
IMI staff headcount shrank before sale to Business Post group
Irish Management Institute (IMI)
, trimmed its staff headcount by almost 20 per cent in the year before the
Business Post group
agreed to acquire the executive education provider from University College Cork (UCC).
Newly filed accounts for the IMI show that losses at the Sandyford, south county Dublin-based institute, narrowed to just over €431,000 in the 12 months to September last from more than €1 million in the previous 12 months.
The IMI reportedly issued protective notice to more than 30 staff in the summer of 2023, warning of potential redundancies.
Staff numbers at the school subsequently shrank from 77 in 2023 to 63 in the year to September 2024, according to the latest filings, a reduction of more than 18 per cent.
READ MORE
Consequently, staff costs – including wages, salaries, social welfare contributions and pension costs – declined by almost 19 per cent to €4.66 million in the year.
In a report attached to the accounts, the IMI's directors said the market for executive education remained challenging due to escalating direct and indirect costs.
[
Business Post expected to move to Irish Management Institute (IMI) campus
Opens in new window
]
'However, despite these challenges, the programme of turnaround activities, commenced in the prior year, has strengthened the company and significantly reduced the deficit for the year.'
Accumulated losses of more than €5.2 million had built up at the company, which is limited by guarantee and has no share capital, by the end of September 2024, according to the accounts.
The IMI's directors also noted that after the financial year end, they had signed non-binding 'heads of terms' related to the potential sale of the institute and its assets to a 'third party'.
How the wealthy are buying up land to avoid inheritance tax
Listen |
22:03
Enda O'Coineen's Business Post Group subsequently acquired the institute in a deal that was finalised in May.
UCC will reportedly retain control of the sprawling 13-acre campus in suburban south county Dublin as part of the transaction.
At the time of the deal, the Business Post Group said the addition of IMI would complement its existing portfolio and align with its 'House of Brands' vision to deliver content through BusinessPost.ie, experiences through iQuest.ie, 'insights' with RedCResearch.ie, and executive education.
'Our group of companies bring together the power of news reporting and insights as well as research – this will help to further inform IMI on the trends and emerging areas that leaders need to know and understand,' Mr O'Coineen said at the time.
The Irish Times reported in May that staff at the newspaper had been told the news publisher's operations will likely move to the IMI campus when the lease on its offices on Merrion Road expires later this year.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
42 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Dundrum drone delivery plans delayed as council requests further information
A decision on a planned drone delivery hub for Dundrum has been delayed after planning authorities requested further information on noise levels and how the operation might impact the ecology of the local area. Drone delivery service Manna lodged plans with Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council in June for the aerial food delivery hub at a site off the main street of Dundrum in a car park to the rear of Holy Cross Church. Founded in 2018 by entrepreneur Bobby Healy , Manna has developed aviation-grade drones that fly at 80km/h and deliver goods, including groceries, takeaways and medicines. Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council has asked the company to carry out a number of assessments before making a final decision on the plan. Among the additional information it has requested is a noise impact assessment addressing the take-off and landing of drones, idling and preflight checks, and any noise created by loading, unloading and associated ground support equipment. READ MORE The company must also provide information about the proposed area and hours of operation, how many drones it expects to have in the air at once, and proposed flight heights. The local authority has also requested various assessments to examine the potential ecological impact of the drone activity on local wildlife, including birds and bats, and a transport assessment to look at the volume of ground traffic and trips that might be needed to serve the proposed aerial delivery hub. Manna has six months to submit the additional information. The application for the Dundrum hub has encountered significant local opposition, with a number of objections lodged to the plans. Local residents have raised concerns about noise, citing recent reports from a group of residents in Blanchardstown where Manna operates a drone service, the impact on privacy and potential safety concerns from low-flying drones. Manna drones are equipped with cameras that the company says are activated only when the drone arrives at its delivery location and hovers 14 metres above the ground, to ensure that the delivery area is free from obstacles. A similar proposal for Tallaght, located off the Main Street at the area's new Priory Market, has also been subject to a request for further information from that local authority. South Dublin County Council is seeking a noise impact assessment, and has also requested further evaluation of how the proposed delivery hub would impact on operations at Baldonnel, and the air ambulance service at the nearby Tallaght Hospital. 'As previously noted, our plans to fly in Dundrum are not imminent and we will be providing all the information requested by the planning authorities,' said Kevin Houston, head of regulation at Manna. 'We have also engaged with local representatives to talk about the benefits UAVs [unmanned aerial vehicles] can bring to main street businesses, local residents, and in terms of reducing traffic. 'We engage with local authorities for each site as advised as appropriate by our external planning consultants and within the scope of the 2001 Planning Act, as can be seen by our Blanchardstown base and application in Tallaght.' Manna's activity is regulated by the Irish Aviation Authority and any safety incidents are investigated by the Air Accident Investigation Unit. The company has completed more than 170,000 deliveries in Ireland to date, with three unplanned controlled landings recorded. It delivers to 37,000 households in Blanchardstown, with around 150 complaints made to the company since it began operating in the area around 18 months ago. Manna has pushed back against the complaints, noting its safety record, and expressions of support from more than 2,000 users in the Dublin 15 area, including a letter of support sent to public representatives signed by more than 400 residents. 'The majority of people in Dublin 15 have used the service and we have been delighted with the 2,268 positive messages in-app and via our letter of support we have received in the area,' said Mr Houston.


