Posts Tagged ‘Kiva’

Weekly Microfinance News & Announcements 2/17/2012

posted: 2012-02-17 @ 9:42 am EST

Obama’s SBA Budget: Doing Less With More

By Robb Mandelbaum, New York Times Microloan counseling would not fare as badly, but other programs that serve the most disadvantaged small businesses, like HubZones and outreach to Native …

Social entrepreneurs use startups to change the world

By VentureBeat With 50000 visitors to its website per day (higher than any other nonprofit with the exception of Wikipedia), Kiva is often cited as the premier success story in this space. Kiva’s President, Premel Shah, recently recognized as a young global leader by …

Who Needs to be Educated for Us to Achieve Financial Inclusion?

By Center for Financial Inclusion Maybe the first focus of financial education should not be at the client level. Maybe the appropriate starting point is for those of us employed by the microfinance industry to better understand our clients’ financial needs, capabilities, and aspirations.

Could Google Wallet be Google’s next failure?

By Marguerite Reardon, CNET (blog) On Friday, Google temporarily disabled the ability to set up new prepaid cards in its Google Wallet app after it was discovered that if someone lost his Google Wallet-enabled phone and the screen of the device wasn’t locked that someone finding the …

Starbucks’s Schultz to Expand Jobs Fund After Raising $2 Million

By Leslie Patton, Bloomberg Businessweek Josh Davis cofounder of Gelato Fiasco Inc in Brunswick Maine received a $140000 loan from Coastal Enterprises Inc through Create Jobs for USA to open a …

Kabbage Crunches UPS Shipping Data to Approve Small Business Loans

By Penny Crosman, American Banker “If you have a FICO score below 720, banks won’t look at you for a small business loan,” says Kathryn Petralia, co-founder and COO of Kabbage, a provider of working capital to small online merchants. “It’s horrible, perverted logic because small …

The Lessons of Microfinance History

By David Roodman, CGAP The chapter would tell stories, such as how Yunus came to devise his form of microcredit, how John Hatch came to village banking. And it would show statistics—how many borrowers and savers there are, in what countries they can be found.

Microfinance in Bangladesh: It’s Not What You Thought

By Elizabeth Rhyne, Huffington Post (blog) The model of microfinance in Bangladesh, as it originated at Grameen Bank, involved tiny loans to women with fixed terms and amounts, group liability, weekly meetings, forced payments into a group savings account, and a set of 16 social pledges chanted …

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 ..

Session Summary: The Impact of Volunteers on Microfinance

posted: 2011-06-22 @ 11:17 am EDT

By Alicia Quinn, ACCION USA

Given current economic conditions and the reverberating effects on non-profits, many organizations are relying on volunteers more than ever. This is a mutually beneficial relationship; organizations receive labor at little to no cost and volunteers fulfill their desire to give back. However, there are farther-reaching impacts of volunteers on microfinance organizations. Four professionals discussed these effects during a panel moderated by Erica Dorn, Manager of Volunteer Partnerships for ACCION USA, at the 2011 Microfinance USA Conference.

  • Catchafire matches skill-based professionals with the specific needs and projects of non-profits. Rachael Chong, founder and CEO, discussed how this pro bono service platform allows volunteers to apply the knowledge and skills developed in their careers to assist the needs of non-profit organizations. Each volunteer meets one-on-one with an executive of the non-profit and fulfills the project on his or her own time, without the pressure and constraints of a specific schedule. In addition to the application of the volunteer’s specific skill set, this approach allows best practices to be shared and builds organizational capacity.
  • Kiva has developed a model in which volunteers assist the organization without having to leave their computers. Alexandra Jafee, Review and Translation Manager, described how volunteers serve as the voice of entrepreneurs by editing and translating the stories of their businesses. These stories are then posted to the Kiva website and donors choose to whom they want to provide funding.
    • Bankers without Borders, a program of Grameen Bank, works with corporate groups to provide expertise to microfinance initiatives around the world. By applying industry knowledge and skills to poverty-alleviation efforts, financial professionals fulfill community service goals while providing skills-based outreach.

