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Pancreatic cancer survivor given 12 weeks to live on keeping her business alive - and turning her focus to tech

November is pancreatic cancer awareness month and Bryony Thomas talks to BusinessLive about being diagnosed with the deadly disease, why there is no point living as if you are dying, and beating the odds to return to the world of business

Bryony Thomas, founder of Watertight Thinking, dyed her hair purple for Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month(Image: Bryony Thomas)

When Bryony Thomas was told the unimaginable news she had 12 weeks to live, she didn’t pray or instinctively feel she would beat the odds, she accepted she would die.

The entrepreneur, who recently moved to Gloucestershire after nearly 25 years in Bristol, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer just days before Christmas in 2019. Only 7% of people who are given a diagnosis for the disease survive for five years or more.

Her first thought was for her eight-year-old daughter and her husband, having lost her own mother when she was just five years old. Her second was a determination to publish her book before she died.

“I was pretty accepting of the fact I was dying. I am not religious, I didn’t pray and I didn’t think I would be the exception or positivity would beat it; I accepted I would die,” she said. “I was glad I had written the book as I knew there would be a legacy and I was glad there were lots of videos of me because there is almost nothing of my mother, except for the odd photo.”

Her thoughts also turned to her staff and business. Mrs Thomas is the founder of business growth consultancy Watertight Thinking, which she established in 2008, as well as the author of an award-winning book by the same name - and had six people whose livelihoods depended on her company when she became ill.

She had been pitching for funding for the business before being diagnosed, and had one investor confirmed and two more interested. She was on the verge of closing a deal for half a million pounds to turn Watertight Thinking into a software product when she was told she had cancer.

Rather than wind the business down, however, she focused on how she could help her employees. “I didn’t want the house to look like a funeral parlour or for my daughter to be surrounded by flowers and cards, and so we set up a justgiving page [to support the business],” she recalled.

She asked people who were going to spend £2.50 on a card, to donate the amount instead. Incredibly, she raised £17,000 in two weeks and used the money to keep her business afloat. “It was like having a memorial but while I was alive. Everyone was leaving messages about what my work had done and it was just incredible. Mind blowing.”