Sunday World
2 hours ago
- Sunday World
Firm owned by former CAB target paid over €4m by government to house asylum seekers
Former CAB target Bernard Byrne and his brother John Paul alleged to have made €750k from laundering fuel and cash A firm owned by a suspected fuel smuggler and former target of the Criminal Assets Bureau has been paid more than €4 million by the Irish Government to house asylum seekers. Bernard Byrne is the director and owner of Tenzing Ltd, which is listed as receiving funds from the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth. In 2005, it emerged that Byrne, along with his brother John Paul Byrne, had holdings worth £750,000 in Northern Ireland which was targeted by the UK's Assets Recovery Agency (ARA). The case was referred to the ARA by HM Revenue and Customs in 2004 after a joint investigation with CAB into fuel smuggling and laundering on both sides of the border. Bernard Byrne at his Go service station on the Kylemore Road Bernard Byrne speaking to Samuel Mansfield In its case in the High Court in Belfast at the time, the ARA alleged that the assets of both brothers were from fuel laundering and smuggling, together with excise fraud and associated money laundering activity. An interim receiver was appointed over two filling stations in Co Armagh and Co Down, a house in Newry, an apartment in Belfast, vehicles, farm machinery and bank accounts. Bernard Byrne's Tenzing Ltd was set up in January 2023 and is registered to an office in Lucan, Co Dublin. That year, the company received payments of €876,000, €553,350 and €366,000 for 'accommodation and/or related costs'. In 2024, the payments from the Department totalled €2,382,000 with €186,000 paid out in the first quarter of 2025, bringing the overall total to €4,363,350. According to a Dail question reply, Tenzing Ltd operated an emergency accommodation centre at Redbank Guesthouse in Skerries, Co Dublin in 2023. Responsibility for the €1.2 billion accommodation budget has been moved to the Department of Justice since May this year. Bernard Byrne's company has been paid more than €4m by the government Bernard Byrne is also a director of other firms involved in the retail fuel business and owns the Go filling station on the Kylemore Road in Ballyfermot, Dublin. The land on which the business is located is owned by Arcount Ltd, which is controlled by Vincent Cosgrave, a Dublin-based businessman. Cosgrave's property portfolio includes the Sheldon Park Hotel across the road from Byrne's filling station business. His daughter, Donna, married Jim Mansfield Jr and the couple's son, Samuel Mansfield, was previously photographed by the Sunday World meeting with Bernard Byrne in 2016. There is no suggestion that Samuel Mansfield is involved in any criminal activity. Jim Mansfield Jr was jailed for 18 months in February 2022 for attempting to pervert the course of justice by directing that CCTV footage be destroyed. The Special Criminal Court acquitted Mansfield of conspiring to have a man kidnapped by a criminal gang but convicted him of directing that the footage be destroyed. Jim Manfield Jnr, was jailed for for attempting to pervert the course of justice It was also heard in a CAB case that Jim Mansfield Jr was previously given €4.5 million of Kinahan cartel cash to launder through property investments. As a result of the 2004 CAB investigation into fuel smuggling, Bernard Byrne's father, John Byrne, paid €1.6 million to the Revenue Commissioners. During a search of John Byrne's home in June 2004, authorities discovered €200,000 in cash and cheques concealed throughout the property. Investigators concluded he had operated a significant grain delivery business for several years. He faced charges over failing to file tax returns at Dundalk Circuit Criminal Court in 2007. The court heard at the time Byrne Snr had 157 previous convictions across both Northern Ireland and the Republic, including a £1.3 million fraud conviction in Northern Ireland. Judge Pat McCartan had deferred sentencing to allow Byrne Snr to finalise his tax affairs. The judge described Byrne Snr as someone who