Archive for the ‘Knowledge Sharing’ Category

The San Diego Microfinance Summit is coming up. Don’t forget to register!

posted: 2012-03-26 @ 4:02 pm EDT

Are you interested in how the development of innovative strategies and new technologies are changing the face of microfinance?

Join ACCION San Diego and other local microfinance organizations for the 4th annual San Diego Microfinance Summit hosted at the University of San Diego.

Highlights of this year’s event include

  • Pre-summit networking mixer at The Ritual Tavern, a local microfinance client (optional)
  • Breakfast provided by clients
  • Catered lunch provided by local restaurateurs who are microfinance clients
  • Artisan marketplace wherein microfinance clients will showcase their wares and services
  • Three afternoon breakout topics offered during two sessions
  • Closing reception featuring giveaways from client businesses

Make sure to check out the video footage from last year!

Register now!

Where: Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice, University of San Diego, 5998 Alcalá Park, San Diego, CA  92110

When: Wednesday, April 4th from 8:15am to 4:30pm

Price: The student, faculty and staff price is $20.00, the general admission price: $35.00.

The 2012 San Diego Microfinance Summit, Register Today!

posted: 2012-03-07 @ 4:17 pm EST

Early Bird Pricing Ends March 21st!

Are you interested in how the development of innovative strategies and new technologies are changing the face of microfinance? Join ACCION San Diego and other local microfinance organizations for the 4th annual San Diego Microfinance Summit hosted at the University of San Diego.

Register Now

Highlights of this year’s event include:

  • Pre-summit networking mixer at the Ritual Tavern, a local microfinance client (optional)
  • Breakfast provided by clients
  • Catered lunch provided by local restauranteurs who are microfinance clients
  • Artisan marketplace wherein microfinance clients will showcase their wares and services
  • Three afternoon breakout topic offered during two sessions
  • Closing reception featuring giveaways from client businesses

Make sure to check out the video footage from last year

Where: Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice, University of San Diego, 5998 Alcalá Park, San Diego, CA  92110

When: Wednesday, April 4th from 8:15am to 4:30pm

Price: Early bird pricing ends March 21st!

Early bird student, faculty and staff price: $12.00

Early bird general admission price: $25.00

Student, faculty and staff price after March 21st: $20.00

General admission price after March 21st: $35.00

Programming Guides from FIELD for Student Groups and Startup MFIs

posted: 2012-02-08 @ 12:20 pm EST

Are you involved in a startup microfinance organization in the United States? If so, take some time to read FIELD’s recent publications Marketing for Micro 101: Lessons from around the U.S. and Data That Works.

Why these publications?

In 1999, FIELD and the Aspen Institute published a case study on student-run microfinance organizations in the US and their role in the domestic microfinance industry. The study concluded that “…university-based initiatives contain promising assets and resources that could strengthen the domestic microenterprise field.”   Since then, FIELD has continued to support student microfinance groups in strengthening their programing. These publications, released in late 2011, are designed as a conceptual roadmap towards designing a well-targeted and effective microfinance program. Both handbooks are comprehensive enough to serve the same purpose for any small MFI looking to design or improve its programming.

Marketing for Microfinance 101

Marketing for Micro 101 opens with a succinct overview of the challenges of market penetration, one of the biggest obstacles for MFIs large and small. It describes the process of establishing a target market, and offers several helpful resources for market research.  It goes on to emphasize the importance of applying the lessons learned from the market research to a program’s design and offers several brief but pointed case studies of MFIs that have done just that with great results. Marketing for Microfinance offers an in-depth overview of several potential outreach strategies, including direct client outreach, indirect marketing through partner organizations, and channel development for targeted marketing.  For those looking for more in-depth marketing information the guide offers links to other FIELD resources on the topic. Marketing for Microfinance concludes by warning against some common pitfalls in client outreach, including choosing or managing your partners unwisely, and failing to be responsive to client your data and client feedback. This handbook is truly an excellent starting place for MFIs that want to learn how to target both their products and their marketing.

