£16.1m for cutting edge companies
Cutting edge companies secure £16.1m in just 18 months
Disruptive bleeding-edge tech companies have secured a staggering £16.1m of funding in just 18 months after being supported by the University of Essex.
Innovative investment programme Angels@Essex facilitated fundraising by linking international backers with East of England entrepreneurs at the vanguard of business.
This stunning sum was revealed today as the Annual Report (.pdf) of the University Enterprise Zone was published.
Firms developing artificial intelligence to connect driverless cars, ground-breaking robotics and impossible-to-hack legal recordings have all benefited from the scheme.
AVET Technology is amongst the incredible success stories that received life-changing investment and praised the support as “a torch in the darkness”.
The Burnham-on-Crouch based business uses blockchain and state-of-the-art hardware to create recording devices which secure vital interviews to battle corruption.
It received a £50,000 convertible loan, an introduction to a network of backers and expert support from the team at the Innovation Centre, based at the University’s Colchester campus.
Mr Stewart’s thoughts were echoed by managing director Jerry Thornton.
He said: “We are experienced businesspeople, and we spent some considerable time talking to the apparent support networks in the UK.
“The University of Essex stands out as being significantly different and genuinely supportive.”
Businesses listed on the Angels@Essex platform have raised over £10.2m through nearly 90 separate investments.
It is an invitation-only equity investment platform which links angel investors with innovative entrepreneurs with a focus on cutting-edge tech.
A further £5.9m has been secured by businesses working with the Space to Grow scheme, which offer businessowners 1-to-1 mentoring support, webinars and an opportunity to pitch to funders.
In total more than 22 jobs have been created, 11 new products have been launched and 25 R&D projects have been initiated in collaboration with academics.
Business Support Manager John Stenhouse welcomed the figure’s announcement and urged entrepreneurs and investors to get in touch with his team.
He said: “The success of the ideas we assist, is in part due to the radical and creative way we address the problem of supporting highly innovative and scale-up businesses.
“We look to the future, levelling up funding for innovation not only in Essex but globally as the true solution.”
The University Enterprise Zone (UEZ)) was launched in 2019 with Angels@Essex and Space to Grow based at the Knowledge Gateway research and technology park.
The UEZ has also seen the launch of improved wi-fi for visitors to the Colchester Campus which can be utilised by business visitors.
It was funded by Research England and supported by Essex County Council, the Confederation of British Industry and the South East Local Enterprise Partnership.
Richard Tunnicliffe, Director of the Confederation of British Industry in the East of England, welcomed its success.