This article is about the British businessman born in 1966. For the British businessman born in 1964, see Nick Read. For other people with similar names, see Nicholas Read (disambiguation).
Nicholas James Read (born March 1966) is a British business executive who has been CEO of Post Office Limited since September 2019. Previously he held senior positions in several customer-facing businesses, and was CEO of Nisa from 2015 to 2017.
In February 2015, he was appointed as CEO of the shopkeeper-owned Nisa convenience store group,[9] where he led what was described as a "hard-fought turnaround".[2] He was then involved in the sale of the business to the Co-op group, agreed in November 2017 and completed the next year.[11] From April 2018 he was CEO of ExtraEnergie GmbH,[8] whose British subsidiary Extra Energy[12] ceased trading in November of that year, around the same time as a number of other small energy suppliers collapsed.[13]
In September 2019, Read took up the role of CEO at Post Office Limited after Paula Vennells stepped down.[12] His appointment came at a time when the Post Office was ceasing to receive government subsidy, and when long-running litigation came to a head concerning actions (including prosecutions) taken by the Post Office against self-employed subpostmasters, based on flawed evidence from the Horizon IT system.[2] During 2019, a series of judgments was issued in a group litigation against the Post Office by 555 subpostmasters,[2] in which the Post Office agreed to pay £58million and incurred £43million in legal costs.[3][14]Alan Bates, one of the lead claimants, praised Read for his efforts "to reset the relationship between the Post Office and its sub-postmasters".[2]
In August 2023, Read apologised for "mistakes" made by the Post Office when it linked executives' bonus payments to their work related to the public inquiry into the miscarriage of justice. He said he would voluntarily return an amount (reported to be £54,400) from the £455,000 bonus he received for the 2021–22 financial year.[15] In January 2024, he gave evidence to Parliament's Business and Trade Committee,[16] which led to a dispute over details of his oral replies.[17]
In July 2024, Read decided to step back from his CEO role in order to prepare for the next phase of the public inquiry into the Horizon IT scandal, which would examine current practices at the Post Office.[18] In September 2024 he resigned from his CEO role, to take effect in March 2025.[19]
Personal life
He is married to Clare and they have three sons.[2] In 2020 he lived near Andover, Hampshire.[2]