Posts Tagged ‘entrepreneurship’

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 1/20/2012

posted: 2012-01-20 @ 6:00 am EST

What’s an Entrepreneur? The Best Answer Ever

By Eric Schurenberg, Inc.com As an entrepreneur, you surely have an elevator pitch, the pithy 15-second synopsis of what your company does and why, and you can all but repeat it in your sleep. But until recently, I’d never seen a good elevator pitch for entrepreneurship itself—that is, what you do that all entrepreneurs do?

Kiva’s Secret Project To Let You Give Peer-To-Peer Loans | SOCAP

By SOCAP Blog But many lenders assumed–not surprisingly, given Kiva’s marketing and web design–that the smiling face on the other end of the PayPal transaction got the exact cash they lent out. A minor kerfuffle ensued in 2009 when a blogger broadcast …

Social impact is an integral part of investors agenda – Microfinance Focus

By Microfinance Focus Bob Annibale speaks about the vision of Citi Microfinance for the global microfinance sector. … There also are significant unbanked and underserved communities in the United States and we have some very interesting partners and initiatives there too, particularly for savings and asset building. At Citi, we continually look for innovative solutions to tailor our existing products to our wide variety of clients and partner MFIs and to specialized banks, microfinance funds and donors. Mobile …

Banorte targets Mexico’s underbanked with mobile-based service

By Finextra … has teamed with payments specialist Rev Worldwide to launch a mobile-based financial services programme aimed at the country’s millions of underbanked. …

Obama to Elevate SBA Chief

By Emily Maltby, The Wall Street Journal President Barack Obama said Friday that he will exercise his executive authority to elevate the head of the U.S. Small Business Administration to a cabinet-level position.

ZestCash Closes $73 Million in Funding

by Juan Carols Perez, PCWorld Traditional “payday” lenders offer small, short-term loans to borrowers who are known as underbanked, because they can’t get loans from banks and other ..

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 1/6/2012

posted: 2012-01-06 @ 10:40 am EST

Development as Industry Building is microfinance’s greatest strength

By Microfinance Focus In his book, David also recommends investing less in microcredit for fear of bubbles, favoring the development of safer services such as savings, insurance, and money transfers, and—lastly—looking to new technologies to revolutionize financial …

As Banks Start Nosing Around Facebook and Twitter, the Wrong Friends Might Just Sink Your Credit

By Adrianne Jeffreys, BetaBeat But there’s a nightmare scenario: if banks learn how to use social media, they could gather information they aren’t allowed to ask for on a credit application—including race, marital status and receipt of public assistance—or worse, to redline segments of the social graph.

2012: The Year Of The Entrepreneur?

By Scott Gerber, TIME Even in the developing world, entrepreneurship has emerged as a driving force behind the eradication of poverty thanks to Kiva and other micro-loan financiers. Whereas a traditional office or retail space was a necessity less than a decade ago, today, …

Small Signs That Small Business Lending Is Up

By Angus Loten, Wall Street Journal A study by Pepperdine University found that more than 60% of small-business loan applications last year were denied. According to the National Federation of Independent Business, a Washington, DC-based small business lobby group, most small-business …

Bring Back Boring Banks

By Amar Bhide, New York Times The Dodd-Frank financial reform act of 2010 did nothing to secure large deposits and very little to curtail risk-taking by banks. It was a missed opportunity to fix a regulatory effort that goes back nearly 150 years. Before the Civil War, …

What the world can learn from the Indian microfinance crisis?

By Microfinance Focus 2 A better understanding of the needs of low income clients for financial products so that the industry evolves from the simple regime of the “one size fits all” conventional Grameen loan to a set of (3-4) products specifically designed for the clients …

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 12/16/11

posted: 2011-12-16 @ 2:35 pm EST

Small business loan demand shows new economic gain

By Lynn Adler, Reuters Small businesses re-engineered themselves during the recession and are now more confident and profitable, with lower-risk loan …

Indian Microfinance Crisis – One year later

By Microfinance Focus The only microfinance practitioner on the panel, Suresh Krishna, Managing Director of Grameen Koota concluded the discussion. “IFMR and MicroSave have done a good job post AP crisis. One message I take from here from both MicroSave and IFMR is that …

