Loughborough Echo

Students’ business named best young enterprise start up in UK

Bottle to easily purify polluted water developed

- ANDY RUSH andy.rush@reachplc.com

A BUSINESS created by three Loughborou­gh College students has been named Young Enterprise Start-Up Company of the Year 2020.

The win in the highly-competitiv­e national finals was doubly deserved as the team had to revamp their presentati­on with only days to spare when lockdown forced the competitio­n to become a virtual event.

Now PureWorld, the company created by Ana-Maria Damjanovsk­a, Daniel Jennings and James McFadzen, will represent the UK at the European finals which was due to take place in Athens later in June, but has now been revamped to a digital format.

The new format will include a live pitch and interview by video link, a short video commercial, and the business proposal.

Judges were hugely impressed by PureWorld’s entreprene­urship and innovation.

Their product AguaVitae – a bottle for easily purifying polluted water aims to be a great benefit to communitie­s in the developing world.

As the finals moved from a face-to-face competitio­n to a virtual one, the three students had to scrap plans for a trade stand they had created to help sell their product.

With a tight deadline, they needed to redesign their entire proposal into just 15 pages of informatio­n. But Ana-Maria, Daniel and James rose to the challenge and the judges rewarded their efforts with an award for marketing excellence as well as the overall trophy.

The three team-mates are all studying for the BSc (Hons) in Applied Sport Science with Management at Loughborou­gh College. James is 21 and Ana-Maria and Daniel are 20.

“We wanted to come up with a big idea and it was Ana-Marie who suggested doing something with water.

“We’d read about communitie­s in the developing world where people had to walk miles for their drinking water, only to find the well polluted with toxic metals or bacteria.

“That gave us the idea for a 10-litre bottle which could purify the contents into drinking water,” Daniel said.

“We set high standards for ourselves. We wanted something that was incredibly easy to use, but could clean the water of all pollutants, bacteria, viruses, all pathogens, and we wanted to construct it out of recyclable material.

“We went to a water treatment specialist Andrew Perkins who we found through the Rotary Club and he advised us on the technical challenges. James Tyler was our mentor on the business side and he gave us all the guidance we needed to get our company up and running.

“The biggest help came from the head of our course, Iqbal Ullah. He was just fantastic support, above and beyond what you’d expect from a teacher. We wouldn’t be here without him.”

Daniel added: “In the long-term we hope to make a working prototype and launch the product. We’re already talking to investors.”

Iqbal Ullah, who heads the Foundation Degree in Business Management at Loughborou­gh College said: “PureWorld should be congratula­ted on a great victory against really stiff competitio­n.

“Some of the feedback from the judges was really uplifting, and it was great that they were recognized for their excellent marketing.

“The Young Enterprise Start Up programme is a fantastic example of how entreprene­urship and innovation is being developed across higher and further education.”

 ??  ?? ■ Pictured, left to right are the winning trio: Daniel Jennings, Ana-Maria Damjanovsk­a, and James McFadzen.
■ Pictured, left to right are the winning trio: Daniel Jennings, Ana-Maria Damjanovsk­a, and James McFadzen.

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