‘Professor’ Kotecha honoured to assume university role
MORNINGSIDE PHARMACEUTICALS founder, Nik Kotecha, has said he is looking forward to his new role as an academic at De Montfort University Leicester (DMU).
He will be made professor of entrepreneurship, innovation and philanthropy at the university where he is already working as pro-chancellor.
Kotecha said he was “honoured and privileged” to assume the new role and added he would lead by example and show students “there is a world of opportunity out there”.
In a statement, DMU described him as “one of Leicestershire’s great business success stories” for helping millions of people around the globe with his life sciences business products. Kotecha and his family arrived in the UK following the expulsion of Asians from Uganda 50 years ago by the country’s president Idi Amin.
The businessman got an honours degree in chemistry from Newcastle and obtained his PhD at Imperial College London, with further doctoral research at the University of Cambridge. He founded and led Morningside Pharmaceuticals, a
Leicestershire-based manufacturer, wholesaler and exporter of medicines and healthcare products.
Kotecha developed the company into one of Britain’s leading life sciences businesses, delivering its products to the UK’s pharmacies and hospitals as well as the world’s largest aid organisations like UNICEF, WHO and the Red Cross.
He divested the business in October this year, having exported products to more than 120 countries.
“I started Morningside from a home garage 30 years ago and grew it through entrepreneurship and embracing innovation into a global pharmaceuticals manufacturer and exporter,” the entrepreneur said.
The Kotechas also established The Randal Charitable Foundation in 2017 to help improve the quality of life of those in need.
Having been in business for more than three decades, he said he had never thought he would be receiving the title of ‘professor’, although he was considering a career in academia after his education.
“To now be honoured with this title is special,” he said. “DMU teaches many students who are in the situation I was in 40 years ago,” he said, adding that several of them were from disadvantaged families and diverse ethnic cultures.
DMU’s pro-vice chancellor and dean of the faculty of health and life sciences, Simon Oldroyd, said Kotecha’s experience in medicine, business and philanthropy and his drive to succeed and help others “will bring huge benefits to our students, academics and the wider community.”