Big Ideas for Small Business

By Ed Paisley & Sean Pool, Center For American Progress High-growth startup companies are one of the most important drivers of job creation in the economy today. They are also vital to tackling some of our most pressing long-term societal challenges such as improving our health care, education, and energy systems…

Wise Ethical Investment Seeks Profit

By Geoff Nairn, Wall Street Journal The microfinance industry has evolved considerably since the 1970s, when Grameen Bank pioneered microloans in Bangladesh. Today, there are more than 3000 microfinance institutions serving more than 150 million customers in over 100 countries. …

Uptown Microlenders Help Immigrant Women Launch Businesses

By Yumna Mohamed, The Uptowner Among other microlenders operating uptown is ACCION USA which, since its establishment in the US more than 20 years ago has provided 18000microloans with a …

Crowd-Sourced Giving Changes Philanthropy

Hosted by Neal Conan, NPR Websites like Kickstarter, Kiva and Giving Tree are changing how people donate money. With what’s known as microphilanthropy, individuals, non-profits and even small businesses raise money directly from individual donors. Journalist and author Laura …

Fed Seeks to Protect Even a Small Bank

by Daniel Indiviglio and Wayne Arnold, New York Times The central bank spent nearly two years scrutinizing the takeover of the tiny Bonneville Bank by the prepaid debit card firm Green Dot. The soundness of even niche banks matters. But in the too-big-to-fail era, the watchdog’s slow process is an …

Google joins with Seattle angels to bankroll non-profit education microloan upstart Vittana

by John Cook, GeekWire Vittana, the Seattle non-profit that’s facilitating micro-loans to students in developing countries, has received a $250000 grant from Google. Others backing the organization include entrepreneurs Hadi and Ali Partovi; former Microsoft VP Mike Murray; …

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 12/9/11

posted: 2011-12-09 @ 2:09 pm EST

Occupy Big Business: The Sharing Economy’s Quiet Revolution

By Sara Horowitz, The Atlantic These and other “collective consumption” companies are part of the new economy arising out of necessity, as traditional businesses and government are increasingly unable to meet Americans’ needs and provide basic supports.

The MicroPlace Ambition: Unleashing $35 Billion in Financial Services Funding …

By Rahim Kanani, Forbes In an interview with Ashwini Narayanan, General Manager of MicroPlace, we discussed the origin and evolution of the company, the nature of social impact investing and microfinance, organizational milestones of recent past, and how to convince the average investor of the enormous potential of impact investing…

Chicago putting $1 million into microloans to spur small businesses

by John Byrne, Chicago Tribune He got the funds from Accion Chicago, a nonprofit that grants small loans to people who don’t qualify to get them from banks. “Without that, we wouldn’t …

Why Start-Ups Need ‘Crowd-Funding’

by Tom Szaky, New York Times (blog) It has been used, variously, to raise seed financing for socially responsible start-ups (Launcht), to supply microcredit in the developing world (Kiva), to collect donations (Karma411), to collect campaign contributions (the 2008 Obama campaign) and to …

Global Microcredit Summit 2011 Report

by Microfinance Focus Insisting that his work with social business is not a move away from microcredit, but that microcredit is in fact a social business, he argued for business-oriented solutions to social problems, drawing on many experiences as MD of Grameen Bank. …

Supporting Small Business in a Big Way

by Erin Eggers, San Antonio Express As 2011 comes to a close, the founder of San Antonio-based Acción Texas has much to celebrate about the past year. Janie Barrera and the organization she …

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 12/2/2011

posted: 2011-12-02 @ 3:18 pm EST

Beyond micro-credit: an evolving microfinance | Engenderings

by Engenderings, The London School of Economics and Political Science Joanna Wilkins, drawing on her research and her experience working in microfinance for BRAC, argues that we need to reconceptualise microfinance and its priorities and to increase and extend access to financial tools to those previously …. The consequences of creating a pseudo, or shadow banking system, not dissimilar to that of the red-lining and predatory lending seen in the Dustbelt of the United States, could result in the marginalization of those microcredit was created for in …

MICROFINANCE PAPER WRAP-UP: “Too Much Microcredit? A Survey of the Evidence on …

by MicroCapital, Review of Paper Written by Jessica Schicks and Richard Rosenberg The authors of this paper discuss over-indebtedness from the perspective of microborrowers and examine related issues including evidence of its prevalence, causes and consequences…

