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 39 L I F E S T O RY: Arts and science are intertwined for Daniel Penn, who was born in the U.S. and holds American, Australian and Canadian passports. While pursu- ing a bachelor of arts and science at McMaster University, he wrote two cookbooks for students, fol- lowed by a third when he studied food sciences at the University of Copenhagen. Both his brothers are artists, and his father, Dr. Ian Penn, is a cardiologist and artist who, with Daniel's mother, adolescent- health physician Dr. Sandy Whitehouse, established the IDEA award to purchase artworks for Vancouver General Hospital. When Daniel graduated in 2011, Whitehouse was working on a project at Emily Carr University of Art and Design re- searching ways to let adolescents open up to doctors about mental health issues. Daniel returned to Vancouver to help, and in 2013 they launched Tickit, an interactive platform to enable comfortable communication between patients and doctors. Patients input details on a mobile app, and an algorithm highlights key information for health-care providers. The average first-year contract is $25,000, with some clients in the $100,000 range. T H E B O T T O M L I N E : Tickit is used by B.C.'s Providence Health Care, Boston Children's Hospital and the San Francisco Public Health Department. Shift Health doubled its sales last year and is expected to turn a profit by the first quarter of 2017. —F.S. D A N I E L P E N N Co-founder and CEO SHIFT HEALTH A G E : 2 8 L I F E S T O RY: Alex Relf and his girlfriend, Kerri Jones, had no restaurant experience when they started asking banks for a loan to start a meat-pie shop in Whistler. "Nobody would touch us," Relf recalls. "I was 24, and nobody in North America had heard of this food concept." But Relf, who grew up in Victoria, and Jones, a native of Newcastle, Australia, were convinced that the savoury pies would be as popular in the ski resort as they are Down Under. While working full-time at service jobs, the couple had spent two years crafting a business plan and developing recipes in their kitchen. Using their own savings and funds from one private investor, they opened Peaked Pies in July 2013. On the first day, lineups were out the door. Demand for the pies (which include steak, bacon and cheese; butter chicken; and lentil) hasn't let up. Last December, Relf and Jones opened a second store, on Denman Street in Vancouver. T H E B O T T O M L I N E : About 40 people work at the two stores, which together sell between 400 and 1,000 pies a day. Relf has increased employees' wages by up to 25 per cent and offers benefits including MSP coverage, ski pass contributions and affordable accommodation in a unit he rents. "It was important to us that all of our staff feel like part of the family," he says. —M.G. A L E X A N D E R ( A L E X ) R E L F Co-founder PEAKED PIES A G E : 2 9

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