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You're hired – on Sir Alan's 'gut instinct'

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Published Date: 08 June 2009
RESTAURANT owner Yasmina Siadatan won a job with Sir Alan Sugar in last night's final of The Apprentice.
The 27-year-old Londoner was hired by Sir Alan on what she described as the businessman's "gut instinct", despite her rival Kate Walsh being in a good position to win.

Ms Siadatan said her mistakes as well as her achievements may have given her the edge. Asked how she felt to have won the coveted job, Ms Siadatan said: "I can't believe it, I am in shock. All those months ago you first apply to try to get on, and here I am, it's amazing."

On beating Ms Walsh, who had performed consistently well in the series, Ms Siadatan said the mistakes she had made – which included confusing the gross profit with the net profit of her restaurant on her CV – may have endeared her to Sir Alan.

She said: "I don't feel like I've beaten Kate because I feel we both deserved that job, and we feel we just had different qualities and Sir Alan needed my qualities over hers. I don't think mine were any better than hers, I just think that's the kind of guy Sir Alan is, and I'm sure Kate will do just as well as I do, but on a different path.

"Sir Alan described it in a nutshell when he said, 'I can't put it into words why I chose Yasmina, it was just a gut instinct'. I think because of the way that I performed, even though I made some quite serious errors, as we've seen, I was also able to show him that I exceeded in certain areas. The profit I made in the catering task was the biggest profit he's ever seen on an Apprentice task.

"Maybe I've shown him that even though I've got this real confidence and real strength in some areas, I've also got a side of me that is slightly insecure and slightly unsure and I will make mistakes. But without that side to you, I don't think you can ever really excel and succeed."

Ms Siadatan is now looking forward to starting work with Sir Alan, even though the job is a world away from her restaurant, Mya Lacarte, in Caversham.

She said: "The actual product will be completely different. Catered food and digital signage are completely different industries and products but, as you've seen in The Apprentice, to get as far as I did you have to be totally adaptable."

IT DOESN'T TAKE BRAINS

DID the best woman win? On the face of it, 27-year-old Yasmina Siadatan lacks the basic business acumen to survive.

Some of her jaw-dropping clangers – such as confusing gross profit with the net profit of her own business on her CV – must have had accountants cringing into their TV dinners.

In episode four, during the task to create a beauty product, she mistook cedarwood essential oil for oh-so-expensive sandalwood – blowing her team's budget out of the water.

Strangely (for an award-winning restaurateur, when charged with creating canapés for a glamorous cocktail party), Yasmina insisted on throwing value brands from a supermarket deep freeze on to plates and passing them off as gourmet nibbles. No-one was fooled.

Last night, viewers saw a model who tried Yasmina's new box of chocolates spit one out in disgust.

Yet this businesswoman who doesn't realise her accounts can be traced by one phone call to Company House, this restaurant owner who only seems capable of serving horrible food, was chosen by Alan Sugar to be his fifth apprentice because she appealed to his famous "gut instinct".

Is he making a terrible mistake? Let's look at the stats: Yasmina led her team to victory on each of the three occasions she was project manager. The profit she made in the catering task was the biggest ever seen on The Apprentice.

She's gutsy, she's ballsy, and hungry for success. Sometimes, that's all it takes.

SUGAR JOBS WARNING

SIR Alan Sugar has been warned he could face a conflict of interest with his new role in the government and his status as a BBC TV host of The Apprentice.

The businessman has already been in discussions with the broadcaster over its strict impartiality rules, he admitted. He was appointed enterprise tsar by Gordon Brown in Friday's reshuffle. But the Tories have ratcheted up the pressure on him to choose, warning the new "enterprise champion" could not have both roles.

Shadow culture secretary Jeremy Hunt said the two jobs were "totally incompatible".

Sir Alan insists he his "politically neutral".

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 07 June 2009 10:34 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

,

08/06/2009 01:06:10
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
2

Gordiedoonsooth,

Engerland 08/06/2009 10:00:19
Sugar has made no secret that he admires Brown. Why?
It just shows that anyone can get into the Lords.
3

AnneJ,

OLDHAM 08/06/2009 10:12:45
Yes the right woman won! I think Kate lost it in the final boardroom meeting; throughout the series she has been accused of little imagination and 'feeding back what is said to her' - very well! In the final asked a question by Sir Alan she almost ecactley, 'fed back the answer' she thought he wanted and i thought 'oops you have just lost girl' she had! What a daft thing to do !
4

Tartan Viking,

08/06/2009 10:26:35
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
5

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 12:29:20
Last time I happened to see a bit of this show, the "apprentices" were all bickering like school kids in the boardroom. If I'd been Sir Alan, I would have fired the lot of them on the spot.
6

Tartan Viking,

08/06/2009 12:29:28
Woulod this be news if the final was contested by two guys?

No.
7

Boab1,

08/06/2009 12:48:13
What used to annoy me about this programme was the way he used to love belittling anyone with any qualifications. You'd think with his success he'd have lost the chip on his shoulder.

I have long since stopped watching what is nothing more than a vehicle for his ego.
8

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/06/2009 15:31:10
#7:

More like, a vehicle for his bank balance.

Ths first series was good. I watched it. It had none of the hallmarks of a stupid reality show. The candidates were all genuine and were trying their best to rise to the challenges presented to them.

Now it has descended into yet another reality trash show where the contestents constantly try to outdo each other in all respects and bicker like spoilt kids. It's made even worse with this particular show because the type who apply to be on it are generally, beligerant, argumentative idiots who would start a row in a monastery.

Yes, I know that there are some exceptions to this rule but frankly, what I've seen of the program lately, I would fire most of the contestants on the spot, the first time they started arguing like kids in my boardroom. The fact that Sugar doesn't do that is testiment to the fact that the whole thing is contrived.
9

Gordiedoonsooth,

08/06/2009 16:16:56
Of course the whole thing is contrived, it's rubbish and made to entertain the masses.
I mean how can you 'fire' someone you don't even yet employ - they are trying to get the job for heavens sake.

Also, you never see Margaret and Nick go off in a car following them around London , so they obviously go later in yet more cars, so how many cars (including film crews etc.) are actually used.
The whole thing must cost a fortune to produce, but then it's licence payers money!

Some production company making it for the BBC will be making a mint no doubt.

10

MattyMat,

So Cal 09/06/2009 00:18:13
He just picked the girl he's more attracted to that "might" give him "special favors". We'll see how long she lasts after she turns him down.

 

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