While volunteers fill important roles and add value to the organization, however, organizations must carefully manage this relationship. They stressed the importance of treating volunteering like employees of the organization, by providing recognition, opportunities for continuing education, etc. People like feeling appreciated for their efforts. By showing its appreciation, and highlighting the outcomes, of volunteers’ work, organizations have a better chance of gaining sustainable commitments of volunteers to the organization.

As the panelists all highlighted during their discussion, the work and commitment of volunteers in Microfinance is essential for the success of these organizations and, in turn, the entrepreneurs who benefit from these services.

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Day 2 Kickoff: The Intersection of U.S. and International Microfinance

posted: 2011-06-15 @ 7:49 am EDT

By Valbona Bushi, Kiva New York Lending Team

The second day of the conference started off by bringing back to the floor the leaders of the three main organizations behind the conference: Gina Harman (ACCION Network in the U.S.), Premal Shah (Kiva), and Eric Weaver (Opportunity Fund). As the discussion focused around microfinance in the US and internationally, it should be noted that it was just three years ago that this conference started to start discussions around microfinance, and develop stronger connections and learn from each others’ strategies and lessons.

Each organization has had its own setbacks and successes, but combined they have had more than $500 million in impact around the world. Each one currently operates around the globe, but didn’t start off that way. For example, Kiva had its operations for four years outside of the US before deciding to enter its market. The move was really driven by the lenders who didn’t until 2009, and with the financial crisis at hand, started to seek to help their fellow Americans.

Photo by Taylor Davidson of Narratively http://narratively.com

A lesson from Gina, and surprising at that, was that internationally people are looking to change their communities and the lives of their families for the better but lacking the resources, and, here in the US, those resources are there but the distribution channels need to be improved to reach their intended audience. There are 10 million small businesses in the US and 3 billion people in the world lacking access to financial services. In her own words “this is the time to unleash the human resolve and capacity by removing the barriers to financial services.” The beauty of microfinance is that it allows each organization to look beyond the credit score and look to learn about the individual and help them build a better credit history by reporting to the credit bureaus on loan paybacks.

The overall message, through, cautioned that microfinance has been seen as the ‘magic pill’ to fix every problem out there, so organizations must be specific in their missions and realistic with their accomplishments with the key word being ‘finance’. In Eric’s words ‘It is not about repayment rates, but about putting money in the hands of the people that really need it to use to improve their lives in the way that they choose. In addition, recent solutions to the credit crunch have focused on community, with organizations such as Kickstarter, using online and offline communities to support small loans. Who knows where the industry will go from here.

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Microfinance and Savings at Citi

posted: 2011-05-18 @ 1:04 pm EDT

By Bob Annibale
Global Director, Citi Microfinance and Community Development

Citi’s approach to microfinance draws on our global network and our unparalleled array of products and services to create locally tailored yet scalable solutions that meet the needs of unbanked people in our communities. This approach is reflected in the development of Citi Microfinance operations in the United States, in which we focus our efforts on providing economical savings accounts, credit building and best-in-class remittances options for American families.  It is also central to the many Citi Community Development partnerships that are expanding financial inclusion and economic empowerment in communities across the country.

Our innovative strategy is to partner with community organizations like Microfinance USA presenters ACCION and Opportunity Fund, as well as Citi partners and other attendees who will share their ideas and innovations at the conference.  These nonprofits deliver financial products to their clients – often along with financial education and coaching – providing programs that enable Americans to build safety nets, improve their credit scores and send money home to their families abroad.

For example, one of our first – and largest – savings partnerships in the U.S., with Grameen America, capitalized on the international Grameen organization’s work to adapt their microfinance model in the U.S.  We now have over 3,000 clients with Grameen-Citi savings accounts in New York City.  For many of these individuals, this is their first bank account.

We have replicated this model with other partners from Florida to California, including partnerships with Opportunity Fund as well as others with public and charter school networks that offer universal college savings accounts for underserved families.  In the coming months, we will work with our nonprofit strategic partners to embed the Citi Secured Credit Card into their credit-building programs. This is a program we piloted with Justine PETERSEN in Missouri in 2010; we look forward to bringing it to greater scale with other community partners over the course of this year.

