Lord Alan Sugar can have a brand new aide within the subsequent collection of The Apprentice – regardless of him being a enterprise flop.
Tim Campbell MBE, who received the primary ever collection, will exchange Claude Littner whereas he recovers from accidents sustained in a biking accident.
Campbell is being promoted as a advertising and marketing professional although checks reveal that his firm was dissolved in June with simply £5 within the financial institution.
Acquainted face: Lord Alan Sugar might be assisted by former present winner Tim Campbell MBE within the subsequent collection of The Apprentice – regardless of him being a enterprise flop
He was the co-managing director of a agency referred to as Advertising and marketing Runners Restricted which was dissolved through obligatory strike-off on 29 June 2021, in accordance with official data at Firms Home.
The explanations behind the transfer haven’t been defined however it may be resulting from administrators failing to file paperwork.
The final set of accounts for the agency lined the 12 months to 31 December 2019 had no tangible property and held simply £5 in money on the financial institution.
Serving to out: Tim Campbell MBE, who received the primary ever collection, will exchange Claude Littner whereas he recovers from accidents sustained in a biking accident
Complete web property of £5 in 2019 have been a change from the earlier 12 months when the corporate report its value was solely £4,046.
The determine was £4,906 in 2017, there have been web liabilities of £1,881 in 2016 following the incorporation of the agency in December 2015.
He was additionally a director of a charity referred to as Vivid Concepts Belief, together with former Sugar aide Margaret Mountford till she resigned in 2018.
Right here we go once more: The Apprentice UK returns with a brand new collection on January 6
That too was dissolved through obligatory strike-off in March 2021 after submitting accounts as a dormant firm in June 2020.
It studies zero property and 0 reserves in 2020 and 2019, after reporting whole web property of £54,493 in 2018.
MailOnline has contacted a consultant for additional remark.