BCBusiness

April 2017 30 Under 30

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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BCBUSINESS.CA APRIL 2017 BCBUSINESS 49 L I F E S T O RY: Jessica Thomas Cooke started her career as an account executive at a public relations firm in Sydney, Australia. After moving back to Vancouver in July 2013, she kept think- ing about a former boss who had started an agency that represented bloggers. She shared her idea with a good friend, Hilary Chan-Kent, and they decided to give it a go. They launched their company in July 2014 with three "influenc- ers," bloggers with thousands of followers on Instagram or other social networks. They ap- proached marketing agencies to negotiate deals through which the bloggers would get paid for promoting products. Defining a new category with standards such as how much a post is worth, they soon started working with major brands including Yves Saint Laurent Beauty and lingerie chain La Senza Corp. T H E B O T T O M L I N E : In October 2015, Sam Feldman, who represents clients such as singers Carly Rae Jepsen and Gord Downie, asked Cooke and Chan-Kent to join him in a partner- ship. They moved into the offices of the Feldman Agency in February 2016, and that year their company's revenue grew 650 per cent. Cooke and Chan-Kent employ three people and are opening a second office, in Toronto. —M.G. L I F E S T O RY: Born and raised in Sri Lanka, Shanil Gunasekara moved to Canada in 2011 with a B.Sc. in biomedical engineering from the University of Southern California. As an associ- ate at Lumedica Consultants Inc., a Vancouver- based adviser to medical device developers, he came up with the idea for a mobile app that measures and tracks arthritis symptoms. He and his boss, Nick MacKinnon, plotted their new tool while working on a big, expensive, hospital- grade machine to analyze skin tissue. "We'd look to other fields like finance, entertainment or social media—and see how they were being revolutionized by technology that was mobile, portable and cheap," says Gunasekara, who became a Canadian citizen last year. "It was frustrating to us that health, which is critical, wasn't really keeping up with that." In 2014, Gunasekara founded eTreat Medical Diagnostics with a group that includes MacKinnon. Using a smartphone camera, their app can register min- ute changes in a patient's condition over time, tracking hand movements. It's also a cheaper alternative to X-rays and ultrasounds. T H E B O T T O M L I N E : Vancouver's eTreat has seen its app deployed by the National Data Bank for Rheumatic Diseases in the U.S. and at clinics in India and Sri Lanka. The company has also raised $1 million from angel investors and is gathering another $2 million. —J.P. S H A N I L G U N A S E K A R A Founder and CEO ETREAT MEDICAL DIAGNOSTICS INC. A G E : 2 8 J E S S I C A T H O M A S C O O K E Co-founder INF INFLUENCER AGENCY A G E : 2 9

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