Английская Википедия:Bethany Koby

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Bethany Koby is an American designer and inventor. She was the co-founder and chief executive officer of the insolvent business Tech Will Save Us.[1]

Education and early career

Koby is from Los Angeles.[2] Her mother taught in a Montessori school and her father was a photographer.[3] She attributes this to her love of making.[3][4] She studied graphic design at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2000.[3] She earned a Master of Science in responsibility and business from Bath Spa University, which she studied in an effort to inform her art work.[5] She was a scholar at the Fabrica research centre. Koby joined the consultancy Wolff Olins, where she worked as design director and social impact specialist for 9 years.[6] She became interested in more interactive and effective ways to teach young people technology.[7]

Career

Koby co-founded Tech Will Save Us when she found a discarded laptop in Hackney in 2012.[8] Investors in their first seed-funding round included Gi Fernando, Christopher Mairs (chairman of Code Club) and Saatchi & Saatchi.[2] She worked with Nesta, Google and Mozilla to investigate what young people enjoyed and how it mapped to skills.[9]

Tech Will Save Us created DIY gadgets for everyday life that inspire creative imagination in young people.[6] They sold 8,000 units in their first year.[2] She raised a $1.8 million investment from venture capital funding, and sought the advice of Matt Webb and Tracy Doree.[8][9] They have sold kits in over 100 countries and several major retailers, including in John Lewis, Barnes & Noble and Myer.[10] Their kits have been acquired by the Museum of Modern Art and Design Museum.[3] In 2009 she collaborated with the Dalston Mill to present an art show for the Barbican Centre.[5] She has taught classes at Kaospilot.[5] In 2015 Koby partnered with the BBC to ensure one million eleven-year-old children had access to a Micro Bit.[8] She designed the Tech Will Save Us Mover Kit, which raised £50,000 from a two-day crowdfunding campaign.[8][11] The Mover Kit is a toy wearable for children that they can code themselves.[3] In 2016 they won Best Hardware at the Europas and in 2017 they were awarded the Best Kids Tech Kit from the Consumer Technology Association.[12] In 2018 they raised $4.2 million in Series A funding.[13] They collaborated with The Walt Disney Company on a Marvel Avengers themed kit that encourages children to invent superheroes to complete secret missions.[14][15]

Koby recognises that parental buy-in is essential to reach children and young people.[16][17] She has written for Goop and presented at the Family Tech Summit.[18][19] An interview with her appears in the Coursera course on Brand Management.[20] Koby was selected as one of the top entrepreneurs in the UK tech sector by Growth Business in 2017.[21] She was championed by Innovate UK as one of their Game Changers.[22] She is one of the Creative Review Creative Leaders 50.[23] She is on the advisory board of The Education Foundation.[24] She was voted Innovator of the Year in the Tech Playmaker Awards in 2018.[25] She delivered the Design School Pioneers Lecture at the University of the Arts London in January 2018, and has been part of various Maker Faires.[26][27]

In 2019, Koby was 22nd in Computer Weekly's 50 'Most Influential Women in UK Tech' shortlist for her role as CEO and co-founder of Technology Will Save Us.[28]

Tech Will Save Us became insolvent in April 2021, despite raising £1.3 million the previous year from crowdfunding and the British government's Future Fund. The assets of the business were acquired for £99,000 in a pre-pack administration by a company controlled by Koby and her associates.[1]

References