Andrew Christopher at University of Kent wins funding for LDrive online platform

A student has won investment for a online platform designed to drive the best price for driving lessons.

Third-year student Andrew Christopher from the University of Kent won £1,000 investment for a platform that aims to connect learner drivers with instructors and in doing so reduce the cost of lessons.

He was chosen as the winner for his idea, LDrive, by a panel of business leaders and entrepreneurs at the annual Business Start-up Journey competition run by Kent Business School (KBS) at the university.

Andrew Christopher picked up the award (8056433)
Andrew Christopher picked up the award (8056433)

LDrive is designed to help learner drivers find driving instructors based on price, while driving instructors can offer flexible teaching hours. The aim is that it provides a more flexible, cost-effective offering for both learners and instructors.

Mr Christopher, who studies at the university’s Medway campus, said: "It’s fantastic to have been selected by such a high-profile panel of judges and this investment will help me continue to develop LDrive in becoming a fully-fledged online platform that will revolutionise the currently flawed learning-to-drive market for both learners and instructors."

Online platform will allow learners to find the best deals for driving lessons
Online platform will allow learners to find the best deals for driving lessons

Two other students won prizes of £500 for their ideas.

Domenico Martini’s pitch for a business that helps provide cover for last-minute gaps in shifts won the best service category, while the best product category was won by Lucy Kemsley, from Rochester, and Stanislav Yakimov, from Margate, who are working to improve dental brace design.

Students had seven minutes to pitch their business before answering questions from the judging panel.

Mr Christopher with judges
Mr Christopher with judges

The Business Start-Up Journey is a philanthropically funded programme offering support for students who are setting up their own businesses. It offers a combination of practical workshops, one-to-one advice, talks and mentoring.

It is run by the Aspire (Accelerator Space for Innovation and Responsible Enterprise) project within KBS which recently hosted a national student enterprise conference at the Canterbury campus, attracting more than 400 delegates over two days.

Close This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies.Learn More