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  • Stalked for Four Years. It Took Prison to Stop It. Naomi Timperley Part Two.
    2026/04/21

    Naomi Timperley built her career on visibility. Then it became a threat.

    In Part Two of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE sits down with Naomi to explore a stalking ordeal that lasted four years, escalated across multiple platforms, and exposed just how unprepared our systems are to deal with this kind of abuse.

    What began with two brief encounters spiralled into thousands of posts, relentless harassment and a campaign that affected not just Naomi, but multiple victims. Police involvement. Bail breaches. Years of delays. And eventually, a prison sentence.

    Naomi speaks with clarity and courage about what it actually felt like. The loss of trust. The impact on her health, her work and her family. The fear of simply showing up. And the reality that even after a conviction, the risk does not disappear.

    This is also a story about failure at scale. Social platforms that did nothing. Systems that moved too slowly. Laws that are still catching up with the way harm is now delivered.

    And yet, it is also a story about resilience.

    Naomi shares what she has learned, how she rebuilt her sense of control, and what others can do if they find themselves in the same position. Her message is practical, grounded and hard-won.

    If Part One was about building influence, Part Two is about what happens when that influence is turned against you.

    This is not an easy listen. But it is an important one.

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    34 分
  • From Holiday Rep to Most Influential Woman in UK Tech. Naomi Timperley, Part One
    2026/04/07

    Naomi Timperley did not come through the front door of the tech industry. She built her own way in.


    In Part One of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE sits down with Naomi to trace a journey that begins in army towns and travel agencies and ends at the very centre of the UK’s technology ecosystem.


    Born in Devon, raised across military communities, Naomi describes a childhood shaped by movement, resilience and learning differently. Undiagnosed ADHD meant school never quite fit, but what she lacked in conventional academics, she made up for in instinct, communication and sheer drive.


    From selling holidays to working as a rep in Bulgaria, to being bullied out of a tech recruitment role, Naomi’s early career was anything but smooth. Then came the pivot. A chance discovery of an American concept led her to launch Baby Loves Disco in the UK, scaling it to nine cities, landing national press before the first event, and turning down investment on Dragons’ Den.


    What followed was not a business career in the traditional sense, but something far more influential. Naomi helped build the networks, communities and programmes that underpin the North’s tech ecosystem today. From Enterprise Lab to Tech North Advocates, from mentoring founders to championing women in tech, she became one of the most recognisable voices in UK innovation.


    This is a story about confidence built the hard way. About backing yourself before anyone else does. And about creating opportunity where none existed.


    Part One ends at the point where everything changes.


    In Part Two, Naomi speaks about a stalking ordeal that would test her resilience, challenge the systems meant to protect her, and reshape how she thinks about visibility and power.

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    53 分
  • Power, Barnsley and the Broken State. Simon Biltcliffe on Capitalism and Control, Part Two
    2026/03/24

    Simon Biltcliffe did not enter politics because business failed him. He entered because business showed him what failure really looks like when systems are wrong.

    In Part Two of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE moves beyond the story of Webmart and into something deeper. Power. Politics. Control. And why places like Barnsley were left behind.

    Simon returns to South Yorkshire not out of nostalgia, but conviction. He argues that the North does not lack talent, ambition or opportunity. It lacks power. The UK, he says, is one of the most centralised countries in the developed world, with decisions made far from the people who live with the consequences.

    He explains his idea of Marxist capitalism. Not ideology, but a system. Use capitalism to create value. Then distribute that value back to the people who made it. Simple. Uncomfortable. Necessary.

    This episode also lifts the lid on the machinery of the state. Lobbying, regulation, taxation, and why governments often make it harder to build than it needs to be. Simon argues that the UK could unlock growth overnight by removing friction, decentralising control and trusting local leadership.

    And then there is Yorkshire.

    A region of more than five million people with almost no real power. Simon makes the case for devolution, for economic self-determination, and for turning places like Barnsley from afterthoughts into engines of growth.

    This is not a polite conversation. It is a challenge.

    If Part One was about building a company with values, Part Two is about building a system that works.

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    59 分
  • The Marxist Capitalist from Barnsley. Simon Biltcliffe and the Webmart Experiment, Part One
    2026/03/10

    Most founders talk about values. Simon Biltcliffe built them into systems.

    In Part One of this two-part episode of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE sits down with Simon Biltcliffe, founder of Webmart, one of the most unconventional and quietly radical businesses in Britain.

    Simon grew up in Staincross outside Barnsley, shaped by community, the miners’ strike, and the hard lessons of deindustrialisation. He was thrown out of university twice, rode his motorbike south with no plan and no money, and stumbled into a job running a million-pound hologram machine in Corby. From there he discovered sales, built a team, and then had the kind of week that breaks people. A company collapsed, a mortgage tripled, and interest rates jumped to 15 per cent.

    Then came the moment that changed everything.

    A trip to Japan in 1993 where Simon saw what the world would later call a Kindle. He came home convinced print would be disrupted. His bosses told him to stick with the knitting. So he built it himself.

    This episode follows the birth of Webmart and the culture decisions that made it famous. Open salaries. Radical transparency. One version of the truth. A profit-sharing model that hands the upside to employees. Simon calls it Marxist capitalism. Not politics, but a deliberate rejection of extractive business.