Data that Works

Data that Works tackles another of the most daunting challenges for any MFI: effective data collection. This vital step, which is so often overwhelming to MFIs with limited human resource and training capacities, is broken down into a few important conceptual steps:

Define your information needs: Data That Works encourages readers to be realistic both about their information needs, and their capacity to collect and manage data. It breaks down the different kinds of data that an MFI can collect, who needs access to the data and for what purposes, and how to store and manage your data so that it is accessible and usable for the whole organization.

Design an excellent intake form: The guide emphasizes the importance of intake forms for establishing baseline measurements, and provides an some straight-forward but important recommendations for making your intake form usable. It recommends keeping your intake form short, making it precise and making sure the questions asked of the client are clear and well defined.

Mapping Outcomes: Data that works goes on to emphasize the importance of tracking your program’s outcomes in terms of your organization’s mission, the performance of the organization and, importantly, the success of your clients.  It offers an easy to use format for doing so.

Using data effectively: Tracking outcomes is interesting, but ineffective until that data is applied towards making a program run better or a product more useful to your clients. Data that works concludes its recommendations with a discussion of the various ways a data-driven organization can outperform less data-responsive organizations.

In combination, these guides offer a powerful starting place for both student groups and startup MFIs working to design an effective microfinance program. Be sure to integrate them into your resource library!

Microlinks Posts Recap of Roodman/Bateman Debate

posted: 2012-02-01 @ 6:02 pm EST

Microlinks has posted a thorough recap of Monday’s Moving Financial Inclusion beyond Microfinance debate between David Roodman and Milford Bateman on their blog. The recap carefully reconstructs the flow of this parliamentary style debate and gives a balanced overview of the most important points discussed by Milford and Bateman.  Be sure to check out the link to the debate notes, and to David Roodman’s post-debate blog entry which includes a rebuttal from Bateman in the comments section.  Also, be sure to check out the Executive Summary of the much-contested Inter-American Development Bank report The Age of Productivity which has been the subject of intense disagreement between Bateman and Roodman.

David Roodman and Milford Bateman Debate Recap

posted: 2012-01-30 @ 4:58 pm EST

UPDATE: Check out the microlinks post-event resource page for a recording of the debate, a transcript and more!

On Monday January 30th USAID and the Financial Inclusion Forum of D.C. hosted a much anticipated parliamentary style debate between David Roodman, Author of Due Dilligence: An Impertinent Inquiry into Microfinance, and Milford Bateman, author of Why Doesn’t microfinance Work: The Destructive Rise of Local Neoliberalism. The debate was entitled “Moving Financial Inclusion Beyond Microfinance” and the central question was:

“If microfinance has not achieved its objective in substantially reducing poverty, what are the pathways to financial inclusion that will contribute to this objective?”

The debate was moderated by Chuck Waterfield of MFTransparency. To find out more about the context for the debate see this exchange between Roodman and Bateman in the comments section of David Roodman’s Microfinance Open Book Blog.

David Roodman won the coin toss and started out the parliamentary-style debate by laying out his top ten reasons for why it is incorrect to characterize microfinance as a completely useless tool in poverty alleviation work. Amongst his reasons, he noted the tendency in microfinance literature to exaggerate both positive and negative impacts, and argued instead for deemphasizing the most extreme viewpoints for the sake of developing a more evidence-based discourse. He preempted the question of opportunity costs and the accusation by some (including Bateman) that microfinance is diverting resources away from other interventions to the detriment of economic development in some regions. Roodman noted that the data on this question is weak, and that it is both difficult and speculative to prove that microfinance is diverting resources away from more effective or impactful economic development interventions to the detriment of local economies. He cited the randomized control trials on the impact of microfinance that have shown the overall average impact of microfinance to be zero, and in some cases to be slightly positive. Even so, Roodman contends that microfinance comprises a market which needs to be regulated like any other. He emphasized that the term microfinance does not exclusively apply to microcredit, but that it also includes savings, insurance and mobile money transfer solutions which deserve their own evaluation criteria. He refuted Bateman’s suggestion that microfinance does not have a place in the broader vision of industrialization and asserted that there are many innovations in microfinance which deserve critical inquiry and consideration.

