New UK programme joins the accelerator vogue, offers evergreen funding
by Mike Butcher
on May 9, 2011

There’s no denying that startup accelerators are now officially in vogue. Whether that is a sign of a bubble (or even a Blubble) or not I will leave to you.

However, today the movement is joined by the Oxygen Accelerator a UK-based investment programme designed to intensively mentor super-early stage startups. The 13-week programme will take applications from around the world, so long as the startup sets up a UK limited company.

The programme is unusual in that it’s offering an “evergreen” loan of £20,000 to start with, in return for a 6% equity stake. In effect this covers the startup’s costs and ‘ramen noodle’ living expenses during the programme (they are working with local athorities to also provide subsidised or free accommodation for teams).

And teams won’t need to ‘pay back’ the loan until its raised more investment or the business can afford to repay it. After which that £20k is designed to re-circulate back into the programme. It’s also unusual in that the £200,000 fund covering 10 teams is coming from one individual businessman with no previous history in the tech industry.

That is not about to put off Mark Hales, however. He says that after building up a £65m turnover in the nursing homes business he wants to get involved in the fast-paced tech industry and is prepared to slap down the cash to do it. To do this he’s brought in Simon Jenner, head of incubation at Birmingham Science park to oversee the running of the programme and the assembling of mentors like former Plusnet entrepreneur Lee stafford, Eze Vidra of Google and VC Cafe and Katy Turner from Eden Ventures. Personally I think Hales is slightly crazy – but it’s the kind of crazy I like, so I am joining as a (pro-bono) mentor as well, at least for this first programme.

Admittedly it’s going to be difficult to produce a programme as highly developed as a Seedcamp or Ycombinator from a standing start – and in a place not known as a tech cluster – but Hales reckons he can do it.

“I love technology and young people, and after being successful myself I want to put something back,” he told me. “I wanted to do something outside London, support young entrepreneurs and create a sustainable project that will continue for a long time.”

Luckily he is not coming to this completely cold. Hales has already been a mentor and Founder investor in Springboard in the existing UK tech startup “Springboard” programme run out of Cambridge which has a similar £20,000 offering.

At the end of the 13 weeks the teams will be taken on a roadshow of investor pitches around the UK (not just London) to help them raise follow-on funding.

The programme will be based at Birmingham’s Science Park Aston (BSPA) from 1st September this year.

Applications are open now and close on June 30th 2011 via the site.

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  • http://www.junaid-ansari.blogspot.com/ Hellojuned

    6% stake in exchange for GBP 20,000! Isn’t it abnormally unbalanced?

  • http://www.facebook.com/togocats Gebadia Smith

    @hellojuned it grows all year round my friend.

  • http://www.realestateactive.com/ Ben Estate

    The program seems good, I just hope that it can really enhance the state of living of the one who avails it. and the those ones who operates it.

  • http://artswrap.co.uk Peter Storey

    That’s for a 20k loan that you’re obliged to repay. Not something like a convertible note where the option exists to buy equity at a later date, but rathermore you give 6% of your business up front as an interest payment. Shoddy.

  • http://artswrap.co.uk Peter Storey

    That’s for a 20k loan that you’re obliged to repay. Not something like a convertible note where the option exists to buy equity at a later date, but rathermore you give 6% of your business up front as an interest payment. Shoddy.

  • http://twitter.com/mikebutcher Mike Butcher

    I did wonder about this aspect. Convertible note would probably be better.

  • OrwallO

    Give up 6% for a loan? what a joke.

  • Neanda

    6% equity as an interest payment on a 20K loan is nothing short of a joke. mike, i’d be embarrased to be associated to this, and i feel sorry for those who later pitch to investors after accepting this offer and get laughed out of town.

    cmon, seriously?

  • http://twitter.com/putt1ck Chris Puttick

    6% equity to get a loan? Hmmm. Doesn’t sound like the best deal on the table. Let’s imagine my Internet service in 5 years; I’ve paid the £20k in year two. In year 5 the company gets bought for £20m, making the equity stake worth £1.2m, a 61x return. Or as it was a loan, something like 1200% APR…

  • Eugene B

    F
    rom around the world? They don’t meet
    £50,000 entrepreneur visa requirement. That means from EU only I guess.

  • Anonymous

    Oh wow, OK thats some pretty cool stuff dude.

    http://www.totally-anon.at.tc

  • http://t.technode.com/archives/1168 Oxygen Accelerator 的evergreen基金 | TechNode Trend!

    [...] #technode微趋势#现在创业公司加速器成为了主流,现在,英国的投资项目Oxygen Accelerator 开始接受英国有限公司的申请,项目为期13周,为有前途的创业公司提供2万英镑的evergreen 基金。直到公司有能力偿还这笔钱的时候,这两万基金将回流到项目。也许可以成为Ycombinator。http://eu.techcrunch.com/2011/05/09/new-uk-programme-joins-the-accelerator-vogue-offers-evergreen-fu… [...]

  • http://twitter.com/serenestudios Dan Hill

    6% for a loan? Daylight robbery. Surely get investment that believes in you or none at all? @seedcamp:twitter or @techstars:twitter or @ycombinator:twitter are significantly better value. Even FFF makes more sense for contacts/network… Seems odd, because they have some great mentors like @katyt:twitter Are you a mentor Mike?

  • http://twitter.com/GeorgeBevis George Bevis

    I don’t think these terms are bad. Small percentages like 6% are pretty irrelevant. £20k at the earliest stage can make a difference and for the types of very inexperienced entreps who will choose this programme it’s probably money unavailable elsewhere. Birmingham, of course, is a bloody silly place to do this. The best thing about doing Seedcamp for me was exposure to the London scene but people stuck in Birmingham won’t get that – and many good teams will be put off by the location. Overall I think commenters here are being too hostile – this looks well-intentioned and well put-together, with most of the risk being taken by the creator not the startups.

  • http://twitter.com/Holzhair Nicolas Holzherr

    In all fairness, it’s a loan that you only pay back once (IF) you’re successful. Given the support in general that the programme offers, it’s a worthwhile programme to enter at the start of a venture.
    £20k @ 6% values your business at over 300k.. and all investors expect a return.

  • http://www.about.me/mattauckland Matt Auckland

    So let me get this right. I surrender 6% of my startup, for £20k, which I then have to pay back, yet they keep the 6% stake in my startup.

    I hope they plan to wine and dine the startups before they f……

  • http://eu.techcrunch.com/2011/05/11/startupbootcamp-to-sponsor-development-of-startup-weekend-in-europe/ Startupbootcamp to sponsor development of Startup Weekend in Europe

    [...] this week, we announced the launch of yet another startup accelerator in Europe. Oxygen Accelerator joined the growing list of YCombinator-like [...]

  • Anonymous

    It’s good to see accelerators coming to the UK – however, the costs here do seem a bit steep. I’m wondering if anybody in the UK could adopt the Starve ups model:

    http://www.iijiij.com/2011/05/10/an-accelerator-that-outperforms-y-combinator-and-techstars-08868

    This is a non-profit “virtual incubator and accelerator with its cornerstone as peer mentoring”.

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  • http://eu.techcrunch.com/2011/06/29/oxygen-accelerator-founder-talks-about-new-startup-programme-tctv/ Oxygen Accelerator founder talks about new startup programme (TCTV)

    [...] An exception to that rule is the new Oxygen Accelerator, a Birmingham, UK, based investment programme which recently launched. [...]

  • http://www.paulmiller.org/the-startup-factories-2/ Paul Miller » The Startup Factories

    [...] New UK programme joins the accelerator vogue, offers evergreen funding (eu.techcrunch.com) [...]

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