Monday, January 10, 2011

Youth entrepreneurs - Doing Small Business in Big Ways!


This publication provides an update on the Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise’s  progress towards levelling the playing field for youth-led enterprises in East Africa. 

These diverse stories of young entrepreneurs from Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda provide compelling reading and advice on how to do business as a youth in East Africa.

It matters not whether the entrepreneurs are engaged in manufacturing, software development or stationery retailing, their primary motivations are not just financial security but to make a long lasting positive impact not only in their communities but throughout their countries as well as globally.

The common thread running through these profiles is that these young people found a gap in the market and are exploiting it.

Indeed all of them are Doing Small Business in Big Ways!

Monday, December 27, 2010

International Youth Conference on Peace

January 5th to 10th 2011: International Youth Conference on Peace
Venue: Palace of January 15th, N'djamena, Chad

Youth Organization for the Promotion and Development (OJPD) in partnership with the Network and Partners to Support Development of the CEMAC zone (RAPAD / CEMAC) are organizing an international youth conference on peace in Chad.

The conference will include a total of 800 people including 300 people will come from Chad and the other 500 will come from around the world. The Conference set for January 2011 will be a collaborative framework that brings together youth leaders, cultural entrepreneurs, representatives of organizations.

For more information on this event and to download an application visit http://goo.gl/FSsEA

Thursday, November 18, 2010

YES Kenya and YIPE Terms of Reference (TOR) for Design of Website and Content Management accessible via net and mobile platforms

The Youth Entrepreneurship & Sustainability (YES Kenya) Network and the Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise (YIPE) have embarked on a joint project aimed at Promoting the Culture of Entrepreneurship in Kenya.

To meet the challenge of achieving this ambitious project, the services of a skilled contractor is required to design a dynamic website and content management system and translate that onto a mobile platform that will meet YES Kenya and YIPE needs.

Expected end-results

Front end:

  • Creation of an eye-catching, easy to navigate website and mobile portal, that is robust and searchable, whilst offering several interactive features to the users.
  • The website should be accessible to low-bandwidth users and should not require downloading of any specific fonts or programme for complete user experience. The mobile platform should be accessible to low-end devices.
Back end:

  • Creation of a robust and intuitive customized Content Management System based on project requirements. The CMS should allow YES Kenya and YIPE to manage and update the website easily through sub-administrators who are not expected to have any special technical knowledge.
  • YES Kenya and YIPE should be able to update all the pages and sections remotely but securely through the online CMS without requiring any external HTML editor or downloading of software.
  • The website (net and mobile) should be database-driven / modular so that it can handle all the existing information and be able to handle new documents that would get uploaded on it on a daily basis.
  • The website should be able to integrate multimedia
Overall:

  • The website should be secure and bug-free.
  • The data should be held in a secure environment. It should be possible to regularly back-up the entire database and restore all the data in case of any errors.
  • The website should conform to major web-standards so that the website and its content can easily be indexed by major search engines and is accessible by different browsers.
Requirements

The requirements although not exclusive, will include:

  • Proven track record of use in web and mobile development. Applicants will have to provide a minimum of three (3) links and references for sites they have developed in the last two (2) years.
Applications

Your application should include, but is not limited to:

  • A capability statement.
  • Your CV – maximum of 2 pages
  • A list of at least three (3) web and mobile site links and references. The references should be organisations/ individuals that have contracted the applicant within the last 2 years.
Please submit electronic applications by Friday November 26th 2010 to info@yipekenya.org with the subject heading Application for web and mobile development assignment.

Youth entrepreneurs are encouraged to apply.

About YES Kenya
Youth Entrepreneurship & Sustainability(YES Kenya) Network is a national youth multi-stakeholder network involved in promoting youth entrepreneurship and employment in Kenya and committed to the global call of creating sustainable livelihoods for Youth. For more information, visit www.yeskenya.org/new

About the Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise (YIPE)

The Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise (YIPE) is a new media social enterprise that provides free business information and resources to Kenyan youth entrepreneurs. For more information, visit www.yipekenya.org, and follow @yipeorg on Twitter.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Corruption rears its ugly head in 2 days among 3 entrepreneurs, during Global Entrepreneurship Week

By Fiona Mati

On the week that marks Global Entrepreneurship, I haven’t even gotten half way and yet I have met three entrepreneurs (one social) who told me about the impact corruption has on their lives.

The first is at the aspiring stage. He just finished a business plan to sell liquor on the outskirts of Nairobi. His reason for consulting me was not just to take a look at the plan and let him know if he could proceed. The plan was great: projections, cash flows, inventories … but missing were what are commonly called indirect costs.

The aspiring entrepreneur wanted to know where he would put the cost for “protection” that was to be paid to the police as well as the local gang. He asked, does that go under miscellaneous costs?

The next day I met two other entrepreneurs. The first a social entrepreneur with a brilliant concept has been at the contract signing stage for a grant from an NGO. In his case, though the boss at the overseas headquarters has said that the project should commence, the local officers seem to have problems preparing the final documents so the grant can be disbursed. The weary social entrepreneur asked: do you think they want a bribe?

The final entrepreneur I met has been in business for two years, and is making money. When I asked him how easy it was to secure contracts with his large business clients, he didn’t even waste a second in responding that you have to be friendly with the person in charge of procurement, then not only do you get local purchase orders, but you also get paid without the headache of having to chase for the money long after the invoice due date has passed.