I am so glad that important conversations about microfinance are taking place at the Microfinance USA conference - this dialogue reflects an embrace of the role of microfinance as a mainstream strategy for financial inclusion.  My colleagues and I look forward to seeing you there.

Building Capacity: What Every MFI Should Know About U.S. Volunteerism

posted: 2011-04-26 @ 1:13 pm EDT

By Erica Dorn, manager of volunteer partnerships at ACCION USA

There’s a lot of preparation that goes into the Microfinance USA conference, as you could likely imagine. I’ve stopped counting the hours in fact. But yesterday I saw some of the fruit of our planning labor when I had a phone call with the three panelists for the breakout session titled “Building the Capacity of MFI’s Through Volunteerism” –my confidence in the breadth and depth of the conference sky rocketed as we discussed how to make this panel most impactful for attendees.

I am excited to moderate this panel with several extraordinary women, Shannon Maynard from Banker without Borders, Rachael Chong from Catchafire, and Alexandra Jaffe from Kiva will be enlightening attendees about the programs that they have developed to utilize skilled volunteers in microfinance. We’ll be focusing on the following issues and questions:

  • How to measure volunteer program impact
  • How to keep volunteers motivated
  • Should every MFI use volunteers?
  • What are the greatest returns that panelists have seen from their volunteer program?
  • What are the largest costs associated with volunteer programs?

Dedicated volunteers like these make microfinance go 'round at organizations nationwide.

Our phone call reminded me of why I work in not just the field of microfinance but also volunteer management. There are volunteer professionals like Shannon, Alexandra, and Rachael who continue to push the boundaries of what social good organizations are able to accomplish using the skills and talent of dedicated professionals volunteering their time.

I sincerely hope that you will join our Microfinance USA panel on Tuesday May 24th from 11:15-12:15. After hearing the passion and knowledge that was shared on our prep-call, I am confident that whether you work at and MFI or CDFI, or are a volunteer yourself, you will walk away with big ideas of how to expand the capacity of microfinance in the U.S. through volunteerism.

Registration Now Open for P2P Lending Pre-Conference Webinar

posted: 2011-03-11 @ 1:38 pm EST

Whether you’re an active Kiva, Prosper, or Microplace lender or you’ve yet to get your feet wet in peer-to-peer microfinance, you won’t want to miss Microfinance USA’s pre-conference Webinar “P2P Lending: Overcoming Barriers to Access” (March 30, 2011, 5 – 6 PM EST).

The Webinar will offer microfinance practitioners and enthusiasts and in-depth look at the business models behind three separate organizations engaged in P2P lending—Kiva, Lending Club, and People Capital, and discuss how the industry is changing everything from the way we borrow and lend to the notions of philanthropy and investing.
Senior managers from each organization will address key issues such as:

  • What can be considered P2P and what are the structures needed to operate in this space?
  • How is P2P lending building better access to capital and impacting the lives of small business owners and others in the United States?
  • What’s in store for the future of P2P?

Those located in the New York metro area will be able to take part in some “bonus” content and attend a Webinar “watching party” and a follow-up discussion in-person at NYU Stern.

WHEN:

March 30, 2011 5-6 PM EST

WHERE:

  • Online (Register Now)
  • NYU Stern’s Kaufmann Management Center M3-110. Registration is mandatory, in order to be added to the building security list (Register Now)

Partnerships, Communication, and Community Resonating Themes at Microfinance USA: Opening Plenary Summary

posted: 2010-05-27 @ 8:55 am EDT

It wasn’t difficult for the roughly 700 audience members to follow the collective story that was told by the four entrepreneurs participating in the Microfinance USA 2010 opening plenary. Maria Shriver, First Lady of California, Premal Shah of Kiva, and two local Kiva borrowers (Mandy and Erik) each told a story about pursuing an idea or a dream—although each certainly went in a separate direction—engouraging others to do the same.

