The Scotsman

Pioneering Scots on list of young entreprene­urs

◆ Local talent among ‘leading British young powerhouse­s pushing the UK economy to new heights’ writes Emma Newlands

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Ninepionee­ringyoung entreprene­urs with a strong link to Scotland–including high-profile names such as Glaswegian make-up expert Jamie Genevieve – have secured a place on a prestigiou­s new list. The Hurun Research Institute has just released the Hurun UK Under30s and Hurun UK Under35s 2023 rankings, with 79 and 109 entreprene­urs featuring on the two respective­ly, making a total of 188, all seen as “showcasing the leading British young powerhouse­s pushing the UK economy to new heights”. They are part of a family of more than 1,600 young entreprene­urs from five countries, the others being China, India, the US and Canada.

The Scottish entreprene­urs to be included on the Hurun UK Under30s comprise Hayden Ball and Roy Hotrabhvan­on, both from Playerdata and based in Edinburgh; and Lewis Campbell of Target Healthcare and make-up star Jamie Genevieve, who are both based in Glasgow. Joel Watt who calls Edinburgh home represents Scotland on the Hurun UK Under35s list. He founded Rooser, which operates an online market for the fishing industry, after running a seafood wholesaler – and last year raised nearly £18m to fund expansion.

Milestones to date achieved by Edinburgh-based wearable tech start-up Playerdata include investment rounds with participan­ts including former Tesco boss Sir Terry Leahy, while Glasgow's Target Healthcare in 2022 pumped a £20m funds package into its growth plans.

As for names on the Under30s Young Entreprene­urs list that are also alumni of Scottish universiti­es, Ball and Hotrabhvan­onattended­theunivers­ityof Edinburgh, Campbell went to Strathclyd­e, while Craig Everett and Angus Hardy of online travel firm Holibob went to Glasgow. Those on the Under35s Young Entreprene­urs who studied at Scottish universiti­es are Charles Armitage of staffing-focused tech firm Florence Healthcare who went to Edinburgh, as did

Razvan Ranca of Tractable that applies artificial intelligen­ce to assess, repair, and protect cars and homes.

Ruperthoog­ewerf,hurunrepor­t chairman and chief researcher, said: “Our research shows Britain’s entreprene­urial spirit is alive and well. Many of these young business leaders have managed to quickly build successful companies despite a difficult geo-political environmen­t, persistent inflation, and the many other headwinds.”

The Hurun Research Institute said the UK lists also feature well-known billionair­es such as Gymshark’s Ben Francis, while this year’s new names include Phil and Tom Beahon, founders

Our research shows Britain’s entreprene­urial spirit is alive and well Rupert Hoogewerf, Hurun report chairman and chief researcher

of sports clothing label Castore backed by tennis legend Sir Andy Murray. A recent fundraisin­g event valued the business at £750m. Other new entries include Susie Ma, the Shanghai-born entreprene­ur behind Tropic Skincare. A former contestant on The Apprentice, Ma secured investment from Lord Alan Sugar, and her London cosmetics brand has grown turnover to £64.8m.

A total of 40 women appear in this year’s lists, less than a quarter of the total, and including Ms Genevieve, who also featured on 2023’s Forbes 30 Under 30 list, which noted that her vegan and cruelty-free make-up brand Vieve that is stocked in Spacenk and Harrods announced a $6.2m Series A in 2022.

Furthermor­e, 22 of all the 188 business leaders on the lists have created “unicorns” – ventures worth at least $1 billion. Johnny Boufarhat was deemed to have created the most valuable company of the U30s, with his video conferenci­ng operation Hopin, valued at $5.7bn, while the equivalent created by the U35 cohort is Blockchain, and Peter Smith who co-founded the crypto currency wallet service and fundraisin­g has valued the operation at £4bn.

Hoogewerf of Hurun, a research, media and investment­s group establishe­d in the UK in 1999, added: “We believe each of our Under30s have quickly built businesses worth $10m. The enterprise­s created by our more experience­d Under35s group are each worth around $50m. Some are worth a hundred times that. In time we expect many of our young Under30s to graduate to the more senior list as their ventures

take flight.

"Hurun’s analysis shows that while there is extensive home-grown talent across the UK, Britain is also a magnet for entreprene­urs from around the world. World-class universiti­es attract some of the very brightest people to this country, and after completing their studies these graduates often decide to launch their businesses here.”

The universiti­es of Oxford and Cambridge each had 12 representa­tives, while there were four each from Edinburgh, Durham, the London School of Economics, Loughborou­gh, Nottingham, Southampto­n and Warwick. Scottish Enterprise in November said it had supported the highest-ever number of academic spin-outs via its High Growth Spinout Program, and that followed the news in October that Edinburgh had been hailed as the top spot for innovation in the UK beyond a “Golden Triangle” cluster of cities in the south of England, while Glasgow and Aberdeen have also been ranked highly. However, Hurun also said 23 of all the names on this year’s lists did not attend university.

Hoogewerf commented: “By analysing the background­s of our Under 30s and Under 35s, we’ve been able to learn about how many of these co-founders met one another. There were some who met at school and others who got to know each other while working together at an investment bank or in another graduate job. But we can also see that universiti­es are playing a crucial role in bringing liked-minded people with a passion for enterprise together.”

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 ?? ?? Roy Hotrabhvan­on and Hayden Ball of Playerdata, above, feature on the Under30s list, as does Glaswegian make-up expert Jamie Genevieve, right
Roy Hotrabhvan­on and Hayden Ball of Playerdata, above, feature on the Under30s list, as does Glaswegian make-up expert Jamie Genevieve, right
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