Statistics on the Unbanked

NerdWallet The un- and underbanked do not represent a cross-section of society as a whole. On the contrary, they’re far more likely to be minorities, low-income, and less …

Banks may have opportunity with under-served market

By Chris Sieroty, Las Vegas Review – Journal The survey also reported that Internet-based payday lending grew by 35 percent between 2009 and 2010, while the general purpose prepaid card business grew by 33 percent and payroll cards by 25 percent. Schutte, whose venture capital firm invests in …

Walmart “Bank” Cannot Beat Big Banks

By Simon Zhen, MyBankTracker.com But, a small part of that group may have opted to join the underbanked population by conducting their finances through major retailers such as Walmart. Walmart offers a host of financial services that would make it a formidable competitor to banks, …

Banking the Unbanked, Looking for Company

by Maria Aspan, American Banker Traditional bankers have been generally uninterested in courting people who do not have or regularly use bank accounts: Because these customers generally do not have much money, the thinking goes, they are unlikely to be very profitable.

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 11/11/2011

posted: 2011-11-11 @ 12:29 pm EST

137 Million of World’s Poorest Received a Microloan in 2010

by MarketWatch (Also in istockanalyst.com, Microfinance Africa, Microfinance Focus, Stock Markets Review, Insurance News Net)      The report’s release precedes the Global Microcredit Summit 2011 to be held November 14-17 in Valladolid, Spain, which will be inaugurated by Her Majesty Queen Sofia and Nobel Peace Prize laureate and Grameen Bank founder, Muhammad Yunus. …

Why “Entrepreneurship” May Be the Buzzword of the Decade

by Kate Jenkins, Microfinance Focus It’s difficult to ignore the growing discontent in the United States and Europe surrounding the excessive power that big banks and other elite minorities have over the average Joe’s political and …

Spanish microlending may no longer be restricted to for-profit sector

by Microfinance Focus The forum on Spanish microfinance legislation convened in Valladolid, Spain on October 24 as a precursor to the Global Microcredit Summit to be held in the same city in November. The forum is made up of over 100 member institutions with an interest in …

St. Louis Microfinance Conference Showcases Positive Impact of Providing …

by MarketWatch While the microfinance movement initially emerged in underdeveloped countries, its principles are being applied to work with low-income communities in the United States. In fact, St. Louis is home to a growing number of microfinance programs, …

To Raise Cash, Restaurants Turn to the Crowd

by Glenn Collins, New York Times Many primarily philanthropic Web sites like Kickstarter and Kiva.org have sought small sums in support of high-risk ventures, arts groups and charities under the rubric of microfinancing and crowd-sourcing. For restaurateurs it provides the added …

Social entrepreneurship and the next generation of giving

By Melissa Steffan, Washington Post Instead, social ventures, including well-known organizations like Grameen Bank in India or Teach for America, often blur traditional organizational lines. And the idea that for-profit companies can generate social good is not new, according to Phil …

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 10/28/11

posted: 2011-10-28 @ 1:10 pm EDT

Unbanked America

By Catherine Rampell, New York Times As the Pew study cites, the 2009 FDIC National Survey of Unbanked and Underbanked Households found that 31 percent of households that dropped a bank account

Crowdfunding draws interest from entrepreneurs

by Steven Overly, Washington Post The concept is not dissimilar from microfinance organizations, such as Kiva or MicroPlace, that dispatch small, crowdfunded loans to screened small-business owners around the world. Some even allow financiers to accrue interest.

Urban microfinance clients move out of poverty faster than rural

by Microfinance Focus These are the findings from a report released by Grameen Foundation that analyses the data collected by Grameen Koota using Progress out of Poverty Index (PPI). Grameen Koota (GK) has analyzed the data for more than 48000 clients who have at least two ..

Sam Adams Helps Finance Small Companies « CBS Boston

CBS Boston O’Garro turned to Samuel Adams Brewing the American Dream, a microlending program funded by Boston Beer Co. and run by ACCION USA, a Boston-based

ACCION launches Delta lending operation | Arkansas News …

Arkansas News ACCION Delta, as it will be called, strictly non-stop for business Wednesday morning. The association specializes in lending indispensable collateral and

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> .

