Celebrity Life
Mike Simpson: Finding Freedom in a Beneteau
Mike Simpson has reawakened his love for sailing since buying a new Beneteau Oceanis 46.1, which he has named Freedom in tribute to a yachting lifestyle he has promoted since founding Simpson Marine in 1984.
The post Mike Simpson: Finding Freedom in a Beneteau appeared first on LUXUO.
Yacht Style Issue 58 Out Now
The second issue of 2021 features Sunseekerâs new Manhattan 55, a profile of the British yardâs new Hong Kong dealer, NextWave, focuses on selected Yacht Builders in Asia and highlights Sustainability focus of major catamaran builders. Plus ⌠exclusive interviews with Sunreef Eco ambassador Nico Rosberg, Imperial Director Julia Stewart, Bali Catamarans founder Olivier Poncin and Mike Simpson as the owner of a new Beneteau Oceanis 46.1.
The post Yacht Style Issue 58 Out Now appeared first on LUXUO.
Mike Simpson on His Game-Changing Role in Building Asiaâs Yachting Industry
If one man could claim responsibility for affluent Asiansâ growing passion for yachting and the sea, that might well be Mike Simpson.
His tall figure has been a well-recognised presence around the typhoon shelter ever since he berthed his yacht alongside the Aberdeen Marina Club almost 40 years ago. In those days, Mike Simpson was a one-man-band, living aboard his boat, meeting fellow sailors and occasionally, over a beer or two, selling them a yacht. Now he heads one of Asiaâs leading yacht-sales, charter and management companies, with a team of almost 100 based in 12 locations across the region, from Bali to Taiwan. And yet this freedom-loving Englishman had never intended to build a business at all.
Although Simpson says that heâs told his story several times, itâs a yarn well worth repeating. âIf you want to start from the beginning,â he says, âI came to Asia to build a yacht for myself, in Taiwan, with the intention of sailing it around the world. For about 10 or 12 years before that, Iâd been travelling in different parts of the world on foot and by boat, and Iâd ended up in Greece running a yacht charter fleet.
âMy girlfriend at the time was a keen sailor whoâd helped to deliver a yacht back from Taiwan and told me what great boats they built there. In those days I wasnât terribly impressed with the Taiwan-built sailing yachts Iâd seen, which were clipper-bowed and heavily built, but one day a beautiful 46-foot, centre-cockpit cutter sailed into Mandraki harbour in Rhodes, where I was working. I wandered over, introduced myself, and the owner showed me around â and it turned out that it was built in Taiwan.â
"Weâve had great success with Sanlorenzo, whose combination of cutting-edge design and exceptionally high quality has struck a chord with Asian buyersâ
Mike Simpson
Convinced, perhaps as much by the serendipity as anything else, the pair decided to head out to Asia, where theyâd build their dream yacht; this was at the tail end of the 1970s. âThe idea,â he says, âwas to sail around the world â though, of course, weâd have to make some money to cover our costs en route. Maybe weâd charter the yacht or work on other peopleâs yachts, or in a boatyard â you did whatever you could to earn money on the way, thatâs how it used to be.â
They holed up for half a year in Tianmu, a suburb of Taipei, and Simpson, who conveniently spoke Chinese, went to the shipyard each day and worked with the team to build his yacht, Hoopoe. Once it was finished and fully fitted out for cruising, the two of them sailed out into the teeth of a South China Sea gale, with Hong Kong and then Singapore being the first two stops on their planned epic circumnavigation. But that was as far as they got.
âWe were all set to head out from Singapore for Sri Lanka, our planned next stop, when an American saw the boat at anchor and asked if he could have a look. After a quick walk around, he said, âThis is my dream yacht. Is there any chance youâd sell it?â I remember my girlfriend immediately snapped back, âOf course not, this is our home!â but I wavered, because when youâre building a yacht thereâs always something you could do better next time and we had debts to repay.
âI worked out what it would cost us to fly to Sri Lanka to pick up our mail from the poste restante in Galle, then fly on to Courchevel in France for a couple of weeksâ skiing, then fly back to Taiwan and rent a flat there while we built Hoopoe II. I gave him the price, which also included paying back the money weâd borrowed to help us buy the yacht, and to our amazement he said, âOK, itâs a deal.â So off we went to his lawyerâs office and it was done literally in four or five hours.â
That eventually brought them back, via a long and circuitous route, to Taiwan, where they started all over again. Only they never did get to circumnavigate the world, because while building their second yacht they met âan English guy who was looking for a yacht in Taiwanâ and, well, you can guess the rest.
âWe delivered that one down to Hong Kong fully fitted out and ready to sail away,â says Simpson, âand he turned up with a suitcase â well, two suitcases, one with all his kit in it and the other one full of banknotes. After a day counting banknotes the deal was done. He sailed off two days later and I never heard from him again!â By then, he says, the penny had dropped and though heâd never been interested in getting into business and money was only a means to an end â funding for adventure and travel â he realised that a business was exactly what he had.
âI thought, âMaybe instead of being typical impecunious sailors, earning money along the way, we could build up a cruising fund by selling yachts for six months or so and then set sail again with some money in the bank.â By the time I took a third yacht down to Singapore specifically to sell and to pick up a couple of orders, the shipyard had caught on and said, âBy the way, would you be interested in becoming a dealer?â So my girlfriend returned to England and I ended up here with the dealership for Ta Chiao yachts for Hong Kong. âI sailed my yacht into the newly opened Aberdeen Marina Club â I think, it was 1983 â and thatâs how I got started here. I was living on the boat, Iâd got a berth right in front of the clubhouse, and thatâs where I began the business, from the yacht. The dealership was simply a document Iâd signed with the rights to sell yachts here.â
Yachting in those days meant sailing yachts, says Simpson, and âthere was quite an active scene, mainly centred around the Royal Hong Kong Yacht Clubâ. However when a âbuyerâ explained that heâd decided to buy a Beneteau from France instead the beautiful hand-built yacht from Taiwan heâd been hoping to sell him, Simpson realised that his heavy Taiwanese boats didnât feed the Hong Kong yachtiesâ appetite for club racing and performance. Realising a change of tack was needed, he contacted the Beneteau shipyard to learn more about them and ended up taking on the French manufacturerâs local dealership, which he still holds today.
