Next round on 1 July 2026 at 10:00 (19 days)
Wednesday, May 27th 2026
Hello! We are your panel members; we are looking forward to meeting you and hearing about your social venture.
UnLtd panels reflect our commitment to inclusion, with over 50% of our panel members identifying as Black, Asian or minority ethnic and/or disabled, and at a minimum, one panel member who identifies as Black, Asian or minority ethnic and/or disabled sitting on each panel.
Social Entrepreneur Support Manager at UnLtd
Kyla has been working as a Social Entrepreneur Support Manager at UnLtd since 2021. She is based in the North West and is part of the Thematic team who specialise in supporting social entrepreneurs nationally who work in Healthy Ageing, Health Equity and Access to Employment. Prior to UnLtd, she spent ten years leading business development, operations and programme and project management and delivery for start-up and scale-up social enterprises and charities, primarily in the health and wellbeing space. She is motivated by seeing social entrepreneurs create and disrupt systems and services that address health and wealth inequalities; and so far has had the pleasure of working with over 60 UnLtd Award Winners doing just that! She also cares deeply about the intersections of social and climate justice, having recently completed a course in sustainable business management; leads our carbon footprint work at UnLtd and volunteers on a food security project close to home in Liverpool.
Social Entrepreneur
Amy is a community activist and founded, along with comrades, York Anti Racist Collective that focuses on healing trauma through building community, engaging in creative practice and cultivating joy. She works with the wonderful Baobab Foundation, a radical decolonial funder who resources Black and Global majority communities. Amy also founded The Teapot Collective along with her life partner and they work with organisations to support them with embedding trauma-informed and decolonial practices, as well as introducing equity and inclusion more broadly. Along with her wonderful colleagues she runs online groups for mixed people (Mixed Up Healing). She also co-runs an online yoga studio: Teapot Yoga, and teaches classes in person in York. Teapot Yoga helps the dreamers and doers of liberation to maintain hope by being in community using the ancient magic of yoga. She is starting up a solidarity space for activists to come together and root themselves, connect and prevent burnout.
Social Entrepreneur
Charlie's social enterprise The Blair Academy boosts the health and happiness of older people through Hip Hop Dance workshops. It was founded on Charlie's own experiences as as a professional dancer, homeless teenager, and home care provider. Her varied experiences mean she is best placed to bring something fresh to the care industry which blows stereotypical, dated, assumptive approaches out of the water. She is not afraid to disrupt industries, to reach those hardest to reach and revolutionise the approach to keeping older people active. In 6 years, Charlie has grown the team from just her, to 16 members who deliver sessions to over 300 older people each week. At present, she also manages a place based giving scheme for community groups in Waltham Forest and works as a community dance artist at Sadlers Wells Theatre.
Social Entrepreneur Support Manager at UnLtd
Tim is a Social Entrepreneur Support Manager at UnLtd. He works as part of our Thematic team and specialises in investment readiness, health, and sporting sectors. During his time at UnLtd since 2017, he has helped to manage the Transform Ageing programme and has supported many social entrepreneurs within the sector to grow and scale their impact. He is really interested in how social entrepreneurs can work to address health inequalities and deliver preventative practices that improve quality of life and reduce pressure on public resources. Before UnLtd he worked for Brunelcare, a care charity and housing association for people in later life in Bristol, which is where he first became interested in the ageing sector. Prior to this he went to Exeter University and during his time there founded two (largely unsuccessful) social enterprises through Exeter’s Enactus programme.