And indeed these three entrepreneurs show that corruption and cronyism are the shadowy elephants in the room that need to be addressed. Most times the assumption is that corruption is prevalent in the public sector. But it can be just as rampant in the private and third sectors. Youth entrepreneurs by their very essence of being young and not as connected socially and financially are vulnerable to unfair business practices against them. This means that they too often like the last entrepreneur frequently engage in bribery and it eventually becomes just another operational cost, though not inserted as glaringly into the audited accounts of their enterprises.

The loss they face in terms of business is also shared amongst the larger corporations with corrupt procurement officers. They wind up paying heftier prices though they probably never learn about it. In the case of the NGO sector, the loss is probably even more fatal in terms of projects that could save lives never taking off because of corrupt fund managers.

Food for thought during this third Global Entrepreneurship week whose theme this year is “dismantling barriers”.

Fiona Mati is the founder of the Youth Interactive Portal for Enterprise a social enterprise that provides free information and resources to youth entrepreneurs in East Africa. For more information, visit www.yipekenya.org, and follow @yipeorg on Twitter.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Business of the living or the dead?


A fascinating article by Kofi Akosah-Sarpong titled ‘Archbishop Palmer-Buckle’s “Funeral Oration’, published in The African Executive this week describes the growing custom among Ghanaians of spending vast amounts of money on funerals. In fact according to Akosah-Sarpong, these ‘bling’ laden funerals often leave the living in debt.

However what we found more intriguing is that the funeral business has also spurred on various related enterprises. Akosah-Sarpong writes:

“Kweku Akosah, one of the leading funeral services proprietors in Ghana, owns the Owners Funeral Services. Owners Funeral Services, driven by Ghanaians sheer obsession with the dead has grown so much that it has branches in most parts of Ghana. Akosah employs over 100 people with varied professionals – wailers, criers, dancers, praise-singers, decorators of the dead, coffin makers, musicians, tailors and seamstresses, promoters, food makers and servers among others.”

In fact death has become so commoditised in Ghana that funeral service owners like Kweku Akosah also offer further incentives to use their services such as financing.

All this in a country where the living still struggle day to day for basic living needs such as food, shelter and education.

Has death been commoditised in your country?

Friday, October 22, 2010

Are bottom of the pyramid social enterprises sustainable?


A post published at the end of September on the Good Intentions are not Enough blog, questioned the viability of introduction of new bottom of the pyramid innovations such as the cook stoves hailed by Hillary Clinton during the recently ended MDG summit.

The gist of the post is that as benevolent a gesture the stoves are for the 1.2 billion people considered to live in poverty worldwide who will use them, the durability of the stoves is not as assured. This raises the question of whether the stoves and similar social innovations are in and of themselves a sustainable alternative to what is already being used.

Included in the Good Intentions post is also a quote from a vice president of the UN Foundation saying apart from distributing the stoves, “You’ll need a supply chain and business model that delivers them, not on a one-time basis, but as a continuing enterprise.”

And without such a supply chain, after the 2 to 5 years and without a steady supply channel, won’t the target beneficiaries just revert to the traditional kerosene and wood?

This is the oft neglected side of social enterprise. The question of how sustainable must the social entrepreneur’s efforts be? And does it mean that just because an enterprise is for profit that business effectiveness and value for money aside from other financial variables take second place to social impact?

The impetus to scrutinise the value of such socially-oriented innovative solutions has become more topical with the aid versus trade debate. Proponents for trade such as William Easterly have argued for business, being recently quoted in the Financial Times that: “current experience and history both speak loudly that the only real engine of growth out of poverty is private business ...”

And with such voices coupled with austerity measures among traditional donor countries (though the UK unexpectedly increased international aid), social business initiatives to mitigate government and market failures in developing countries are sure to claim the limelight.

Social entrepreneurship must include a strategy for achieving financial sustainability, and that includes ensuring that aside from the sentimental value of providing solar lighting, water pumps and eco-friendly stoves amongst other new technologies, that the nitty gritty business essentials such as supply chains and customer care are included in the package, from the outset.

Let’s remember that without the business model there can’t be a lasting and durable social impact.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Social Entrepreneurship Profile: Kibera Community Youth Solar Programme (KCYP)


Kibera Community Youth Programme is a community- based organization formed and run by a group of young people in the Kibera slum in Nairobi. The group have been manufacturing and selling solar torches going by the trade name Kibulight. 

We recently got the opportunity to briefly interview Elizabeth Otieno, a Programme Manager of the organisation regarding the group’s solar energy project. She told us though the group started assembling the Kibulight torches last year, the organisation has been implementing solar project for years. In fact in 2007, KCYP won a clean energy award in Switzerland for their solar technology program.

The market reception for the torches has been promising, though Elizabeth told us that at the price of Kshs. 3,500 (approximately US $44), the torches were beyond the pockets of the majority of the market. The price could be cheaper if the group was in a position to manufacture all the components themselves.

Another marketing challenge the group faces is the influx of cheap products from China that have flooded the Kenyan alternative energy market. Nevertheless, in spite of the challenges the group face, they continue to produce the solar torches for increased security as well as promoting the use of clean energy in Nairobi. 

Read the Kibera Community Youth solar programme profile on Yipe!