Thomas Segun IlubeCBE (/ɪˈluːbeɪ/il-OO-bay;[1] born July 1963)[2] is a British entrepreneur and educational philanthropist and chair of the Rugby Football Union[3] making him the first black chair of a major sport in England.[4] He is the Chair of The Prince’s Trust in the UK.[5]
Ilube was chief information officer (CIO) for the internet bank Egg.[5][8]
Ilube founded the Hammersmith Academy, a state secondary school in Hammersmith, west London, which opened in September 2011 and has become one of the UK's "most innovative technology schools".[5]
He created and launched Noddle, a credit reference service,[9] in his time as MD of consumer markets at CallCredit Information Group. In 2005 Ilube co-founded Garlik, the online identity company sold to Experian in 2011[10] He is the founder and Chairman of Crossword Cybersecurity plc, which was admitted to the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) on the London Stock Exchange in December 2018.[11]
Ilube was a non-executive director of the BBC, from April 2017,[12] stepping down in June 2021 to take up the role of chair of the Rugby Football Union (RFU),[13] and a non-executive director of FTSE100 company WPP plc,[14] the world’s largest advertising company[15] by revenue, effective October 2020.
Charity
Ilube is the chair and founder of the African Gifted Foundation,[16] a UK education charity focused on science and technology in Africa. They recently launched the African Science Academy, Africa's first all-girls science and maths academy.[17] He was chair of Ada, the National College for Digital Skills.[18] which opened in 2016 as the first brand new UK further education college in 23 years.[19]
Ilube provides the prize money for the Nommo Awards for African science fiction and speculative fiction, announced at the Ake Book Festival in 2016 and hosted at WorldCon in Glasgow in 2024.[20]
In October 2016, Ilube was named by Powerlist as the most influential black person in the UK after topping the annual list of the 100 most powerful people of African and African Caribbean heritage in Britain.[22]
Ilube received the 2017 Beacon Award for innovation in philanthropy.[23] and in the same year, New African magazine listed Ilube as one of Africa's most influential people.[24]