Chester Mojay-Sinclare
Chester Mojay-Sinclare (born around 1989) is a British entrepreneur and founder of Enthuse, a tech-for-good company that helps charities with donations, fundraising and event registrations. He was born in London and grew up in Ashburton, Devon. He was expelled from primary school, then attended South Dartmoor Community College. He studied Philosophy at University College London, where he started Spudnik, an educational space project that sent a potato dressed as Father Christmas to space using a capsule built by children from Landscove Church of England Primary School.
In 2011 he fulfilled his grandmother’s wish to have her ashes scattered in the stratosphere and represented the UK at the Global Student Entrepreneurship Awards in New York. In 2018 he was named in Forbes 30 Under 30. Enthuse, founded in 2012 at UCL, provides fundraising and event technology for charities and not-for-profits and has raised £7.3m in three funding rounds. In 2022 Enthuse became the London Marathon’s official fundraising partner, replacing Virgin Money Giving. In 2016 he gave evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee on Charities about digital technology and fundraising, recommending digital trustee roles. This idea appears in the committee’s report Stronger charities for a stronger society.
This page was last edited on 3 February 2026, at 11:07 (CET).