 The student enterprise department was actually started by Claire Renwick and she's done a really great job of scaling this whole department up and building it up from scratch. Workshops, inspirational events, training, the annual boot camp and also very importantly funding opportunities for students to set up their businesses. The reason for why you came to SOAS is probably because you thought with imagination and with innovation already before you came. SOAS probably developed it even more so you've become sort of an intellectual of imagination and creativity. I would say what better place than an enterprise or an organization to be able to put those ideas into practice. Doing a startup there's an overflow of ideas and it's really great to have come to experts such as yourself to really manage my ideas and to give me the feedback that I needed to hear to be able to organize my thoughts. I've been involved with the student enterprise through their lunch and learn workshops where speakers have started their own social enterprises that come to speak about their own journeys and given us advice on what to do if we're interested in starting our own social enterprises. As well as the support with the business plan and the funding, you also get a chance to attend a three day boot camp that I attended last year and have been part of this year as a mentor and in the boot camp you learn a lot about the practicalities of starting a business. So the different company formations, how to do your financials and you also get talks from people who have started enterprises and you get to do group projects that come up with basically businesses that you get to pitch at the end of the three day boot camp and you just get a lot of skills on how to start a business. The bazaar is literally a godsend for anyone who wants to start a business or even who has a product that they'd like to sell but they're not sure about how it's going to be received. It's really, really well attended. It's been really well received. There have been businesses that have been set up just from people selling their stuff at the JCR and getting the feedback. The best thing you can do if you have an idea is just to go out there, start selling, get feedback. So the visa graduate scheme was the only choice available after the immigration law essentially changed for international students such as myself wanting to continue to work here. And it was at the same time though a brilliant opportunity for someone who had never really thought about entrepreneurialism but had all the qualities and the skills of one. So it just sort of provided that connection and I just thought well why not. I should probably go for this and I tried to come up with an innovative idea about something that I was already passionate about which was education. And just build it into an enterprise and slowly, slowly it just came together. So it was a brilliant sort of incentive. I also applied for unlimited funding through SOAS Enterprise and was successful. So I was able to get some funding to start my own social enterprise. It's a project to put a roof garden on the top of SOAS in the main building along with two bee hives to create a roof garden and a tree space. Since we started the bees came as nuts. There were small 10,000 but small bees relatively. And they're sort of bedding in this year so for the start of the next academic year the hives will be up and running and fully functional for other students to get up there and get involved.