Chester Mojay-Sinclare

Chester Mojay-Sinclare (born c. 1989)[1] is a British entrepreneur. He is the founder of social enterprise Charity Checkout and Spudnik, the not-for-profit educational space project which led to the development of Stardust Ashes, a high altitude ash scattering service.[1]

Early life

Mojay-Sinclare was born in London and grew up in Ashburton in Devon, England.[2] The entrepreneur says he was "a difficult child" who was expelled from primary school at a young age, before moving on to secondary school at South Dartmoor Community College.[3] He went on to read Philosophy at University College London[4] and after graduation became Consultant Entrepreneur at UCL Business Plc. He also represented the UK at the 2011 Global Student Entrepreneurship Awards in New York.[5][6]

Charity Checkout

The social enterprise Charity Checkout was founded by Mojay-Sinclare in 2009 while he was still a student at University College London.[1] Mojay-Sinclare has been running the organisation full-time since 2012, after he graduated from University College London, one of the original investors in the social enterprise.[7]

Charity Checkout is a provider of online fundraising tools for charities and not-for-profit organisations.[8] Charity Checkout is a winner of the 2014 Big Venture Challenge competition for social enterprises and aims to enable charities to raise more money online via their own website.[9]

House of Lords

In 2016 Mojay-Sinclare gave evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities, as an expert in digital technology and fundraising. During the evidence session, Mojay-Sinclare recommended introducing digital trustee roles in an effort to "bring a focus to digital" within the charity sector.[10]

This suggestion became one of the key recommendations within the 'Stronger charities for a stronger society' report published by the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities.[11][12]

Stardust Ashes

Stardust Ashes is a business founded in 2011 by Mojay-Sinclare following the scattering of his late grandmother's ashes into the atmostphere 20 miles above earth.[13][14] Mojay-Sinclare's inspiration for this was his earlier project, Spudnik,[15] which involved the launch and retrieval of a potato dressed as Santa Claus into near space.[16][17][18][19]

Stardust Ashes provides an environmentally-friendly method of scattering cremation ashes at over 100,000 ft above earth.[20] The business also offers the scattering of pet ashes.[21]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Young Entrepreneur Bucks The Unemployment Trend". The Yorkshire Times. 12 November 2012. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  2. "Chester offers the chance to have ashes scattered in space". Western Morning News. 23 September 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2016.
  3. "Interview with Chester Mojay-Sinclare – Founder of Charity Checkout". YHP.
  4. "'Spudnik' project helps pupils see into space". UCL.
  5. "UCLB's Consultant Entrepreneur Finishes Top 30 in Global Entrepreneurship Competition". UCL Business.
  6. "UCLB's Consultant Entrepreneur Launches Charity Checkout". UCL Business.
  7. "Global Banking and Financial Review recently conversed with the youthful British entrepreneur, Chester Mojay-Sinclare, about his most recent and successful endeavor, Charity Checkout" (interview). Global Banking and Finance Review. 19 November 2012.
  8. "Charity Checkout". Charity Checkout.
  9. "Big Venture Challenge – The Winners 2014". UnLtd.
  10. "Trustees and leaders letting charities down on digital, lords hear". Civil Society.
  11. "Stronger charities for a stronger society" (PDF). UK Parliament.
  12. "Baroness Pitkeathley: Our recommendations support the vital role of charities". Third Sector.
  13. "Final resting space: Gran gets cosmic send-off in style". Metro.
  14. "Ashes request is one small step for gran". Daily Mirror.
  15. Anna Edwards (20 September 2011). "Out of this world! Space fan gives late grandmother the ultimate send-off by scattering her ashes in SPACE". Daily Mail.
  16. "Spudnik: Potato dressed as Santa with a camera attached is sent to edge of space by schoolchildren". Daily Mail.
  17. "School kids launch potato dressed as Santa into space". The Daily Telegraph.
  18. "Soaring 90,000ft above earth .. a potato dressed as Santa attached to a helium balloon". Daily Mirror.
  19. "Mashtronaut is launched into space". The Sun.
  20. "Stardust Ashes". Stardust Ashes.
  21. "Huddersfield man sends mum's ashes into space along with her pets'". The Huddersfield Daily.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.