Manawatu Guardian

Brave Venture wins top award

Company's entreprene­urship work recognised

- Paul Williams

APalmersto­n North-based company unlocking entreprene­urial skills in young people has been recognised with a major New Zealand award.

The Brave Venture, which started engaging with schools in Manawatu¯ in 2019, won Best Youth Programme in New Zealand for 2023 at the Global Entreprene­urship Network New Zealand (GEN NZ) awards in Auckland last month.

The Brave Venture won Youth Programme of the Year for its Ripyl programme, which competitio­n judges said recognised “unwavering commitment to nurturing the entreprene­urial spirit in our youth”.

Founder Dave Craig said the team was humbled to be nominated and proud to have their work recognised with the award.

“We’re on a mission to change a generation of learners, and to be acknowledg­ed alongside finalists Young Enterprise and Flying Geese as organisati­ons that are making a difference to the lives of our a¯konga, is truly awesome.

“We couldn’t believe it when we heard our name as the winner,” he said.

The venture was growing. More than 1200 students had participat­ed in the Ripyl programme, many in the Manawatu¯ and Whanganui areas. Craig said plans were now under way to more than double the number of

students involved New Zealand-wide in 2024.

“We have a clear pathway to help develop our youth, creating vibrant young people excited and equipped to take on the world.

“We try and instil in youth skills we need and learn in adult life. We basically take technology completely out of the classroom and encourage the use of pencil and paper — and brain — to free-think creatively and

problem solve.”

Amazingly, a fundamenta­l difference encouraged by The Brave Venture is to step back from the use of technology to allow good oldfashion­ed brainstorm­ing and discussion.

“That’s where the magic happens.” Craig said it was the type of model that had the potential to change the business landscape in New Zealand and students engaged with business

people to put together plans and presentati­ons.

He said many of the students could carry the skills and critical thinking they were learning into their adult working life. It focused on developing practical skills that would lead to success in any field.

The Brave Venture CEO Lance Bickford said the programme took students on a journey, taught essential skills, and complement­ed the school curriculum.

“We get back to basics. Students traditiona­lly use three items: a pencil, a piece of paper, and their brain. In the start-up world, we call that our competitiv­e advantage.”

Meanwhile, GEN NZ chairman Dave Moskovitz said judging was tough and New Zealand was experienci­ng an explosion of diversity among young entreprene­urs.

“Most of our ventures have a social bent to them, trying to improve society and the world that we live in with new products and services . . . our entreprene­urs give us hope that our children and grandchild­ren will live in a fairer, healthier, exciting, human-centric and sustainabl­e world.”

GEN NZ’s mission was to “connect entreprene­urs to the people and resources they need to thrive locally and globally.”

■ The award winners from GEN NZ Awards were:

Academic Initiative of the Year: Velocity — The University of Auckland Innovation and Entreprene­urship Programme.

GEN NZ Connector of the Year: Pauli Sosa.

Entreprene­ur of the Year: Rick Kiessig of Kimer Med. Entreprene­ur Support Organisati­on of the Year: Doso, previously known as Startup Taranaki. Investor of the Year: Maria Jose (MJ) Alvarez of WNT Ventures.

Ma¯ ori Entreprene­ur of the Year: Kaye Maree Dunn.

Public Sector Initiative of the Year: Jenny Douche´ from Callaghan Innovation.

Social Entreprene­ur of the Year: Sasha Lockley of Money Sweetspot. Youth Programme of the Year: The Brave Venture.

Special Award: Suse Reynolds.

 ?? ?? The Brave Venture founder Dave Craig (bottom right) with the award winners from the Global Entreprene­urship Network Awards.
The Brave Venture founder Dave Craig (bottom right) with the award winners from the Global Entreprene­urship Network Awards.

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