The Scotsman

Investment course supports start-ups

● Entreprene­urial programme has resulted in £2m funding since 2015

- By HANNAH BURLEY hannah.burley@jpimedia.co.uk

A group of Edinburgh-based entreprene­urs have completed a five-week programme designed to help their startups grow and secure investment.

Eight business owners took part in Business Gateway Edinburgh’s Gateway to Investment course, which has resulted in 80 companies securing more than £2 million of investment since it began in 2015.

The programme aims to give entreprene­urs advice on growing their business and finding funding by covering aspects such as investor buyin and research, financial readiness, and pitch presentati­on training.

Expert advisors included Michiel Smith from angel syndicate Apollo Informal Investment, which provides seed funding to new start-ups, and tech entreprene­ur and Dragons’ Den contestant Alison Grieve, inventor of G-hold devices for tablets.

Grieve, who has partnered with Microsoft and Amazon Devices, has raised around £500,000 in investment since taking part in the entrepre-

0 The five-week course provides growth advice to start-ups in Edinburgh

SUSAN HARKINS

neurial programme and sold more than 100,000 G-holds since appearing on Dragons’ Den, 90 per cent of which are exported from her site in Edinburgh.

The programme culminated with a live pitch to angel investors including Apollo, Equity Gap, Linc Scotland, Archangels and Wallace Equity.

This was the tenth edition of the Gateway to Investment programme, which runs three times a year at Edinburgh City Chambers.

Grieve said: “I was fortunate

enough to be on the pilot series of Gateway to Investment when it first began, which was an invaluable experience and really got my business off to a good start.

“It’s great to see the programme has gone from strength to strength and is contributi­ng to the success of many of the Scottish companies we see flourishin­g today.

“Every start-up journey is unique, but it all starts with an idea and committed founders. The advice and exposure entreprene­urs have access to on the Gateway to Investment programme can really make the difference in turning those ideas into fully fledged and funded commercial enterprise­s.”

Edward Baillie, founder of bicycle developer Zip Electric Bikes, who was one of the entreprene­urs selected to take part in the programme, added: “I’m incredibly grateful to have been challenged on my business plans throughout the entire process as it really has given me so much to think about, adopt and learn to make my propositio­n even more attractive to investors.”

Susan Harkins, head of Business Gateway Edinburgh, said the programme provides business owners with the tools to develop their ventures on an internatio­nal level. She added: “Gateway to Investment has resulted in 80 Edinburghb­ased companies taking their businesses global after securing over £2m of investment in the last three years.

“This investment enables entreprene­urs to employ staff, support both local and national supply chains and make a positive impact on the Scottish economy, which is why we use the programme to make sure the companies that we’ve identified that have the potential to grow and secure investment are aware of each stage of the process.”

“This investment enables entreprene­urs to support local and national supply chains and make a positive impact on the Scottish economy”

 ?? PICTURE: PHIL WILKINSON ??
PICTURE: PHIL WILKINSON

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