    Part One ends as the story turns. Barnsley to Bicester and back again. The two Bs. And the question of why a man who built a successful company in the South came home to Yorkshire with a bigger mission.

    Part Two is coming.

    If you want a founder story with grit, humour, and a serious challenge to how British business is run, start here.

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    1 時間 7 分
  • From Meltdown to Mina. Ashley Tate on Turning Failure into Advantage, Part Two
    2026/02/24

    Most founders never talk about the moments that nearly ended them. Ashley Tate does.

    In Part Two of this two-part episode of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE returns with Ashley to trace the comeback story. After two brutal lessons in the energy world, Ashley explains how those disasters became the foundation for his biggest success.This episode is the truth about rebuilding.Ashley tells the story of how Mina began as a consumer idea, then pivoted hard into fleets when he spotted a pain nobody had solved. Drivers were not charging at home because it hit their personal electricity bills. Fleet managers were stuck. Mina became the missing link, and product-market fit arrived in a single meeting.From there, Ashley breaks down what actually drives a breakthrough. Partnerships. Pricing. Focus. Timing. The discipline to build foundations before scaling. He also lifts the lid on what it is really like to be acquired, how he survived two years inside a major corporate, and why he treated it like an MBA.The episode ends with the next chapter. Ashley is now Co-Chair of Sheffield Angels, backing early-stage founders in the region, building an investment culture Sheffield has lacked for too long, and proving that experience earned the hard way is worth more than theory.If Part One was the fall, Part Two is the recovery. And the blueprint.Subscribe to The Digital Forge on Spotify or Apple Podcasts so you never miss what comes next.

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    41 分
  • From a Bedroom Card Machine to the Brink of Collapse: Ashley Tate, Part One
    2026/02/10

    Ashley Tate built his first business before most people finish school.

    In Part One of this two-part episode of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE sits down with Ashley to unpack the early years of a career shaped by instinct, experimentation and hard lessons learned the long way round.

    Growing up in Dronfield and Sheffield, Ashley always knew he wanted to work for himself. At sixteen he was importing mini motorbikes, processing card payments from his bedroom and shipping hundreds of units across the UK. By nineteen he was running a student property business that grew into a serious operation. From there came Split the Bills, a business that scaled fast, generated huge cash flow, and nearly collapsed under the weight of its own complexity.

    Ashley speaks with rare honesty about what went wrong. Losing control of finances. Operating on hope rather than data. Facing winding-up petitions. Buying his own business back out of administration with borrowed money and credit cards. Then doing it all again in energy, just as wholesale markets imploded.

    This is not a story about overnight success. It is a story about learning in public, surviving failure, and understanding that grit without discipline eventually catches up with you.

    Part One ends at the moment where most founders would walk away. In Part Two, we explore how Ashley rebuilt, what those failures taught him, and how they shaped the investor and founder he is today at Sheffield Angels and beyond.

    If you have ever built something, broken something, or wondered whether you could come back from the edge, this episode will stay with you.

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    50 分
  • After the Cell Door Opens: Volker Hirsch on Survival, Reinvention and Seeing What Others Miss
    2026/01/27

    Part Two of the Volker Hirsch story begins where most careers would have ended.

    Fresh from being arrested and held in a Maltese jail in the collapse of a dot-com era mobile incubator, Volker Hirsch had a choice. Retreat to safety or build again. He chose the harder path.

    In this episode of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE follows Volker through the aftermath. How he rebuilt his career, moved to the UK, helped shape the early mobile games industry, co-founded multiple companies, and went on to invest in some of the UK’s most successful education and technology startups.

    Volker reflects on what failure really teaches you, why being early is often indistinguishable from being wrong, and how pattern recognition, not prediction, defines the best founders and investors. He talks candidly about venture capital, the difference between UK and US attitudes to risk, and why ecosystems like the North of England need confidence as much as capital.

    This is a conversation about perspective earned the hard way. About learning when to walk away, when to double down, and how to see around corners after you have been burned.

    If Part One was about the rise and fall of technology giants, Part Two is about what it takes to survive them.

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    1 時間 8 分
  • From BlackBerry’s Inner Circle to a Maltese Jail Cell. Volker Hirsch, Part One
    2026/01/13

    Volker Hirsch has lived several technology lifetimes in one career.

    In Part One of this two-part episode of The Digital Forge, David Richards MBE sits down with Volker to trace an extraordinary journey that begins in German law firms and runs straight through the first mobile revolution, the rise of social gaming, and the peak of BlackBerry’s dominance.

    Volker left a successful legal career to join one of the world’s first mobile-only incubators in 2000, helping launch some of the earliest mobile fan clubs and games long before smartphones existed. He went on to help build Scoreloop, growing it to more than 450 million users, before the company was acquired by BlackBerry, where he worked from the inside as the company tried and failed to reinvent itself.

    This episode is about timing, conviction and being close enough to history to see how giants rise and fall. Volker explains what BlackBerry got right, what it misunderstood, and why execution mattered more than technology.

    And then the story takes a turn.

    Part One ends with Volker recounting the night he was arrested and held in a Maltese jail for four hours, accused of money laundering in the fallout of a collapsing mobile incubator. What happened next changed the direction of his life and career.

    Part Two continues the story.

    If you want to understand how early mobile really worked, why BlackBerry lost its grip on the world, and how chaos can become a catalyst, this is where it begins.

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    1 時間 22 分