Plymouth College team triumphs in UK’s largest enterprise competition - 14/12/09
Published: 14 December, 2009
Young entrepreneurs from Plymouth College have been announced as
winners in the national final of the 2009 Make Your Mark Challenge,
the UK's largest enterprise challenge for 14-19 year olds.
This is the second enterprise competition the pupils have won
outright in 2009 (winning the Young Enterprise competition earlier
in the year).
The group of four Plymouth students - Jess Evans, Sarah
Marchant, Alex Smith and Tom Watkins - triumphed in the 16-19
category of the competition after battling it out against 11 other
teams from across the UK at the National Finals in London. More
than 73,000 students originally took part in the competition
nationwide when it was launched by Countdown presenter Rachel Riley
during Global Entrepreneurship Week in November.
During the action-packed day, held at King's Place, London,
Rachel Riley gave a welcome address before teams got the chance to
pitch to a top panel of judges, including Heather Stewart,
Economics Editor at the Observer, Philip Goodwin from the British
Council and Richard Gillies, director of Plan A and Sustainable
Development at Marks & Spencer.
The team from Plymouth impressed the judges with their Pro
Planners idea, which fulfilled the judges criteria for a
business idea which was locally inspired and has a low carbon
footprint. Pro Planners are online student planners that get
rid of the need to use paper planners for every pupil in the school
and also ensure that pupils cannot lose their planners or not know
what homework is being set. Teachers upload homework and all
pupil planners are updated with the relevant work set.
The Plymouth College team bagged £1,000 for their efforts which
will be used by their school to develop their idea further. As part
of the winning prize they will also travel to Belgrade, Serbia for
the Skills@Work Challenge Final, a joint-project between the
British Council and Junior Achievement-Young Enterprise (JA-YE)
Europe, supported by Microsoft CEE. The UK team will work with
students from European nations such as Bulgaria, Romania and
Georgia, before going on to participate in a virtual final with
counterparts from countries such as Bangladesh, Nepal
and Pakistan. Each member of the team also received £100 each
in high street shopping vouchers.
Jess Evans of the winning team, said: "It feels
amazing to be the 2009 winners. 73,000 people entered this
competition so we never expected to get this far so it has been a
real surprise. We are so excited to be going to Belgrade and look
forward to taking our idea further."
Speaking at the final, Jonathan Shields from Plymouth College
said: "We are delighted to be crowned winners in the 2009 Make
Your Mark Challenge. Our students have worked extremely hard to get
this far and displayed creativity, dedication and a flair for
enterprise. The Make Your Mark Challenge is a great opportunity for
young people because it nurtures their creativity and helps them
develop valuable life skills. "
Dr Jon Rae Sustainability Coordinator for The Dartington Hall
Trust, and one of the SW regional judges, comments: "Plymouth
College's idea was not only a gloriously simple and ingenious
solution cutting paper out of homework but also is a sound
commercial proposition. To find real talent, it is clear that
we need to look no further than the young men and women in our
schools across Devon. Well done Plymouth College and I look
forward to seeing this team turn into the entrepreneurs of the
future."
Rachel Riley said: "The Make Your Mark Challenge is a
fantastic way to get young people interested and excited in
business and becoming entrepreneurs. It is vital to inspire and
develop the skill set of these future entrepreneurs as they will
help to drive our economy in years to come. This year all entrants
considered the environmental impact of their entries, ensuring they
are prepared for another of the challenges that will become ever
more important to business."