Chester Mojay-Sinclare

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chester Mojay-Sinclare (born c. 1989)[1] is a British entrepreneur. He is the founder of social enterprise Enthuse and Spudnik, the not-for-profit educational space project.[1]

Early life[]

Mojay-Sinclare was born in London and grew up in Ashburton in Devon, England.[2] He 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 represented the UK at the 2011 Global Student Entrepreneurship Awards in New York.[5][6]

Enthuse[]

The social enterprise Enthuse (formerly Charity Checkout) was founded by Mojay-Sinclare in 2011 while he was a student at University College London;[1] the university was one of the original investors in the social enterprise.[7]

Enthuse 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 enables charities to raise 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, which involved the launch and retrieval of a potato dressed as Santa Claus into near space.[15][16]

Stardust Ashes provides an environmentally-friendly method of scattering cremation ashes at over 100,000 ft above earth.[17]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "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. Archived from the original on 16 December 2014. 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. Archived from the original on 18 May 2011. Retrieved 29 August 2014.
  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. ^ "School kids launch potato dressed as Santa into space". The Daily Telegraph.
  16. ^ "Soaring 90,000ft above earth .. a potato dressed as Santa attached to a helium balloon". Daily Mirror.
  17. ^ "Stardust Ashes". Stardust Ashes.
Retrieved from ""