The national enterprise campaign’s double-decker bus willvisit 40 universities and further education colleges across the UK, carrying ateam of business experts, mentors, authors and entrepreneurs to get face-to-face with the increasing number of young people hoping to set up abusiness.
It will also deliver information and application details to the 10,000 young people it hopes to come into contact with, about the £82mStartUp Loans scheme for people aged 18 to 24, announced earlier this year.There will be an opportunity to apply for the loan on board the bus andeveryone will receive a free StartUp Loans Kit with a guide on how to start abusiness and over £200 of StartUp offers.
StartUp Britain co-founder Emma Jones said: “We are seeing more and more young people setting up businesses. Research has shown eight out of ten young people think about setting up a business these days as a career path, or a wayto turn a hobby into a money-spinning idea.
“These young people represent the future of business and oureconomic prosperity – that’s why it’s so important to offer them support bydelivering the message that they can set up a business, there is support out there for them – and that we’ll be with them every step of the way, cheering loudly!”
Lord Young, the Prime Minister’s Enterprise Adviser said: “Many young people have the drive and ambition to create a business, yet don’t knowhow to put this into action. The StartUp Britain bus tour will do much to connect many of them to the support they need as well as help them sign up fora StartUp Loan. In doing so, it will help to transform the enterprise potential of a new generation.”
A recent report into entrepreneurs in the UK revealed a significant rise in the number of young people aged 18 to 29 engaged in early stage entrepreneurial activity. The Global Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) report showed that in 2010, 5.3% of young people aged 18 to 29 were in earlystage entrepreneurial activity. That figure rose to 7.8% last year – an increase of a third in twelve months.
Emma Jones added: “If we can keep up the pace of start-upgrowth, it will be a significant contribution to UK PLC moving forward. This generation has been disproportionately affected by the down turn, with more than a million people aged 18 to 24 facing unemployment.
“The StartUp Loans offer finance coupled with expert mentoring, critical if we’re going to get these young fledgling businesses off the ground. We hope our teams of entrepreneurs and mentors will be able to instill passion and confidence to these young people who need to hear this message right now. Young people are wired for enterprise with a global mind set toembrace technology and take their business to the world.”
The tour, which kicks off at Youth Enterprise Live on October 12, will start its college tour at Lewisham College and visit twocolleges a day, including Oxford College, Keele University, Reading University,the University of Suffolk, Telford College of Arts & Technology,Middlesbrough College, Glasgow Caledonian University and the Cardiff & Vale College, finishing the four-week tour at the Queen Victoria Square in Hull.
The start-up campaign is backed by top firms, including Dell, Intel, Intuit, AXA, PayPal and Magento Go, who will all be on board the bus.
Mark Little, UK MD at Intuit, said: “We need more young people to think about setting up a business and what better way of supporting and encouraging them than by providing advice on how they can best manage their finances from the word go?
“Not only will this tour give vital help to start-ups up and down the country, but it will spur people on to give the UK an economic boost.”