Tips for submitting a winning Queen’s Awards application
“What exactly are you looking for in an application?” – this is one the most popular questions that we hear when we pick up the phone at the Queen’s Awards Office.
Advice from assessors, judges and previous winnners as well as practical hints and tips from The Queen's Awards Team.
“What exactly are you looking for in an application?” – this is one the most popular questions that we hear when we pick up the phone at the Queen’s Awards Office.
Coombe Castle International are specialist producers and exporters of high quality British and Irish dairy products, and the team are delighted to have been given the Queen’s Award for International Trade – the company’s fourth since 2001.
Melanie Brownlow, Managing Director at HotHouse, talks about their journey to winning a Queen's Award.
Jon Tibbs OBE, Chairman of two-times Queen's Award winner JTA, explains the importance of the award to the international trade of his company.
Queen's Awards for Innovation winners Metrasens tell about the technology that won them the Award and share some tips about the application process.
The Queen’s Awards for Enterprise are the most prestigious awards for UK businesses and since their inception in 1965, over 7,000 companies have won a Queen’s Award.
At Magnetic North Travel, we create bespoke holidays to the Nordic Countries and Canada. Usually our clients approach us with a vague idea - such as see the Northern Lights - which we then transform into a thoughtful, often tailor-made itinerary.
Bridgette Softley, Director of Nouveau Lashes, shares her thoughts on why they have applied and what it has meant to win.
My Nametags was launched by founder and CEO Lars B. Andersen in his spare room 14 years ago. They now distribute to 129 countries worldwide and have been awarded the The Queen's Award for Enterprise in International Trade.
Celtic & Co is a luxury British brand, offering a wide range of footwear, clothing, outerwear and accessories made exclusively from the finest, all-natural fibres, predominantly produced in the UK.