had lived 'completely outside the good order of things' and imposed a two-year sentence, suspended on condition of good behaviour. The Sunday World recently reported on two other firms which have received payment for providing accommodation. One firm had been owned by John Gill, the father of alleged gangland figure Jonathan Gill. According to figures published by the Government, Astervale Ltd was paid €414,505 from 2022 until April 2024. Another firm which has been awarded emergency accommodation contracts has links to the Drogheda gang feud. Ben O'Brien resigned in May as a director of Secure Accommodation, which has been paid €10.2 million since it was set up in September 2022. O'Brien (31) was among several people named in evidence in the 2022 CAB case against gang bosses Owen and Brendan Maguire. Bernard Byrne News in 90 Seconds - Tuesday, August 5th


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Glen Dimplex slumps to €7.7m pre-tax loss as demand for heat pumps slows
Glen Dimplex 's main Irish unit slumped to a pretax loss last year as the heating and electrical goods manufacturer announced an overhaul of its operations amid a slowdown in demand for heating pumps in Europe. New accounts filed by Glen Dimplex Europe Holdings reveal a more than 9 per cent slide in turnover to €875.2 million in the 12 months to the end of September last. In a report attached to the accounts, the directors said the drop in revenues related to a 'decrease in the sale of heat pumps'. Market demand for heating pumps fell by 35 per cent in Europe, the directors said, and by more than 40 per cent in 'major markets' including France and Germany. READ MORE 'The demand for heat pumps was adversely impacted by a decrease in the support for heat pump installation by public authorities in core markets,' the company said. 'It is expected that the slowdown in state support for heat pump installation is temporary and that it will regain its momentum.' Glen Dimplex Europe Holdings swung to a €15.5 million operating loss over the period, compared to a €23.8 million profit in the previous financial year. The Naughton family-owned company reported a pretax loss of €7.7 million, down from a €120.9 million profit in 2023. The company accounts note that the 2023 profits figure was inflated by a €170.7 million gain on the sale of intellectual property. Glen Dimplex incurred restructuring costs of more than €26 million in the year, according to the filings, more than twice the €12.4 million cost a year earlier. The costs relate to the company's 'transformation programme', the directors said, including the 'simplification' of its flame and consumer appliances businesses. Despite the challenging year, the company more than trebled its divided payment to €13.2 million compared to €3.8 million in each of the previous two years. In February 2024, the group announced an overhaul of its Irish operations, including moving production of its gas and electrical fire products from Dunleer, Co Louth, to a partner business in China, ending manufacturing by the company in the town. Glen Dimplex has entered a consultation process with workers at the site, where it is seeking around 70 redundancies. The group had previously said it planned to relocate a distribution centre from north Dublin to Dunleer and locate a research and development unit in the town, where it currently has two sites, but that one of those sites would close. In all, some 300 jobs were expected to be lost as the company sought to reduce its production footprint in Ireland. Glen Dimplex Europe Holdings employed 4,509 people on average in the year to September last, down from 4,595 in the previous financial period. The company made donations of €200,000 to the Naughton Foundation charity over the period, down from €3 million in 2023. Late last year, Glen Dimplex founder Martin Naughton was named 'chairman emeritus' of the group's supervisory board, with his son, Fergal Naughton, moving into the executive chairman role. Fergal Naughton was subsequently named chief executive, succeeding Fergal Leamy after 18 years at the helm of the group.