Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

  • hot
  • hot
  • hot 100

Butlers in the Buff has taken Britain by storm. Jason Didcott reveals all.

by Rebecca Burn-Callander - Monday, 31st March 2008 -

Butlers in the Buff has taken Britain by storm. Jason Didcott reveals all.

From student sideline to roaring trade: check out how founder Didcott has shaken up the silver service industry with a flash of flesh and a lot of panache.

“I came up with the idea as a penniless student,” says Didcott. “I used to be in the marines, so I kept myself fit. It was supposed to be a little earner on the side, but hiring myself out as a “butler in the buff” turned out to be more successful than I’d ever imagined.”

Pretty soon, Didcott had to recruit four other “butlers” to keep up with demand, and in 2003, the firm was officially launched. Fellow director William Jones was one of the original team, though both he and Didcott have alas, hung up their aprons.

Butlers in the Buff is now the largest supplier of “scantily-clad hunky butlers” in the UK. The company pulled in a turnover of £350,000 last year, but revenues this year will be over half a million.

The company caters to a number of clients, from hen nights to bar openings with 30 per cent of turnover coming in through corporate events.

“Butlers in the Buff are naughty, cheeky and fun,” says Didcott. “But we’re careful not to be smutty. Butlers are never nude. At the very least they have their aprons, collar and cuffs.”

There is a strict code of conduct to make sure that the company name remains unblemished. “Butlers are not allowed to hang around after events,” says Didcott. “And if a party gets too wild, we will approach the client and say, ‘If you don’t tone this down, I’m afraid we will have to leave’. That usually does the trick.”

This code of conduct ensures that the firm only attracts high-end clients. Premium prices also help to cut out undesirable clientele. Butlers cost between £65-75 per hour and prices drop to around £45 for group bookings.

Net profits at the company stand at 20 per cent.

www.butlersinthebuff.co.uk

BUSINESS NEWS >>

Senior care franchise fills gap in market

By Catherine Woods - October 10, 2008 3:21pm GMT

Trevor Brocklebank and his wife, Sam, bought the UK franchise for alternative care business Home Instead Senior Care after struggling to find appropriate services for his ailing grandfather.

Stop press: Sir Alan Sugar's bought into Woolies

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - October 10, 2008 2:36pm GMT

Amstrad founder and Apprentice star Sir Alan Sugar today acquired a four per cent stake in the ailing Woolworths chain.

Testing is crucial for new social networking site

By Catherine Woods - October 10, 2008 12:34pm GMT

Social networking site Wigadoo.com wants to make it easier for friends to organise social events when there’s money involved – from holidays to hen parties.

Does the Lightning car have electric appeal?

By Kate Pritchard - October 10, 2008 11:46am GMT

It scorches from 0-60mph in less than four seconds, its batteries can be charged in ten minutes and you can imagine James Bond sitting behind the wheel. But will the über-stylish electric Lightning car ever make money?

The financial market today

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - October 10, 2008 10:47am GMT

Share prices tumble further. Brown calls for global support for failing banks. And Pesto thinks its only going to get worse.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Playing monopoly with Alistair Darling

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - October 10, 2008 5:11pm GMT

It's Friday afternoon and RB's eyes are bleeding from frantically watching the rise and tumble of the financial markets today. To give our peepers, and yours, a well deserved break from doom and gloom, check out today's funnies from NewsBiscuit.

Market crisis: the Real Business bargepole ten

By Stuart Rock - October 10, 2008 1:53pm GMT

The market crisis has some big losers.

Global financial crisis: what next?

By Catherine Woods - October 09, 2008 11:31am GMT

I received a text from an investment banker friend this morning who, it has to be said, is master of the understatement.

Interest rates: the reaction

By Catherine Woods - October 08, 2008 4:03pm GMT

Was today’s global interest rates cut “one of the big, pivotal moments for the economy”?

Why I love being British...

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - October 08, 2008 2:01pm GMT

The financial markets are in turmoil. It's the worst banking crisis since the 1930's. A cloud of doom hangs over our fair nation. But some people still have the balls to have a little joke about it all.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover