Talk:Peter Horrocks

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Updates to this entry 27/09/2019[edit]

Can someone update Peter's record with the following:

Peter Horrocks was appointed as Chair to lead the economic vision for the South East Midlands Local Enterprise Partnership (SEMLEP) on 27 Februrary 2019. Peter sat on the SEMLEP Board as a representaive of The Open University prior to his departure in 2018. Source: https://www.semlep.com/news/2019/peter-horrocks-cbe-appointed-chair-of-local-enterprise-partnership/ — Preceding unsigned comment added by 137.108.205.17 (talk) 07:50, 27 September 2019 (UTC)[reply]


Nigel Chapman[edit]

Is the Nigel Chapman linked to the same person as the one who was head of the World Service?AdeMiami (talk) 22:17, 21 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

No, it's the wrong Nigel Chapman. But I don't know how to remove the link.Manormadman (talk) 06:54, 11 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Done. AdeMiami (talk) 11:57, 11 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Updates to this entry[edit]

Would be possible for someone to correct some out of date information on this biography page for Peter Horrocks please? For example, it states that Peter works at the BBC and is due to take up post as Vice-Chancellor of The Open University in May 2015, which has already happened. I work in the Communications Department of The Open University and have included below the latest version of Peter’s biography, which might help if you need to double check any facts in the Wikipedia entry.

Peter Horrocks, Vice-Chancellor, The Open University

Peter Horrocks took up the post of the sixth Vice-Chancellor of The Open University in May 2015.

The UK’s largest academic institution, The Open University has been transforming the lives of millions of people for over forty years, harnessing innovative technologies to provide high-quality, flexible and inspiring part-time higher education to people world-wide. Nearly 200,000 people, from many different backgrounds, are currently studying for qualifications with the OU, often combining work and family commitments. Millions more watch the University’s TV programmes, produced in partnership with the BBC, and use free learning resources on iTunes U, Open Learn and the global platform FutureLearn, which provides free online courses in partnership with over 50 universities and institutions worldwide.

As Vice-Chancellor, Peter is the chief academic and administrative officer of the University, responsible for providing strategic leadership through his senior executive team, championing the interests of the institution at the highest levels with government, policy makers and funders, and ensuring the long term financial and operational sustainability of the OU. He chairs the Senate and a number of committees of the Council and the Senate.

Peter arrived at the OU after a career with the BBC spanning more than three decades. As Director of the BBC World Service Group, the world’s most respected news brand, he was responsible for leading the BBC's international news services across radio, television and online, and his team provided trusted news to over a quarter of a billion people globally every week. He had responsibility for a global workforce of 3000, based in 113 countries delivering over 83,000 hours of content each year in 28 different languages, with annual revenues exceeding £400m.

Peter joined the BBC in October 1981 as a news trainee. He went on to work at Newsnight as an assistant producer and then producer. In May 1992, Peter was appointed editor of BBC Two's social affairs programme, Public Eye, a position he held until January 1994 when he launched Here And Now, the BBC's popular current affairs magazine programme. After working as a senior producer, intake editor and output editor on Breakfast Time, he became editor of Newsnight in April 1994, and took up the position of Editor of Panorama in 1988.

He was appointed Head of Current Affairs in June 2000. He was executive producer of Brits, True Spies, Smallpox 2002, The Day Britain Stopped, Dirty War and of the documentary trilogy The Power of Nightmares. Peter then became Head of Television News from September 2005 until BBC News went multimedia in November 2007, when he became Head of the BBC newsroom; he has also been the BBC's Head of Current Affairs.

Peter has an international reputation for thought leadership in major digital transformations. He led the transition of BBC News to become a multiplatform organisation in 2008, and in 2012 he conceived and delivered the “world’s newsroom”, the BBC’s innovative concept for the world’s leading multilingual, multimedia digital news operation.

As a journalist Peter has excelled in investigative and analytical programmes, becoming editor of the Newsnight and Panorama programmes. He won two BAFTA awards in 1997 and 2005 for his editorship of Newsnight and for The Power of Nightmares.

Peter’s not-for-profit experience is through his chairmanship of the BBC Media Action Board of Trustees (previously called the BBC World Service Trust), the BBC’s £40m per annum international development charity that delivers social transformation through media skills and communication in the world’s poorest countries.

A future-focussed leader, Peter is in demand as a speaker at international conferences for his comprehensive vision of how organisations in many sectors need to constantly adapt to cope with a digital world. He has been on the advisory board to the Chancellor of Cambridge University, and he is an adviser to the media protection organisation, Reporters Without Borders.

Educated at the independent King's College School in Wimbledon and Christ’s College, the University of Cambridge, Peter holds a Bachelor’s degree in History. He enjoys running, skiing, cycling and tennis and is married with three children. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 137.108.145.24 (talk) 14:30, 26 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]