âItâs a very long relationship, which says something, though Iâm not sure what!â he says with a chuckle. âItâs now 35 years since we became their dealer, first in Hong Kong and then in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and China. Theyâre one of the worldâs largest yacht builders with more than 400 dealerships worldwide, but theyâre yachtsmen at heart and that comes across in the way they do business. Theyâre a great company to work with and I still enjoying doing business with them.â
Simpsonâs move into motor yachts began when he met the Australian businessman and âcorporate doctorâ Bill Wylie, a man perhaps most famous in Hong Kong for heading Hutchison Whampoa in the late â70s. âThereâs a sort of cultural divide,â says Simpson, âbetween âtrueâ sailors, who sail boats with sails, and motor-yacht sailors, who typically have a captain and crew to look after everything and do all the work â or all the fun, as we âtrueâ sailors might say â while they just sit back, relax and enjoy the service! Although weâd started out selling sailing yachts, when I met Bill he was intending to move back to Australia and was interested in getting a motor yacht to keep down in Perth.
"It's the realisation of a dream, to help spread yachting around Asia, because being so keen on it and loving the adventure of it, I wanted to share that."
Mike Simpson
âCoincidentally, Iâd seen an advertisement in a magazine for an Italian motor-yacht builder. So I put two and two together, flew to Italy, went to the shipyard and explained that I possibly had a buyer for one of their 76-footers, which in those days was a big yacht in Asia. And that was how that deal happened â and how I got into motor yachts.â
Today, Simpson Marineâs business is very much skewed towards motor yachts, representing the leading luxury Italian motor-yacht builder Sanlorenzo and its Bluegame subsidiary, Aquila power catamarans and UK-based Fairline motor yachts, as well as Beneteau motor and sailing yachts, Lagoon catamarans and CNB sailing yachts. The company also has a superyacht division, which offers purchase, management and chartering services.
That shift towards motor as opposed to wind power largely coincided with the companyâs expansion into a regional operation, with sales and service facilities across East Asia. âIf you look back over the last 30 or 40 years,â Simpson explains, âitâs been a turbulent period in Asian history, with all sorts of political and economic upheavals around the region, but fortunately not in all Asian markets at the same time â if some countries were down, others would be up.
âWhat that showed me was that if your business was centred only on one country, and that country experienced a serious financial crisis, youâd have no business. So I decided â though there were some additional circumstances that led to it â to open an office in Singapore and then in Malaysia, and so on. It greatly extended the reach of the company and itâs worked well for us â itâs given us a kind of balance.
âBut it was also the realisation of a dream, to help spread yachting around Asia, because being so keen on it and loving the adventure of it, I wanted to share that, to be a pioneer, as it were, and introduce people to boating â and having the offices around Asia meant that people were given the confidence that if they did decide to go cruising further afield, we could look after them. And thatâs always been part of our philosophy.â
Simpson admits â a little ruefully, as he doesnât like to crow at a time thatâs proved so hard for so many â that the past 12 months have been surprisingly good for business. âAlthough it could have been extremely bad for us, it worked out very well, and quite the opposite of what weâd anticipated. Weâre very fortunate being in such a beautiful location in lockdown. When you get out on the water around Hong Kong, you see what a beautiful place this is â and that the best way to enjoy it is to buy or charter a yacht. Last summer I bought myself a Beneteau Oceanis â a sailing yacht, of course! â and Iâve enjoyed sailing with friends every weekend. When youâre sailing along in a brisk northeast monsoon with this beautiful coastline going past, itâs wonderful.â
As for being an old-school sailor whoâs now forced to rely on new-fangled motor and superyachts for the bulk of his business, heâs phlegmatic. âTo sustain and develop the business, we have to sell large motor yachts and weâve had great success with Sanlorenzo. whose combination of cutting-edge design and exceptionally high quality has struck a chord with Asian buyers,â he says.
âWe could never afford the regional presence we have if we were only selling sailing boats, because theyâre a relatively small segment of the rapidly growing Asian yacht market. The reason we continue with Beneteau is because we really like the brand and because itâs our identity, itâs where we started. Beneteau are yachties themselves and I do think thatâs why the relationship has lasted for so long. We share the same passion for the sea.
âItâs part of our DNA that we continue with sailing. And we always will.â
The post Mike Simpson on His Game-Changing Role in Building Asiaâs Yachting Industry appeared first on Prestige Online - Hong Kong.
Simpson Marine: Fighting On In The Face Of Adversity
In a Column for Yacht Style's new Issue 52, Simpson Marine founder Mike Simpson reiterates that Asia has overcome setbacks in the past.
The post Simpson Marine: Fighting On In The Face Of Adversity appeared first on LUXUO.
Simpson Marineâs Mr Malaysia: Simon Theseira, Dealer Supreme
Ahead of the Penang RendezVous, Yacht Style speaks to Penang-raised SIMON THESEIRA of Simpson Marine, who has sold more than 150 boats.
The post Simpson Marineâs Mr Malaysia: Simon Theseira, Dealer Supreme appeared first on LUXUO.