Bateman countered by clarifying that he does not argue that there are no benefits to microfinance, but that the evidence indicates that the costs do clearly outweigh the benefits. He also makes the distinction that his critique is limited to microcredit, and that he too feels there is potential in micro savings, insurance and other microfinance tools. He characterizes microcredit as having become corrupted by commercialism, such that the poor are expected to finance their own way out of poverty. He went on to accuse the microfinance community of resisting evidence that demonstrates the negative impacts of microfinance. He interprets this resistance as self-serving, and he suggests that the move by many MFIs towards a financial inclusion paradigm is a way of justifying their own existence in the face of this negative evidence. Milford rebuked Roodman’s assertion that there is no place for extremes in this dialogue, and claimed that in fact it is possible that there is truth in the extremes. Bateman accused Roodman of interpreting the success of the microfinance industry itself as evidence of its own positive impact, and argues instead that we should be seeking evidence for impact in poverty indicators. He advocates for moving resources and inquiry into more locally based solutions to economic development like credit unions, local banks, enterprise development efforts and cash grants and away from microcredit.

The debate was followed by a lively question and answer session.

Social Enterprise Alliance’s 12th Annual Summit, Oct 30th

posted: 2011-10-17 @ 7:34 am EDT

Check out this awesome conference coming up in a couple of weeks!

Get your questions answered at the Social Enterprise Alliance’s 12th Annual Summit, October 30 to November 2, at the downtown Chicago Magnificent Mile Marriott … THE one stop place where you can get everything you always wanted to know about social enterprise.

GO TO THE SUMMIT FOR FREE!: You can win a full Summit registration plus a room at the Marriott.  Click here <https://www.se-alliance.org/newsletter-signup>  to learn more.

The Summit offers expert advice, quality connections, and investor strategies.  Connect with over 750 social entrepreneurs, partners, and field leaders to enhance your human and financial capital, strengthen your supply chain, and help you and your organization scale to new heights.

Our speakers include:

  • Mayor Rahm Emanuel, City of Chicago (invited)
  • Bill Drayton, Ashoka
  • Darell Hammond, KaBOOM!
  • Carla Javits, REDF
  • Paul Carttar, Social Innovation Fund
  • Priya Haji, World of Good and Saveup.com
  • Jim Gibbons, Goodwill Industries International
  • Leila Janah, Samasource
  • Simon Mainwaring, We First
  • Rey Ramsey, TechNet
  • Julius Walls, Formerly of Greyston Bakery and now with Greater Centennial A.M.E. Zion Church
  • David Carleton, FareStart and Catalyst Kitchens
  • Gerald Chertavian, Year Up!
  • Felix Brandon Lloyd, MoneyIsland/BancVue
  • Judy Wicks, White Dog Café and BALLE

Summit 2011 is jam packed with 35% more programming than last year, and Summit registration includes all meals from breakfast Monday morning, October 31, through our closing keynote luncheon on Wednesday, November 2.  For more information on the schedule, speakers, and reasons to join THE national gathering of social enterprise, please click here <https://www.se-alliance.org/annual-summit>  to learn more.  For a Summit schedule, please click here <https://www.se-alliance.org/summit-schedule> .

Five things you didn’t know about microfinance in the US

posted: 2011-09-30 @ 12:21 pm EDT

Yesterday, CGAP posted an insightful blog post that exposes common misconceptions about domestic microfinance and reveals distressing statistics about the U.S.’s economy, further proving the urgent need for microfinance. Microfinance Gateway writes, “As with microfinance clients in other parts of the world, commonly cited reasons for being unbanked are insufficient funds to open an account, banks feel unwelcoming or they do not trust banks, lack of documentation, and a poor credit history or no history.”

Read more: http://www.microfinancegateway.org/p/site/m/template.rc/1.26.17569/