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Sage and Village Capital award $190,000 in grants to second cohort of impact entrepreneurs

Eight businesses from Sage’s Impact Entrepreneurship Program received grants of up to $50,000 in a pitch competition.

ATLANTA (June 12, 2026) — Sage, the leader in accounting, financial, HR and payroll technology for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs), and its partner Village Capital have awarded 12 grants totalling $190,000 to entrepreneurs from the second cohort of the Sage Impact Entrepreneurship program, powered by Sage Foundation.

The grants were awarded at the Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Summit, a four-day gathering held across Atlanta and London that brought together founders, investors, mentors, and ecosystem leaders to accelerate the growth of impact-driven businesses.

The 25 start-ups that form the program's second Core Cohort are drawn from across the US, UK, and Europe, representing a growing generation of founders using business models to address challenges ranging from waste reduction and circular consumption to sustainable food systems and community resilience. Together, they reflect the increasing role entrepreneurship is playing in developing practical, scalable solutions to environmental and social challenges.

Throughout the summit, founders presented their businesses, impact models, and growth strategies. Grant recipients were selected using Village Capital's peer-selection methodology. By evaluating one another against shared business and impact criteria, founders surface high-potential ventures that may be overlooked by traditional funding systems.

All start-ups were assessed on key investment criteria including team, product, value proposition, market, and scale. CIRT and Recovolt were selected by their peers as the top two companies in the program, and each received a $50,000 grant in recognition of their potential and impact. WattAir and METzero were close behind, each receiving $25,000 grants. Sage Foundation also awarded $10,000 grants to four additional businesses that were chosen by the audience on the night.

The grant winners from the US were:

  • CIRT (Athens, US) is a circular economy software platform, keeping valuable materials in circulation, and out of the landfill, the environment and our ocean.
  • WattAir (Atlanta, Georgia) is a climate technology company turning low-grade heat and air into clean water. 
  • Rhino (San Francisco, US) is an AI-powered insurance brokerage that finds coverage for hard-to-insure, climate-exposed property, using proprietary structure-level data to place risks where traditional brokers can't.
  • Tato Labs replaces plastic at its source with regenerative, potato-based biomaterials designed for aesthetics and high-performance.

Joseph Mooney, co-founder at WattAir, one of the grant winners, said: "The Village Capital – Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Program was exactly what I needed as a founder. It brought together a deeply supportive cohort, world-class industrial experts, investors, founders, and a team that pushed us to be ready for our next major milestone. More than anything, being surrounded by such an inspiring group of founders made the highs more meaningful and the lows much easier to navigate."

The grant winners from Europe were:

  • Recovolt (Newcastle, UK) develops upstream infrastructure to safely neutralize end-of-life EV batteries at intake, enabling scalable reuse and recycling.
  • METZero (Newcastle, UK) is a wastewater technology company that retrofits treatment sites with a novel solution that cuts pollution and energy.
  • Ecoswap (London, UK) exists to shift everyday consumption towards brands that do right by people and the planet, using a simple digital gift card.
  • GreenFlip (London, UK) helps asset owners and investors turn residential energy upgrades into predictable investments using AI-driven energy and financial modelling.

Pavlina Theodosiou, CEO at METzero, said: “Like many technical founders, I naturally focus on the technology. One of the biggest shifts for me has been spending more time thinking about the business itself, the business model, growth strategy, investment readiness and how to communicate the opportunity more clearly. The Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Program has allowed me to learn from an incredible cohort of founders who are facing many of the same challenges. I encourage any founder who is serious about growing their business to apply to this program." 

Helen Devanny, Vice President of Sage Foundation, said: "When we first launched the Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Program, we wanted to show that Sage was serious about supporting businesses working at the intersection of sustainability and social impact. Cohort 1 showed us exactly what that could look like in practice, with six businesses receiving grants, all of them continuing to grow with our support. With Cohort 2, we've gone further — backing 57 businesses tackling social, environmental and economic challenges around the world. What excites me most isn't the number of businesses we've supported; it's the depth of what they're building, and the communities they're already changing."

