The Cornwall Innovation Podcast

Jeremy Sneller from Salto VisionWorks

18 min · 16 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Jeremy Sneller from Salto VisionWorks

Descripción

In this episode of the Cornwall Innovation Centre podcast, Rebecca Loto speaks with Jeremy Sneller, founder of Salto Visionworks, a company that pioneered facial recognition access control technology. Jeremy explains the core concept behind Salto Visionworks in a simple tagline: "Access a space with your face." The technology replaces traditional keycards, codes and physical keys with facial recognition, allowing users to simply walk up to a door which then opens automatically. This provides both convenience for carrying bags or when phones are not readily accessible, and enhanced security for various environments. They covers the wide range of applications for this technology, from care facilities where residents may be experiencing memory or physical loss, to gyms where facial recognition can manage memberships and locker allocation, to hotels where guests can bypass reception and go directly to their rooms. Jeremy shares the company's journey from its founding ten years ago on the second floor of Cornwall Innovation Centre with just two people, initially focusing only on the UK market. The business grew to the point where Jeremy had to decide between seeking investment or finding a strategic partner. This led to Salto acquiring Visionworks, and the technology is now being rolled out to potentially 40 countries worldwide. Jeremy also highlights how the company has created local employment, keeping talented young people in Cornwall who would otherwise have left the county. The team has grown to 15 people occupying three offices within the Tremough Innovation Centre, demonstrating how the flexible workspace has allowed the business to scale without needing to relocate.

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7 episodios

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Ayer18 min
episode Sam Shrimpton from Teylu and Partners artwork

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In this episode of the Cornwall Innovation Centre podcast, Rebecca Loto speaks with Helen Tite, founder of iCareiMove. Helen explains how iCareiMove works across the age spectrum from people in their 40s and 50s in the workforce, through those in their 60s managing chronic health conditions, to people in their 70s, 80s and end of life care. The business focuses on understanding chronic health conditions and movement, delivering commissioned services around falls prevention, COPD management, and other conditions that have significant impacts on the economy, NHS, communities and families. The conversation explores the important work iCareiMove does in preventative healthcare, helping people avoid hospital readmissions and re-enabling them to get their lives back. They also focus on women's health in the workplace, particularly menopause and perimenopause. Helen highlights the stark reality of women facing difficult choices between coming to work while struggling with severe symptoms or taking sick leave, particularly affecting low-income workers. Helen notes that from April 2026, big businesses will need to take on more information around managing women's health, with all businesses required to have better understanding by 2027. The business also addresses men's health, particularly around prostate health and supporting men through cancer treatment and return to work. Helen emphasises the importance of understanding anatomy and working preventatively so both men and women can live longer, better lives. The conversation also covers how commissioned services work, with tenders going out from central government, public health, local authorities or the NHS for services like falls prevention. Helen explains how iCareiMove has been delivering these services for around 15 years, learning from each bid whether successful or not. iCareiMove is part of the Future Fit Training group, which provides resources and infrastructure to support iCareiMove's work while benefiting from the specialist experience in health and care contract work that her team brings back to the wider group.

7 de abr de 202617 min
episode Jeremy Sneller from Salto VisionWorks artwork

Jeremy Sneller from Salto VisionWorks

In this episode of the Cornwall Innovation Centre podcast, Rebecca Loto speaks with Jeremy Sneller, founder of Salto Visionworks, a company that pioneered facial recognition access control technology. Jeremy explains the core concept behind Salto Visionworks in a simple tagline: "Access a space with your face." The technology replaces traditional keycards, codes and physical keys with facial recognition, allowing users to simply walk up to a door which then opens automatically. This provides both convenience for carrying bags or when phones are not readily accessible, and enhanced security for various environments. They covers the wide range of applications for this technology, from care facilities where residents may be experiencing memory or physical loss, to gyms where facial recognition can manage memberships and locker allocation, to hotels where guests can bypass reception and go directly to their rooms. Jeremy shares the company's journey from its founding ten years ago on the second floor of Cornwall Innovation Centre with just two people, initially focusing only on the UK market. The business grew to the point where Jeremy had to decide between seeking investment or finding a strategic partner. This led to Salto acquiring Visionworks, and the technology is now being rolled out to potentially 40 countries worldwide. Jeremy also highlights how the company has created local employment, keeping talented young people in Cornwall who would otherwise have left the county. The team has grown to 15 people occupying three offices within the Tremough Innovation Centre, demonstrating how the flexible workspace has allowed the business to scale without needing to relocate.

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In this episode of the Cornwall Innovation Centre podcast, Rebecca Loto speaks with Dan Start, founder of Nerth Limited, a business operating in the offshore renewables sector. Dan explains how Nerth was formed four years ago during the post-Covid period, building on 13 years of experience working in the offshore and marine industry for world-leading Cornish contractors. His background combines technical engineering knowledge with commercial expertise, giving him a unique perspective on both the technical and business sides of the industry. The conversation covers Nerth's evolution from initially providing sales, tendering and marketing services for other marine sector businesses, to developing a consultancy practice focused on high-level planning of large-scale infrastructure projects including ports and harbours. Dan explains what offshore renewables encompasses, including offshore wind, floating offshore wind, and wave and tidal energy. The discussion explores the future opportunities in the offshore wind sector, with Dan highlighting that any solution reducing human exposure to offshore environments through autonomy, robotics or efficiency improvements will be valuable over the next decade. Dan also discusses the benefits of being based at Cornwall Innovation Centre, including how the office space has helped increase turnover and profitability while providing much-needed sociability for small business owners and access to free seminars and business advice. The name Nerth means power and energy in Cornish, reflecting the company's focus on bringing offshore renewable energy to the Celtic shores.

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