FEATURED CONTENT

Cisco Customer Kings Cisco Customer Kings

Real Business and Cisco are looking for entrepreneurial firms that provide the very best in customer engagement.
Click here to enter your firm.

  • hot
  • hot
1 comment

Encouraging enterprise among disabled entrepreneurs


Your email address:   
Friend's email address:   
   

by Melissa Hancock - Monday, 18th February 2008

Encouraging enterprise among disabled entrepreneurs

This is the page

E4E was launched in conjunction with a new report called the Barriers and Opportunities Report, which noted that 57 per cent of London’s 800,000 disabled people of working age are unemployed, owing to the fact that they struggle to find suitable working environments and face difficulties getting business advice that considers their specific needs.

E4E will help them overcome these hurdles through a series of workshops, accredited qualifications linked to an online learning programme and regular informal network meetings. The initiative will also equip business advisers and enterprise agencies to devise a range of strategies for clients who have sensory, physical, learning difficulties/disabilities and mental health issues.

Speaking at the launch was 47-year-old disabled entrepreneur Stephen Collins, whose parents were told he’d never be able to work or drive when he was born with cerebral palsy.

Today, Collins gets around in a Jaguar and runs Lazarus Mobility – a company he founded in 2006, which supplies aids for people with disabilities, including scooters, wheelchairs, walking frames and stair lifts. His website www.lazarusmobility.com can now take orders from all over the country for standard living aids, as well as new and innovative products not yet sold in the UK.

Collins’s business recently caught the attention of Dragons' Den star Duncan Bannatyne. The two entrepreneurs struck a deal last week that will see Bannatyne throw his financial clout behind the business, as well as advise Collins on the PR and marketing for his company.

Collins’s ultimate plan is to create a number of regional megastores, offering a "one-stop shop" of equipment for people with disabilities.

“I am determined because I have had to be,” said Collins. “It took me seven months to open a business bank account. The bank just said: "Why do you want to open a bank account? Who is going to support you?" Just because my legs don’t work, it doesn’t mean my business can’t.”

And there were plenty of other successful entrepreneurs present who are living proof that disability should not be a deterrent to setting up your own business.

Just take a look at Debbie Reynolds, whose deafness prompted her to start the School of Sign Language, and Amar Latif, who scooped last year’s Stelios Disabled Entrepreneur of the Year award for setting up Traveleyes, a Leeds-based travel company specialising in holidays for visually impaired individuals set up in April 2005. 

After selecting him as the winner of the award, Sir Stelios was so impressed with Latif that they are now in talks about a possible collaboration between Traveleyes and easyCruise. 

As the old adage goes...he who dares, wins

For related articles, see Don't discount the disabled

Tags: disabled people, business bank account, enterprise agencies, sign language, e4e, open bank account, equip business advisers, duncan bannatyne, stephen collins, mental health, disability, lazarus mobility, disabled, traveleyes, business advice, debbie reynolds, leonard cheshire, business adviser, dragons den, school of sign language, learning difficulties, disabled entrepreneur, enabled 4 enterprise,

1 Comments

August 15, 2008 10:36am
David Rolph Says:

As a disabled entreprenuer who specialised in consultancy based services and specific products it is becoming increasingly difficult to obtain funding to lauch our businesses. What we need is a cash boot of at least 5-10K, because we are expected to attend radar events, unfortunately these cost money and then, we have to plan to get there. Another point is that able vodied people don't understand is that if you are a wheelchair user, this becomes increasingly frustrating. What i am getting at is that our organisation Lifestages Training provide Disability Awareness & Equality Training, which is still needed. Don't write us off give us a chance.

Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

BUSINESS NEWS >>

“I will survive this recession,” says Kelly Hoppen

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - January 08, 2009 3:46pm GMT

Designer to the stars, Kelly Hoppen, talks to RB about preparing for her second recession, capitalism and the sad demise of Wedgewood.

Lloyds TSB provides relief to SMEs

By Catherine Woods - January 08, 2009 3:02pm GMT

Lloyds TSB will pass on the Bank of England’s 0.5 per cent base rate cut to all its small business customers with variable rate loans and overdrafts.

How much do you need to retire?

By Stefan Wissenbach* - January 08, 2009 2:44pm GMT

The story of an entrepreneur can often be traced back to his past. But his future is also a vital influence on his business narrative.

Interest rates: reaction to the record low

By Catherine Woods - January 08, 2009 2:04pm GMT

Interest rates are now at their lowest figure ever following the decision by the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee to cut them to 1.5 per cent.

Interest rates cut to 1.5 per cent

By Catherine Woods - January 08, 2009 12:08pm GMT

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee has cut interest rates by half a percentage point to 1.5 per cent.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

Valentine’s Day PR puff is starting already

By Catherine Woods - January 08, 2009 4:54pm GMT

My views on Valentine’s Day are well documented.

Do you have a moral compass?

By Catherine Woods - January 08, 2009 3:40pm GMT

Is selling stuff to people who are sick morally wrong? One entrepreneur thinks so and has taken issue with Real Business for writing about companies that do so.

From concept to launch: a start-up's video diary

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - January 06, 2009 5:41pm GMT

Clive Payne has invented a new fitness product. Having turned down a contract with a big American manufacturer, he's decided to launch it himself. Week by week, he will document his progress. We're going to follow him!

The future's not so bright

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - January 05, 2009 4:22pm GMT

The only thing going up in 2009, aside from unemployment, will be sales of antidepressants, says Professor Marvin Zonis

Depressing days and Dave's Big Idea.

By Catherine Woods - January 05, 2009 4:15pm GMT

It comes as no surprise to me that today is considered the most stressful day of the year. I wonder if David Cameron feels the same after his big saving announcement?


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter

In association with
Real Business Front Cover