I really don't want to encourage young people to think that life is about money only. Life is about being able to give yourself choice.
My kids certainly aren't going to have the money. They don't need it.
Business is about more than just money. It's about being creative and innovative.
Those are both better measures of your true risk related to bad cholesterol.
I want my kids to be polite and respectful, stand on their own two feet.
If I'm filming 'Dragons' Den', we work flat out until 8pm, although I love seeing the weird, wonderful and plain delusional.
There are lots of people who say you are born an entrepreneur - you either have that gene or not. I really disagree with that.
I'm not a guy who plays political games, and I believe absolutely in one method, which is directness.
Whenever I invest, I invest in the person as well as the business.
I'm 6ft 7in and I was a bit like a giraffe on the tennis court, though I did play at county level.
I never thought I'd be a TV entrepreneur.
If someone comes onto 'Dragons' Den' and annoys me, I'm going to tell them exactly what I think.
For many young people on-the-job training and hands-on experience is the real route to employability, not a university education.
When you do make losses, or you have businesses that don't succeed, it's about knowing when to stop and do something else.
I want enterprise and entrepreneurship embedded in the national curriculum and will continue to lobby government until it happens.
I've played a massive and growing part in making business glamorous and even, yes, sexy.
I find it very, very difficult to watch myself on TV.
The more people you meet, and the more people you have influence over your business can scale quicker.
All young people can benefit from practical business knowledge but especially those from the poorest parts of the country.
Business is about making money but it is also about having fun, so get your character across.
When people pitch me their ideas in a T-shirt and jeans it shows they can't be bothered.