Peter Paduh

Peter Paduh (born 1977 in Sarajevo) is Bosnian-born British businessman and social entrepreneur. He is best known as the Young Business Person of the Year at the London Business Awards 2005, and for his involvement with the Computers for Older People Initiative with the Mayor of London and Age Concern and as a spokesperson for Refugees in the UK and for Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR).

Peter Paduh
Born1977
OccupationEntrepreneur
Websitehttps://www.socialbox.biz/

Biography

He came to the UK as a refugee in his early teens when war broke out in the Balkans.[1] At the time he did not speak English, but wanted to have a positive contribution to society and establish a successful business.[2]

Paduh learnt English, lived in a children's home for refugees in London and attended school and university in the UK. He worked for companies such as Gateway and Microsoft, then started a series of businesses.[1]

In 2002, as a result of consultations with his clients, Paduh began researching the business potential of the electronic waste problem. His research took him to North America, where he made a number of contacts, visited reuse and recycling plants and observed the thriving reuse and recycling industry there.

His approach to business was built on the principles of practical corporate social responsibility (CSR), providing training in IT hardware for young unemployed people and helping disadvantaged groups such as older people in the UK with refurbished PCs. Paduh demonstrated that it was possible to establish a successful business that is environmentally and socially sustainable.

He received the most prestigious was as the Young Business Person of the Year at the London Business Awards 2005 sponsored by ITV London and the London Chamber of Commerce.

Social enterprise

Paduh is currently chairman of SocialBox.Biz, a new generation social impact consultancy agency with emphasis on digital inclusion, tech innovation and integration of refugees and homeless people.[3][4]

He helped setup other ventures in the technology sector that worked with the local community on initiatives such as the reuse of IT equipment that London businesses were replacing helping create employment opportunities in London. In this process, training was provided to young people in IT hardware including immigrants and other former refugees. These ventures reused thousands of computers from firms and put them back into use in the charity voluntary sector benefiting from the services.

Works

Originally a refugee, Peter's story has been covered on The Guardian, the Financial Times and Newsweek, and was the subject of a two-page spread in the London Paper. Paduh has also been featured on ITV news, BBC World, on the BBC's Working Lunch and Times Radio programme.

Awards and recognitions

  • Institute of Directors – The Good Director Honour award winner
  • Winner HSBC Startup Stars – London
  • National Business Awards – Chairman Award for Innovation
  • The Edge Employers Awards – London Region Winner
  • Young Business Person of the Year award winner London Business Awards
  • London Mayor's Award for Outstanding contribution to life in London.[1]
  • Best Corporate Social Responsibility firms Haringey City Growth Award winner

References

  1. "False starts and fresh beginnings". The Guardian. 26 November 2006. Archived from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  2. ""A computer can be life-changing"". Refugee Support Network. 17 October 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  3. Marshall, Tom (7 March 2016). "Pioneering scheme launched to give laptops to homeless people". Evening Standard. Archived from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  4. Paduh, Peter (26 May 2016). "SocialBox.biz Announces Launch of Its New Generation Social Impact and Cloud Based Solutions". Cision. Archived from the original on 14 May 2020. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
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