A few key messages were part of their story:

  • Partnership: This theme was discussed multiple times at Microfinance USA 2010 and it was the first topic of conversation during the opening plenary. Premal Shah began the panel recounting the partnership that began two years ago when Maria Shriver first visited Kiva. At the visit in Kiva’s office Maria simply asked Premal, “why not [microfinance] in our own backyard?” Two years later, Premal, Maria, and two U.S. microentrepreneurs funded through Kiva and U.S. field partner Opportunity Fund are talking about the success of that partnership.
  • Communication: Maria’s experience as a journalist and her effort communicating the cause of U.S. microfinance is one of the biggest strengths she brings to the movement. She emphatically reminded the audience of the importance of communicating the microfinance story. She emphasized the importance of keeping the message simple and straightforward.
  • Community: The entrepreneurs brought to light the real value of their struggles to access capital when they were starting their businesses, and told the audience their definition of “community” –the interdependence that encourages them to better themselves, their business, and society.

The panelists’ stories will keep evolving, but what they all agreed on is the urgency to share the microfinance message. In the words of Premal, if something “doesn’t work that means that you’ve gotten to the next starting point.” U.S. Microfinance, even after decades of work is still at a starting point— partnerships, communication, and community will help us see where we can take the microfinance movement, together.

Maria Shriver started the Women’s Conference to empower women to be Architects of Change in their homes, their workplaces, their communities and the world around them. Maria has been especially dedicated to empowering woman through entrepreneurship. Her conversation publicly and with organizations like Kiva, ACCION USA, and Opportunity Fund are helping to bring greater awareness to the cause.

Erica Dorn is the Volunteer Partnerships Manager at ACCION USA. Her work is targeted at bringing financial access to microentrepreneurs in the United States by harnessing the leadership of students. She served as the first domestic Kiva Fellow. Find her on twitter @eldorn.

Kiva Lender-Borrower Meet-Up: Taking Peer-to-Peer Lending to a New Level!

posted: 2010-05-26 @ 6:07 pm EDT

By Patricia Wada, conference attendee

Kiva connects lenders and borrowers all over the world. Normally, though, the connection both starts and ends on the Internet. That’s why meeting three Kiva borrowers in the flesh was a rare chance and truly one of the highlights of the Microfinance USA 2010 conference for me.
Serena (a personal trainer), Tasneem (a professional photographer), and Gloria (a mail and shipping center owner) are clients of Kiva field partner Opportunity Fund. A total of 494 lenders contributed to funding their loans on Kiva’s website. At the meet up, we learned what the borrowers thought of the Kiva experience.

Kiva meet up photo

Serena, Tasneem, and Gloria shared their experiences with Opportunity Fund and Kiva


A common theme was that knowing that there was a group of people who believed in them, from the Kiva lenders to the staff at Opportunity Fund, made them believe more in themselves. When Serena saw her profile on Kiva showing the pictures of all the lenders who supported her, she said, she felt a connection and didn’t want to let them down. Tasneem knew exactly how many people had lent to her: 172. She appreciates that goodwill and said, “It makes me feel really good that there are people who want to help us get our dreams started.” And Gloria emphasized that her business could not have started or survived recent dips in demand without the support from Kiva lenders, Opportunity Fund, and other organizations like Urban Solutions and Renaissance.

Kiva lenders

A few of Tasneem's lenders from her Kiva profile

An interesting question came up, shifting the focus momentarily from one side of the connection to the other: Why do Kiva lenders fund these loans? A number of audience members had answers, all unique. I just want to help. Good karma. The satisfaction of re-lending the same money again and again to reach multiple people.
Another thing that struck me was the pride that each of the entrepreneurs showed in her business. Serena says she is showing her son that you pursue an education to have a career that you love. Tasneem says that she enjoys the ability to run with her own ideas and see the fruits of her own efforts. Talking about their work, and telling the stories of how they got started, they couldn’t help but smile. And they all agreed that although running their own business isn’t always easy, they wouldn’t have it any other way. Asked whether she would go back to working for someone else, Gloria quipped, “I can only go back if I’m the CEO.”

