Equiseat Help has revealed its first spherical of angel funding – over £100,000 from Lars Letonoff, a extremely regarded expertise govt and former President and Chief Income Officer at KnowBe4 (Nasdaq KNBE).
The corporate says this funding marks a pivotal second for Equiseat Help, as it would present the funding essential to help the corporate’s progress and growth.
The funding from Letonoff will likely be instrumental in accelerating product analysis and growth, enhancing advertising outreach and solidifying Equiseat Help’s place within the equestrian market.
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With Letonoff additionally becoming a member of the corporate’s board, Equiseat Help will profit from his confirmed observe file in constructing and scaling profitable international companies.
Lars Letonoff is internationally recognised for his strategic management and entrepreneurial imaginative and prescient. He led KnowBe4 from an early-stage tech start-up right into a publicly traded powerhouse with over 55,000 international clients, companions, Managed Service Suppliers (MSPs) and Managed Safety Service Suppliers (MSSPs).
Equiseat Help additional mentioned his capacity to drive innovation and commercialise applied sciences has been demonstrated all through his profession, and now he brings this experience to Equiseat Help, serving to information its future progress.
Letonoff mentioned: “Equiseat Help represents a novel alternative to help an organization that’s really innovating throughout the equestrian business. Their product has the potential to make an actual distinction for riders and horses, and I’m thrilled to assist them develop and attain their full potential.”
Letonoff’s funding makes him a significant shareholder within the enterprise alongside majority shareholders Vickie Dennis (founding father of Equiseat Help), Ruth Schofield and Kate Dennis.
Collectively, they are saying they’re dedicated to bringing Equiseat Help to extra riders and advancing its mission of serving to riders obtain better steadiness and straightness, in the end enhancing their reference to their horses.