Over the next two years, Sage and Village Capital will continue working alongside founders through mentorship, training, and strategic guidance designed to help them refine their models, accelerate growth, and create real impact in their communities. The program now supports 111 startups, marking significant progress towards its goal of backing 165 high-impact startups.

Reflecting on the role of programs like Sage Impact Entrepreneurship in helping founders grow, Kelly Bryan, Regional Director of the Americas and Europe at Village Capital, said: “Entrepreneurs understand firsthand what it takes to build and grow a company. They recognize the resilience, execution, and potential behind a business in ways that aren’t always visible on paper. The founders selected by their peers have already demonstrated strong momentum, and at this stage, grant funding can help them strengthen their foundations, deepen customer adoption, and prepare for their next phase of growth.”

Applications for the third cohort will open later this year. Learn more about the current US and UK & Europe cohorts on Village Capital's website: 

Notes to editor

About Sage Foundation 
Sage Foundation has been knocking down barriers in our communities since 2015. By mobilizing our colleagues, partners, and customers through impactful programs, Sage Foundation is helping underrepresented entrepreneurs to grow their businesses while equipping the entrepreneurs of tomorrow with the skills they need to succeed. 

About Sage

Sage exists to knock down barriers so everyone can thrive, starting with the millions of small- and mid-sized businesses served by us, our partners, and accountants. Customers trust our finance, HR, and payroll software to make work and money flow. By digitizing business processes and relationships with customers, suppliers, employees, banks and governments, our digital network connects SMBs, removing friction and delivering insights. Knocking down barriers also means we use our time, technology, and experience to tackle digital inequality, economic inequality, and the climate crisis.

About Village Capital

Village Capital is a global leader in impact investing, helping early-stage startups access the type of social and financial capital they need to grow – reshaping the supply and demand sides of capital flows as a result.

Since 2009, Village Capital has directly supported more than 2,100 impact startups in 70 countries. Together, these founders have raised over $9.6B across economic mobility, environmental sustainability, and access to essential services. It has made 116 investments through its various affiliated funds, including Vilcap Investments, which has invested in 91 peer-selected companies. Additionally, 26,000 entrepreneurs have used its Abaca web app to take at least one assessment, helping them expand their access to financial capital. Learn more at www.vilcap.com and follow @villagecapital.

Total amount of grants handed to the winners

Notes to editors

Sage and Village Capital have awarded 12 grants to entrepreneurs from the second cohort of the Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Program. The grants were awarded at the Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Summit, a four-day gathering held across Atlanta and London, bringing together founders, investors, mentors, and ecosystem leaders.

The Sage Impact Entrepreneurship Program, powered by Sage Foundation, supports impact-driven entrepreneurs using business models to address environmental, social, and economic challenges. Now in its second year, the program supports 111 startups across the US, UK, and Europe, with a goal of backing 165 high-impact businesses. Founders receive mentorship, training, equity-free grants, and Sage product support over three years.

Twelve grants were awarded to founders from the program second Core Cohort. Winners were selected through a peer-assessment process in which founders evaluated each other's businesses against key investment criteria including team, product, value proposition, market, and scale. Sage Foundation also awarded additional grants to businesses selected by the audience at the Summit.

Grants ranged from $10,000 to $50,000. CIRT received a $50,000 grant, WattAir received $25,000, and Rhino and Tato Labs each received $10,000. Further grants were awarded to UK and Europe-based winners, with full details available on Village Capital's website.

Sage Foundation launched the program to support businesses working at the intersection of sustainability and social impact, reflecting Sage's wider mission to knock down barriers so everyone can thrive. The program has expanded significantly in its second year, backing 57 businesses in Cohort 2 alone — up from six in the first cohort — across markets including the US, UK, France, Germany, Portugal, Spain, and South Africa.

Applications for the third cohort will open later this year. Further information on the current US and UK and Europe cohorts is available on Village Capital's website.