Micro-level Stories and the Big Picture

posted: 2010-05-14 @ 12:30 pm EDT

By Patricia Wada

This probably marks me as a newbie, but my interest in microfinance began when I read Banker to the Poor by Muhammad Yunus. I was working at the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan, and was interested in how microfinance could be a piece of the international development puzzle. Fast forward a few years and you find me now, a microfinance enthusiast at the tail end of an eight-month internship at Kiva.

Kiva is a website that lets you make micro-loans of as little as $25 to low-income borrowers around the world. A quick browse through the Kiva lending page offers a glimpse into the lives of these borrowers.

In Peru, Edgar is borrowing to buy seeds for his agriculture business. In Senegal, Tacko is borrowing for her mobile phone business. And right here in the United States, Ana is borrowing to improve her childcare business. It is these individual stories that originally attracted me to Kiva, and they continue to fuel my enthusiasm for microfinance.

One of the sessions I’m most looking forward to is “The Rise of P2P Lending.” Peer-to-peer lending sites like Kiva have opened up a new funding channel for microfinance. At the same time, they provide something traditional funding sources don’t: an educational opportunity for individuals who lend on the site.

I’m also excited to hear from individual micro-loan borrowers. I’ve spent a lot of time working with over 400 volunteers who edit and translate their profiles for Kiva, so I can’t wait to meet some Kiva borrowers at the “Kiva Lender-Borrower Meet-Up.”

The “Opening Session: Conversation with Maria Shriver” is likely to be a highlight for me because of the chance to hear Maria Shriver speak, along with Kiva President Premal Shah. Thursday night’s “Taste of Microentrepreneurship” event will combine two things I’m passionate about microfinance and food, as microentrepreneurs will be representing Bay Area kitchens in a “food festival”!

On the other end of the spectrum, the conference offers sessions on important big-picture questions. I’m particularly interested in “What is a Fair Price to Pay for Good Credit?” and “Is Savings Even More Important than Credit?” These have been hot topics in the Kiva office and in the microfinance world, and I’m looking forward to hearing the experts weigh in.

The conference promises a great mix of sessions for seasoned microfinance professionals and relative newbies alike. It’s not too late to register for individual sessions or for the whole conference. I hope to see you there!

Patricia Wada has just completed an eight-month internship in Kiva’s Review and Translation Team. She previously worked in the publications department of the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan. A believer in the importance of microfinance for poverty alleviation, Patricia is continually inspired by the stories of microfinance clients all over the world.

Continuing My Microfinance Education

posted: 2010-05-13 @ 11:06 am EDT

By Delaine Zody

For 21 years I have worked in an inner city school in the middle of California’s Central Valley. My students come from very poor neighborhoods with little chance to see what is beyond their six blocks. 

Seeing a need I helped build a program at my school, called the Marketing Academy. Through the program we showed students how to start their own business, and through guest speakers and field trips, opened them up to a world of possibilities.  Many of these students have gone on to have successful careers and started their own businesses. 

Seeing this success made me want to continue to work with organizations that can help others be successful. So as I planned my third career, I took into account how microfinance was doing just that and where I might fit.  My research started with reading Muhammad Yunus’s book, “Banker to the Poor” and then lead to an interest in Microfinance USA conferences

This year, when I received the notice for Microfinance USA 2010 and learned that it would be in San Francisco, I was doubly excited.  Not only would I get to learn more about this method of helping people get out of poverty through entrepreneurship, but I could do it in my favorite city, and new hometown, San Francisco. 

I signed up immediately and was even able to get registered for the Micro-entrepreneur Tour. This session is all about visiting microfinance borrowers at their places of business throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. I am really excited to learn about what real entrepreneurs are doing and how microfinance has helped them.

Another session that I am excited to attend is Student-Led Microfinance Clubs.  With my background in teaching and the examples I have read of two schools where teachers have had students invest in microfinance organizations such as Kiva. I am looking forward to hearing what other students are doing to start microfinance clubs on campus. 

The Opening Session: Conversation with Maria Shriver will be a great way to start the conference and hear the First Lady of California’s take on the growth of microfinance and how it will help California. Just having Maria Shriver attend lends an air of excitement to the two-day event. Looking forward to seeing you all there!

 

Delaine Zody is currently a teacher in an inner city school where she has collaborated on two smaller learning communities within the business department.  She teaches entrepreneurship and is a microfinance enthusiast. Blogging athttp://dkzody.wordpress.com/