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Enterprise

Ethical school uniform firm Etika secures grant to boost growth plans

Etika hopes to create new jobs as part of its growth ambitions

Sean Murphy (left) and David Beavis (right) of Etika Clothing with Jonathan Armitage of NEL Fund Managers(Image: Etika Clothing)

A Tyneside ethical school uniform supplier is aiming to quadruple its customer base after securing a five-figure investment .

Gateshead based Etika Clothing is the first company in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to supply ethically sourced uniforms to the primary school market, after developing a manufacturing partnership between the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and India which delivers full transparency and ownership of the supply chain.

Launched in 2019, the firm currently supplies uniforms to around 20 primary schools, most of which are around the North East, and it is aiming to double that number by the end of the next academic year before increasing it to three figures by summer 2024.

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The Etika management team has worked with regional fund management firm NEL Fund Managers to secure a £20,000 Small Loan Fund investment, which will be used to boost its business development activity and bring in skilled staff to help meet growing demand. Around six new jobs are expected to be created as the business expands, with the aim of reaching an annual turnover of £1m by 2025, establishing the firm as a national brand.

Etika Clothing’s approach has previously won the support of the Bishop of Durham, the Rt Revd Paul Butler, who highlighted the firm’s ethical character to schools within his diocese. Its priorities include ensuring safe working conditions, salary transparency, community development and minimising its environment impact.

It works closely with several charities in India to provide employment opportunities for vulnerable women who are survivors of domestic abuse, and also runs Wear the Change workshops for Year Five and Six children to help them gain a better understanding of injustices within the garment manufacturing industry

All the uniforms it supplies come complete with an embroidered logo of each individual school, with the supply chain shaped to enable orders to be fulfilled much more quickly than is usually possible for most suppliers.