Are you a Bay Area local? If so, you can support these amazing entrepreneurs! Take advantage of Gloria’s neighborhood mail and shipping center at Parkside Postal in San Francisco. Contact Tasneem through her business, fotoClara* in San Jose, for your photography needs. And get in shape with Serena at Noxcuses Fitness (that’s “no excuses”) in Palo Alto.
*Note: Tasneem’s website is undergoing some improvements and should be up in a couple of days. For now, bookmark it!

Patricia Wada has just completed an eight-month internship in Kiva’s Review and Translation Team, working with the staff and the more than 400 editing and translation volunteers who facilitate the posting of microloan borrowers’ profiles on Kiva’s website. 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.

Session Take-aways: The Rise of P2P Lending

posted: 2010-05-21 @ 3:56 pm EDT

By Rob Packer, conference attendee

Even though the peer-to-peer (p2p) model is one of the oldest forms of lending, the Web has revolutionized process. Websites mean that instead of just being friends or family members, lenders and borrowers can now be complete strangers, encouraging borrowers to “market” their personal stories to lenders to get a loan.

This was the introduction to the conference session on the rise of P2P lending.  Although I work for P2P lender Kiva, this panel discussion helped me better understand the differences between the various online microfinance lending and investing websites; Kiva, Lending Club, and Microplace were represented on the panel.

Kiva, the oldest of the three, is a non-profit organization that uses an intermediated lending model. Online lenders or social investors who have proven to be exceptionally risk-tolerant lend $25 or more to a borrower, the client of one of Kiva’s many microfinance institutions around the world.  When the borrower pays the loan back, the lender receives their original $25, which they can then re-loan (and if the borrower doesn’t pay back, the lender doesn’t receive anything either).

Similarly, Microplace connects lenders with borrowers online, but allows lenders to earn interest on the loans they make.  A social investor’s money is pooled and invested in microfinance projects throughout the world with a return of 1 to 3%. However, although both Kiva and MicroPlace consider that the importance of the stories of microfinance is one of their reasons for success, Lending Club works on an anonymous basis, much like a traditional bank. There are savings and lending portfolios that essentially cut out expensive “middle men” (banks), helping to provide cheaper loans to people the U.S. for a variety of purposes ranging from loans to pay for honeymoons to loans to pay off credit-card debt to more traditional microfinance loans to set up or improve businesses.

What struck me most about the discussion—and much of the conference as a whole—is the link between microfinance and traditional banking. The traditional target markets for microfinance institutions fall outside those of conventional banking: when bank lending contracts (as it has during the recession), the market for microfinance grows and even laid-off bankers find they can’t get bank loans. This environment helped p2p lending grow in 2009.

Kiva, for example, saw its loan activity increase, and 2009 was its most successful year to date. MicroPlace continued to provide returns on the money invested, outperforming bank accounts as well as stocks in terms of returns. Rob Garcia from Lending Club provided the most interesting food for thought when he mentioned that borrowers on Lending Club are more likely to pay off their Lending Club loan than their credit card, because they perceive that their web-based loans come from an “Average Joe,” while credit cards are part of the banks that have caused so much anger in the crisis.

My main takeaway on the discussion was that while the three different organizations may appear similar, they are all very different.  Essentially, only Lending Club is a true peer-to-peer lender (Kiva and MicroPlace are intermediary-based). And it was this diversity that made me realize that these websites are here to stay.

NOTE: All 3 presenters encouraged the audience to try P2P lending out and experience it first hand.  With as little as $25, you can start to make a difference in a borrower’s life on any of their websites.  At the session, Rob Garcia of Lending Club offered conference participants a $50 lending club credit to help people get started. Use “MicroFinanceUSA” as the secret code, or use this link to open your account.

Rob Packer is Portfolio Manager for the Americas at Kiva, working worldwide to connect people through lending to alleviate poverty. He has recently completed a Fellowship with Kiva which saw him based in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan and Barranquilla, Colombia.