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Tech

Bereavement tech start-up Settld prepares to go global as investment tops £800,000

The company was launched less than two years ago by mother-and-daughter team Julie and Vicky Wilson

Julie Wilson, Settld co-founder(Image: Helen Smith Photography/Settld)

A County Durham company that aims to ease the administrative burden left with bereaved families has set its sights on rapid expansion, on the back of investment.

Mother-and-daughter team Julie and Vicky Wilson, from Seaham, launched Settld in February 2020, after Vicky’s grandmother died.

Working full-time and faced with the task of settling their relative’s finances and assets, it took the pair more than eight weeks – including six hours of phone calls – to sort the accounts, leaving them disillusioned with the process while also pondering how it could be improved.

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After putting together a business plan and outlining their plans for the platform, they were accepted onto the North East SME Innovation Programme – managed by the North East Business and Innovation Centre (BIC) – and tapped into support from RTC North and the ERDF-backed Arrow Project at Newcastle University.

This support, as well as grants totalling over £185,000 from Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, provided the pair with everything they needed to officially launch Settld.

Eighteen months on, the company is supporting families nationwide, and it has secured a total of more than £800,000 for its end-of-life admin platform, which automates bereavement notifications to more than 750 companies, from banks to social media players.

By digitising the process, Settld says it reduces the admin stress often left with grieving families and the professionals who support them.