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South West trailblazers among 50 entrepreneurs backed by Innovate UK

15 March 2023
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The Business Magazine article image for: South West trailblazers among 50 entrepreneurs backed by Innovate UK
Experimental pianist Sarah Nicolls in her studio in Brighton checking the sounds made with the prototype of her standing grand piano, which she hopes to produce in a lightweight carbon-fibre, and therefore easily-transportable form. The piano has the footprint of an upright, is less than a third of the weight of a grand but has a full, concert-grade sound.

Fifty of the UK’s leading women entrepreneurs – including five from the South West – have been backed by Innovate UK for game-changing ideas.

From a pedal-powered games controller to an AI digital pre-habilitation programme for cancer patients before receiving treatment, Innovate UK’s Women in Innovation Awards will empower the women to scale their innovative businesses.

Each winner will benefit from a £50,000 grant, one-to-one business coaching, and a suite of networking, role modelling, and training opportunities.

The Awards reflect the government’s ambition to give more support to women innovators and business leaders.

The entrepreneurs include:

  • Sarah Nicolls, from Stroud, founder of Future Piano and concert pianist, who is revolutionising the design of grand pianos with her lightweight, portable yet totally acoustic “Standing Grand”. This innovative product fits in modern homes without compromising on sound while reducing the weight and carbon footprint of a normal grand piano by 60 per cent.
  • Joanne Redmile, from Poole, Founder of TurboGaming, a pedal-powered games controller to get you off the couch onto a bike to play some of your favourite PlayStation and Xbox racing games.
  • Samantha Payne, from Bristol, who has co-founded Open Bionics, a robotics company building multi-grip bionic arms for amputees, which are 3D printed to make them more affordable. Disney granted the company royalty-free licence agreements, enabling them to produce prosthetics based on fan-favourite characters like Black Panther, R2-D2 and Iron Man. A “Sidekick” app syncs the arm to the phone for personalisation, training and tracking performance.
  • Dr Rebecca Allam, from Bristol, a haematologist who has founded PreActiv, a ‘prehabilitation’ programme utilising the time people have before a cancer treatment to better prepare them for it. Her innovative AI-led digital platform creates personalised programmes from the time of diagnosis potentially reducing the risk of complications by 51 per cent, cutting down hospital stays by a third and allowing quicker recovery.
  • Laura Scanlon, from Bristol, who has co-founded Fatima, a research platform that ensures data is ethically collected, securely stored and rapidly analysed. This helps organisations looking to have a greater social impact to better understand the challenges of and to reach vulnerable people who are often overlooked and mistreated, and their data used without their consent or knowledge.

The flagship Women in Innovation Awards is a key part of Innovate UK’s commitment to boosting the number of women entrepreneurs. Innovate UK will give all 50 trailblazers £50,000 and bespoke mentoring and coaching to enable them to scale-up their businesses.

Now in its sixth year, the competition drew a record number of 920 applications from women business leaders, 10 per cent up from last year, reflecting the growing number of women-led businesses in the UK.

Innovate UK’s Women in Innovation programme continues to support high-potential women business leaders from diverse backgrounds. With a passion to support underrepresented innovation talent, 22 per cent of the winners are Black, Asian, or from another ethnic minority group and 12 per cent have identified as disabled.

Indro Mukerjee, CEO of Innovate UK, said, “The Innovate UK Women in Innovation programme is an important part of our many activities to make a real difference to the talent and skills pipeline for UK business innovation by inspiring, involving and investing in greater diversity. I warmly congratulate all the Women in Innovation Award winners and look forward to keeping in touch as they progress.”

Image courtesy of Andrew Hasson


Peter Davison is deputy editor of The Business Magazine. He has spent his life in journalism – doing work experience in newsrooms in and around Bristol while still at school, and landing his first job on a local newspaper aged 19. By 28 he was the youngest newspaper editor in the country.

An early advocate of online news, he spent the first years of the 2000s telling his bosses that the internet posed both the biggest opportunity and greatest threat to the newspaper industry and the art of journalism. He was right on both counts.

Since 2006 he has enjoyed a career as a freelance journalist. He lives in rural Wiltshire with one wife, two children, and three cats.

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