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As seen on TV: OE’s high-profile business launch

Antony Pink has realised a long-standing ambition to become an entrepreneur with the launch of his own mobile start-up company, Laundrapp.

Antony (OE 2000–2007) was a keen rugby-player at School and was then known as Kishan, having subsequently begun using his middle name, Antony, instead.

Since leaving QE to study Business Management at Nottingham University, a fascination with business has been a constant theme of his life. While at Nottingham, he was involved in business start-up societies and says it was already in his mind that he would one day like to launch a business of his own.

After university, Antony joined multinational management consultancy Accenture as a strategy consultant, where he worked in financial services.

Nearly four years later, he took the decision to leave a secure job and instead start Laundrapp with two business partners. They have raised £1.5million of seed funding from well-known investors Rupert Hambro (former Chairman of Hambros Bank) and Dominic Perks.

Laundrapp offers customers a door-to-door laundry and dry-cleaning collection and delivery service. It is currently operating in London and moving into five other UK cities.

“The business has only been trading for five months, but is already doing well and is the market leader in its field,” says Antony, who is Laundrapp’s Chief Operating Officer. One of Laundrapp’s strategies has been to advertise heavily and to invest in PR. A six-figure marketing investment has resulted in TV and radio commercials, online and outdoor advertising, posters on the Underground (in stations and in trains). Features in the Daily Telegraph, Guardian and Daily Mail, as well as articles in the specialist business and technology press, have also formed part of the marketing mix.

Laundrapp is available on iOS (iPhone/iPad) and Android.

 

Collation for Cambridge contemporaries

Matteo Yoon (OE 2003-10) sent Alumni News this photo of a recent meal which brought together a number of Old Elizabethans all studying at Cambridge.

Organised by Yemi Ogunyemi and Bilal Khan, the meal was held at Bilal’s college, Sidney Sussex. All of those pictured were at QE in broadly the same period as Matteo.

Since the meal a few months ago, Matteo, School Captain in 2009-10, has spent time travelling in Australia. Having graduated in Law from Pembroke, he has now started the post-graduate Legal Practice Course at BPP Law School, through which he will qualify as a solicitor. Matteo is due to return to QE in July this year to be the guest speaker at the Junior Awards Ceremony.

Also among those pictured are:

  • Adam Kuo, the son of current QE Chemistry teacher Dr Elizabeth Kuo, who, Matteo reports, is completing his Master’s degree at Christ’s College
  • Pawan Katta, who is on the Assurance Graduate Scheme at professional services firm PwC and is working towards becoming a chartered accountant
  • Nicholas Niem, who is currently Publicity Officer for the Association of British and Chinese University Students (ABACUS).

From left to right, the diners are: Adam Kuo (Christ’s – Natural Sciences); Sagar Thanki (Selwyn – Economics); Pawan Katta (Trinity – Economics); Alastair Macfarlane (Fitzwilliam –Natural Sciences);  Charlie Scutt (Girton – Geography); Rowan de Souza (Clare – Medicine); Nicholas Niem (Homerton – Engineering); Eigo Takeda (St John’s – Mathematics); Yemi Ogunyemi (Pembroke – Engineering ); Bilal Khan (Sidney Sussex – Theology and Religious Studies) and Matteo Yoon (Pembroke – Law).

 

Daniel’s glittering path to the Bar

Daniel Isenberg (OE 1999-2006), who has won a string of law prizes and academic scholarships, is now working towards becoming a barrister after a brief spell as a civil servant.

These include first place in a competition run jointly by the Guardian and the influential UK Supreme Court Blog for his essay entitled Do we need more or fewer dissenting voices in the UK Supreme Court?

“So far, so good with the career change (perhaps chiefly because I’m yet to start properly!) – and it’s always reassuring bumping into another OE around the Inns of Court,” he says. These legal alumni include Daniel’s QE contemporary, Peter Morcos, as well as barrister Tom Cleaver.

While at QE, Daniel achieved 12 straight A* grades at GCSE (including being in the top five in the country for German and in the top ten for History and Mathematics) and then earned a distinction in his English Advanced Extension Award before going on to gain straight As in his A-levels.

Daniel’s legal interest was stimulated during his 2006-2007 gap year, when he studied Jewish Law at the Yeshivat Har Etzion, a seminary in Israel.

He went up to Pembroke College in 2007, where he took a double first in History, focusing on the history of political thought. He gained a number of accolades at Cambridge, including being elected as a Scholar. (He was twice awarded a Foundation Scholarship.)

Daniel then spent two years as a fast-stream graduate Civil Servant at the Ministry of Defence, before deciding to switch careers to go into Law.

He excelled at City University London, coming first in his year studying for the Graduate Diploma in Law, then going on to the Bar Professional Training Course, also at City. During this period, he has again stood out among his peers: his prizes and awards include the City Law School Prize for Excellence (Highest Mark for an Intending Barrister) and the City GDL Mooting Competition, in which he beat 100 other entrants in the mock judicial proceedings, with the final judged by Lord Mance, a justice of the Supreme Court.

Currently a member and scholar of Middle Temple (Inn of Court), after some further post-graduate academic legal studies, he will be starting his pupillage in September 2015 at Brick Court Chambers, which specialises in commercial, EU/competition and public/human rights law.

 

From war to the dawning of a new era

David Pardoe’s memoirs give a fascinating insight of his long years at QE, from arrival at the age of just nine in 1942 – which proved to be quite literally the dark days of war for the pupils – to his departure at the dawn of a new Elizabethan age.

Now retired and living in Australia, David took an electrical engineering degree at Queen Mary College, London, on leaving QE in July 1952.

