10 January 2001
Scottish Institute for Enterprise appoints Director
Issued by the University of Glasgow on behalf of the Universities of
Dundee, Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt and Strathclyde
Ms Carl Togneri has been appointed Director of the Scottish Institute for
Enterprise (SIE) and took up her post on 8 January 2001.
Carl takes on this high profile role on a two-year secondment from her post
as Director of Semiconductors at Scottish Enterprise under the Scottish
Enterprise Staff Exchange Programme.
Professor Sir Graeme Davies, Principal of the University of Glasgow,
speaking on behalf of the SIE, said "We are all delighted to welcome Carl
to the post and to have someone with her drive, energy and experience to
move the Institute forward from its early encouraging start."
The five leading Scottish research Universities - Dundee, Edinburgh,
Glasgow, Heriot-Watt and Strathclyde - formed a consortium to compete
successfully for £4M of government funding to create the SIE, one of 12 in
the UK.
The Institute aims to foster an entrepreneurial culture among students and
staff across the five universities by promoting innovative approaches to
the teaching of entrepreneurship and to underpin the active
commercialisation roles by helping students make their businesses come
alive.
The Director will play a crucial role in facilitating the activities of the
five universities and linking these internal efforts to efforts in the
wider entrepreneurial community.
Carl Togneri began her career in economic development at the Scottish
Development Agency in 1989. A graduate of the University of Glasgow and the
University of Strathclyde Graduate Business School, she has held various
posts within the Scottish Enterprise Network including positions with
Locate In Scotland and Renfrewshire Enterprise and most recently
Director of Semiconductors at Scottish Enterprise.
Carl said: "I am thrilled to have this challenging opportunity to play my
part in bolstering the emerging entrepreneurial spirit in Scotland and look
forward to leading this collaborative initiative."
Irene Johnstone, Director of the Staff Exchange Programme at Scottish
Enterprise said: "This is an excellent opportunity for Carl to share her
knowledge with others in such an important new venture, building on the
work and the relationships the Scottish Enterprise Network has developed
with Scottish Universities. Our Staff Exchange Programme plays a key role
in supporting our goal of sharing knowledge through partnerships."
Carl is based at the Institute's new offices at 25 Bothwell Street where
she is supported by Sandhya Kapitan who joined the Institute in November as
its Project Executive.
Further information: Contact Mike Brown, University of Glasgow Press
Office, 0141 330 3535 or Kirstie Crawford, Senior Executive, Public
Affairs, Scottish Enterprise, 0141 228 2876
Note to Editors:
The SIE originated in a bid by the five universities to the Government's
Science Enterprise Challenge Fund set in the context of Scotland's economic
strategy to develop the knowledge economy.
Recognising the historic under-achievement in Scotland to convert native
inventiveness into economic opportunity, the five universities combined
resources to build on their own expertise and achievements in
commercialisation and entrepreneurial education with the intention of
creating a world-class institute to promote and foster these skills.
The award was part of a £25M competition to set up centres of enterprise in
UK Universities. The £4M awarded to the Scottish consortium led by the
University of Glasgow was the highest award outside of London. When the SIE
was formally launched in March 2000, Mr Henry McLeish, the then Minister of
Enterprise and Lifelong Learing, said: "Exploiting Scotland's rich
intellectual resources, and creating a more entrepreneurial culture, is the
key to establishing a modern, knowledge-based economy. This new Enterprise
Institute for Scotland.... is a significant step towards that common
goal."