I grew up poor & living on rough council estate but now I’m a multi-millionaire – here’s how I made my fortune

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**TAKEN WITHOUT PERMISSION**, , A South Derbyshire multi-millionaire property developer has swapped his life with a struggling mum with debts of more than £16,000 as part of a real life documentary. As part of Channel 5 programme Rich House, Poor House, mother-of-two Billie Thompson swapped her three-bed council house in Nottingham with millionaire businessman Mark Harvey and his family who live in a sprawling eight-bedroom estate in Bretby. The property sits on 1,500 acres of land and has six lakes, a tennis court and a swimming pool., , Mark is dad to three daughters from a previous relationship - 12 year old Courtney, Sienna-Rose, six, and Freya, four and is also dad to one year old Theo with Nicky. He was not born wealthy though, and initially worked with his dad as a builder. He has told how his family were so poor that he became obsessed with the idea of making money. He found motivation in the stress of living on the breadline - including being mocked for having to wear hand-me-downs in the form of his sister's pink trainers.

A DAD who was raised on a tough council estate and once mocked for wearing hand-me-downs is now a multi-millionaire.

Mark Harvey, 34, says his family were so poor that it led him to become “obsessed” with making money from a young age.

Mark Harvey now lives in a multi-million-pound mansion

Mark has made millions of pounds in the software, construction and property business

The dad-of-four is now leading a very different life from what he did growing up.

Mark has made millions of pounds in the software, construction, and property business and lives in a multi-million-pound mansion in Bretby, Derbyshire.

Speaking to Birmingham Live, he said: “I grew up in a village in Leicestershire called Thornton on what was referred to as ‘the estate’ – which was completely separate from the rest of the village in so many ways.

“You were from ‘up the village’ or ‘down the estate.

“A lot of people didn’t work and that was the environment I grew up in.

“There was violence too – people would beat each other up for no reason.

Mark explains how he managed to get out of a lot of scrapes because he was a “quick runner” but there were times he would get beaten up.

He says in hindsight looking back at that period in his life it is what made him “mentally sharp and aware”.

Mark lived with his parents and three sisters, – twins 14 years older than him and another seven years his senior.

His dad James worked as a builder and a taxi driver but tragically died following an illness in 2018.

Mark said: “My sisters always looked after me, but when you don’t have much money, you have to rely on your siblings’ hand-me-downs.

“I’d be wearing girls’ jeans and trying to make them look like they were boys’.

He recalls one occasion where he used bitumen on his sister’s pink trainers to make them black, but that it came off when he was playing football resulting in him being bullied for “wearing girls shoes”.

Mark describes how his mum used to “scrimp and save every penny” and says that is what motivated him to make money from a young age.

The successful businessman now lives in a huge home with his wife Nikola, 25, and is father to daughters Freya, three; Sienna-Rose, six; and Courtney, 12 – as well as infant son Theo.

He said: “I always had a feeling inside there had to be more to life.

“I’d even put vouchers and Monopoly money in my pockets when I went out to have that feeling of having cash in my pockets.”

When Mark was 19, he started a construction business, but in 2008, the global financial crash happened.

He said: “I did everything I could to make money – even selling door to door – and ended up somehow getting a job with an IT company.”

Mark soon became the company’s leading salesman and was promoted to head of sales.

He then became a partner in his ex-colleague’s software company.

He said: “That really was a game-changer for me.

“We did £3.5 million of sales in 18 months, turning round what had been a struggling company losing money every month.

“That’s where I started to get into training people and realised that business is people – when I helped others to become better versions of themselves, the company won.”

Mark then invested in property and from 2017 within 18 months, he had established a portfolio worth £4.5 million.

Now, his property firm, Harvey Property Solutions, has done £16 million in deals.

Mark also has a company called Real Life Group, which has companies across sectors including construction and training.

He said he likes helping people to transform their lives and wanted to create a business where staff “want to come to work”.

He said: “Not everyone has to be a believer, but they should know they can create a life where they are comfortable enough and have the resources to deal with it when things get really tough.

“If I can do it with some of the things I’ve come up against, then many other people already have a head-start.

“I’m always drawn to people who need help and want to know whether they, deep down, want to help themselves.”

Mark’s company has helped to create 200 millionaires