Taking Flight: Inside a Drone Insurance Innovation

Taking Flight: Inside a Drone Insurance Innovation

Since launching in 2016, Flock has raised half a million pounds from a combination of VC, angel and corporate investors. Pioneering a smarter drone insurance model based on Big Data analytics for quantifying drone flight risk in real time, the start-up has garnered interest from insurers, drone users and tech experts alike…and the first product hasn’t even been launched yet. In this week’s Future Planet Blog, CEO Ed Klinger tells us how they got started and explains why his investors have been “transformative” for the business.

The Education Entrepreneur

The Education Entrepreneur

Rajeeb Dey MBE, the youngest member of Future Planet’s advisory committee at the age of 31, has been founding and leading organisations since he was just 17. From entrepreneurial internship platform “Enternships.com” to professional learning services provider “Learnerbly,” Raj’s businesses have channelled his passion for reshaping the landscape of work and education in the 21st century. This week in the Future Planet Blog we pick his brains on start-ups, social impact and the “series A crunch.”

The Future Planet Blog: The Rise of British University Venture Funds (Part Two)

Last week, The Rise of British University Venture Funds - Part One explored the emergence of a new generation of UK institutions focused on innovation investing. When it comes to funding for university spin-outs, the country has progressed from being one of the world's laggards to one of its front-runners in just two years. It is now home to the world's largest university venture investor, Oxford Sciences Innovation (OSI), and an expanding roster of similar entities. 

In Part Two, we take a closer look at OSI and its Cambridge counterpart, Cambridge Innovation Capital (CIC). Founded in 2015 and 2013 respectively, these two entities are now setting the tone for investment in the country's university clusters. They are also attracting the attention of sophisticated investors worldwide. With an evergreen structure enabling a more long-term horizon than conventional venture capital funds, their recent fundraising rounds have brought leading sovereign wealth funds and investment managers knocking alongside the more familiar UK university investors.

The Future Planet Blog: The Rise of British University Venture Funds (Part One)

British venture: immature or ahead of the curve?

The road from laboratory to industry is a time consuming and long one, but the rise of a raft of new University Venture Funds (UVFs) in Britain is helping to transform the innovation landscape. The country is now home to an increasing number of firms committed to turning innovative ideas from academic organisations and associated clusters into world class companies.

 

The Future Planet Blog: Best Minds, Brilliant Ideas - Scott White

In January 2017, the recently incarnated British Innovation Fund (sub-advised by Future Planet Capital and Milltrust Agricultural Investments) executed its first direct investment in a growth-stage technology business. PragmatIC Printing made waves in its early years, winning multiple start-up awards. Yet, as CEO and co-founder Scott White tells Future Planet, fostering serious innovation can be a slow-burn.

The Future Planet Blog: Best Minds, Brilliant Ideas - Nick Greenwood

Last month saw the official launch of the British Innovation Fund, an evergreen vehicle focused on the commercialisation of UK university innovation, sub-advised by Future Planet Capital and Milltrust Group. Nick Greenwood, Chair of BIF's Investment Committee and Pension Fund Manager of its seed investor, sat down with FP to explain why the Royal County of Berkshire Pension Fund sees serious investment potential in British research...and how BIF plans to exploit it.

The Future Planet Blog: Best minds, brilliant ideas - Douglas Hansen-Luke

Innovation. We have the money. We have the minds. Now we need the Mojo.

Douglas Hansen-Luke, the Executive Chairman of Future Planet Capital, explores how Britain can maximise the effectiveness of it's leading institutions and innovators.

Following the Government's commitment to increasing spending on innovation and technology it's clear that we have the money, and with leading innovation centres including universities, such as Oxford and Cambridge, it's clear we have the minds.

However, do we have the mojo?