National Service followed: in 1955, he joined the RAF and was commissioned as Pilot Officer, Technical Signals Branch, and posted to Bempton on the east Yorkshire coast. On promotion to Flying Officer, he was moved to Linton-on-Ouse, just north of York, where he stayed until demobilisation in 1957.

He then forged a successful career at the forefront of telecommunications, joining Standard Telephones and Cables (STC) at New Southgate, where he was one of a team designing STRAD, a new type of message-switching system. This eventually took him to Mauritius to commission the first installation of a new type of message-switching system for the Royal Navy and then to Sydney to oversee the handover of a further two systems for the Royal Australian Army.

While in Australia he met his future wife, whom he married in Sydney in 1964. He returned to England the following year with his wife. For ten years, he worked for STC on computer-based communication systems. But in 1975, he and his wife decided to make a change. “Our family moved to Sydney, ‘on spec’, without a job or a house or school to go to. Eventually, I took a technical/marketing job with AWA, a communications company and in 1984 joined a consultancy firm as research manager from which I retired, at age 71, in 2003.”

Today he and his wife, a retired nurse and social worker, live in St Ives, a northern suburb of Sydney. His two sons both work in IT.

In his memoirs, David, who is pictured above in his mid-20s, devotes many pages to memories of QE which remain crystal-clear more than six decades later.

Born in 1932, in his younger years he lived with his parents and brother in Crown Lane, Southgate, north London. “The county boundary ran down the centre of the road—I was on the appropriate side to be eligible for Queen Elizabeth’s…

“In 1942, when I was enrolled, I knew nothing of its history or achievements but was only aware that my father wanted me fixed up in a secondary school before he went overseas with the RAF. Accordingly, one morning I went along to the school with mum, took the Entrance Exam and went home.  A few weeks later my parents were told that I had passed and that there would be a place for me in September 1942, when I was still nine.”

The School had moved to its site at Queen’s Road only ten years before, with classrooms that were, in David’s words, “designed to be large and bright and airy”.

“However, this was not possible under wartime conditions, which required that splinter-preventing fabric was glued on to each pane of the windows and sand bags were stacked up outside, in some cases restricting the light entering the rooms on the ground floor.”

He soon established his place in the School, which was thriving under the long headmastership of E H Jenkins. The Library fostered his fondness of reading – Agatha Christie was an early favourite – while he devoted many hours to helping backstage with School plays, an outlet for his love of theatre.

His account of Founder’s Day shows that proceedings on that highlight of the QE calendar are to a large extent unchanged today.

“There were two specially empathetic masters, ones whom I could really relate to,” he writes. “The first was Mr Brian Dickson, the Chemistry master. His use of homely analogies to illustrate chemical reactions and concepts was so good that most boys achieved excellent results in the subject, as I did, gaining a Distinction in the School Certificate.

“He was especially nice to me when my mother died, and I still have the letter of sympathy that he wrote to me. I can remember phrases from his letter today and I have used them myself when writing to people who have lost loved ones. He was a devout Christian and was the president of the School Christian Union. He later took holy orders and became a priest.”

“The other master who I got on with, and owe a debt of gratitude to, was Mr A H Raines, whose subjects were Maths and Chemistry. I believe Mr Raines was responsible for turning my school career around. He firstly showed me that I could do Maths. I was always good at arithmetic, but algebra was almost a closed book. I realise now that a minute spent at the beginning of a problem to properly understand it and to seek the method of solving it was the key and this could be applied to many situations in life. Mr Raines showed me this and by doing so let me find out for myself how easy the subject is.”

1952, the year he left School, was the end of an era not only for him, but also for the country:  “On 6 February, a dark, cold and rainy morning, we were called to the Hall at about 11.30 for an Assembly. The Headmaster walked to the rostrum in his usual manner and briefly explained that King George VI had died in his sleep and that there would be no more lessons for that day and we were to go home.  He concluded with a short prayer and declaimed: ‘The King is dead; God save the Queen.’”

David concludes: “I find that, in writing this account of Queen Elizabeth’s, I still have (mainly) fond memories of my teachers, and I appreciate the efforts that they made to create interest in their subject, and admire the way that they put up with some very mischievous behaviour from the boys on some occasions!  It must not have been easy for the School authorities to find teachers of quality under wartime conditions and I thank the Headmaster and the Governors for the job that they did.”

New Year’s Eve wedding for Nick

Current QE teacher and old boy of the School, Nicholas Bird, welcomed more than a dozen fellow alumni and colleagues to his wedding on New Year’s Eve.

Nick (OE 1995-2002), is a Physical Education teacher and is in charge of water polo – a sport which has gone from strength to strength at the School in recent years. Several boys have gained national places in the GB water polo squad this term.

He is also a PGCE Professional Mentor at QE, helping trainee teachers, especially those specialising in PE.

Seven old boys and their partners came as guests to his wedding to Samantha, a Metropolitan Police Officer, at Theobalds Park, Waltham Cross.

“They were all from my year group across various houses and now own businesses, work in the media or in the City. Some I would have played rugby with, whilst others were just classmates who I have kept in touch with,” says Nick.

“A number of my friends from School now live abroad in various countries, from Hong Kong and China to Canada and the US, and therefore although they were not able to make it to the wedding, they sent their best wishes – and it was very nice to receive such kind words. We would like to thank the School for all the good wishes and for the gift, which we have put towards an iPad.”

Also at the ceremony at the Georgian mansion were six members of School staff and their partners.

After leaving the Sixth Form, Nick took his first degree in Sports Science and Business Management at Brunel University, one of the UK’s leading universities for sport. He studied on the Graduate Teacher Programme at the University of Hertfordshire and gained his MEd at Middlesex.

The happy couple are looking forward to a summer honeymoon taking in New York, Las Vegas and Barbados.