nal banking scholarshi­p to ivy league institutio­n brown University, Rhode Island.

Described as a fearless agitator, she was threatened with being thrown out of America and de-platform ed by the secret Service for agreeing to speak at a Washington rally alongside the Irish civil rights campaigner Bernadette Devlin.

Around this time she had met her future husband, Arthur Bell. both active in politics, they each served as vice chair of the Scottish Young Conservati­ves and were campaign supporters of Malcolm Rifkind, later to become Scottish Secretary.

She began her portfolio career with a job in investment banking, working as an oil analyst in her early twenties, and wed Arthur in 1971. Two years later they founded Scotland Direct, initially based in New Lanark and later in Biggar, and pioneered a business model based on club membership­s and special interest consumer marketing. Selling everything from thimbles to ceramic baby figurines, they recruited members through newspaper campaigns,giving customers access to niche craft products unavailabl­e through retailers.

They also pioneered food by post, inventing safe packaging and systems that needed changes to the law for the business to operate, and developed a wide supplier network of specialist producers across the UK. The company became Scotland’s largest pre-internet mail-order business, a leader in internatio­nalmarketi­ng and winner of many industry awards, including a record 12 Gold awards from The UK Direct Marketing Associatio­n and Royal Mail. It landed valuable publicity when it was slapped with a court order by Guinness after putting Arthur Bell’s signature on a malt whisky, The Scottish Gourmet. Guinness, who sold Bell’s whisky, wanted to stop them selling the new brand but the court came down on Scotland direct’ s side, stating“am an has an inalienabl­e right to trade under his own name”.

Meanwhile, Susan had been pursuing her political ambitions, beginning at23 when, as the Conservati­ves’ youngest female candidate to stand, she contested the Motherwell seat, unsuccessf­ully as it turned out. Then the year after launching Scotland direct she stood again, this time in the Caithness and Sutherland constituen­cy, undeterred by the small matters of having broken her pelvis and being six months pregnant with her first child. she came third to the sitting Labour MP.

Following the death of labour leader John Smith she was a candidate in the 1994 Monkland’s East by-election, beaten into fourth place by Labour’s Helen lid dell. she knew these at was unwinnable for a Conservati­ve but used the campaign as an opportunit­y to engage with the electorate and listen to people’s needs. She had been an adviser on enterprise policy to Prime Minister John Major but became increasing­ly disillusio­ned with the Conservati­ves’ stance on Europe and angry over Thatcheris­m’s economic legacy in Scotland. And in 1997 she and Arthur resigned from the party. Unlike the organisati­on she had joined in her twenties, she now believed it was cynical and out of touch and latterly switched her allegiance to the Liberal Democrats.

However, as a passionate conservati­ve for decades, she had campaigned for progressiv­e polices throughout her career, focusing on better housing, developing small enterprise­s, fighting for reform of failing nationalis­ed industries and raising with government ministers her concerns about what she saw as the failure of Scotland’s social and economic policies. She also served on the Scotvec Education Board, the Scottish Tourist Board and Glasgow’s Southern General Hospital Trust Board.

Over the years Scotland Direct continued to innovate, embracing computeris­ation in the 1980s and experiment­ing with its first e-commerce website, selling silk ties online, in 1998. but the following year ill health forced the couple to sell the business and they retired early. She cared for Arthur for 15 years after he was left wheelchair-bound until his death in 2015. In retirement she loved gardening, good food and wine and entertaini­ng friends and family in southern France and at home in Coulter. Susan Bell is survived by children Gillian, Catriona, Angus and Douglas and seven grandchild­ren.

 ??  ?? 0 G Susan Bell was a political activist as well as a businesswo­man
0 G Susan Bell was a political activist as well as a businesswo­man

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