Posts Tagged ‘student microfinance’

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!

Empowering Students to Empower Micro-entrepreneurs

posted: 2010-05-19 @ 3:14 pm EDT

By Alex Dang, “Student-Led Microfinance” panelist

I recently learned that there are more than 120 students registered for the Microfinance USA 2010 Conference.  For a second annual conference that grew tremendously in size, the group of students in attendance grew as well.

This burst in interest in microfinance among students is an indication of a broader trend of greater interest in public service and social entrepreneurship among young people.  Increasingly, students are looking for opportunities to start a career at an innovative non-profit or a socially-conscious company. The concept of combining finance and business to benefit low-income, hard-working individuals seem to be especially attractive to college students looking to devote their skills to a cause that is more meaningful than simply earning profit for shareholders.

I’m excited that the conference will help students learn of the numerous opportunities to contribute their skills towards helping small businesses in the United States.  Making microloans to underserved small businesses in the United States is, in essence, a tiny start-up compared to the Fortune 500 behemoth that is microfinance abroad. Having 120 students attend the conference will hopefully translate into 120 new talented individuals working in U.S. microfinance.

On a personal note, I started my career in microfinance as a student at UCLA with Global Brigades (www.globalbrigades.org), a non-profit organization that empowers university students that volunteer in community development abroad.  I was among 11 students who volunteered to advise a coffee cooperative in Honduras.  I returned from Honduras committed to finding a way to offer that type of technical assistance to small businesses in California.

I’m slated to speak on the student-led microfinance panel, but secretly, I am planning to just listen.  I want to hear how students want to get involved in microfinance and how Global Brigades can empower them. Imagine a U.S. microfinance world where college students across the country are providing financial literacy workshops on credit and savings… or teaching basic accounting and finance to their neighborhood mom-and-pop businesses…  or helping a start-up understand the lending process… I cannot wait!

What Students Can Do to Reach Millions through Microfinance

posted: 2010-05-19 @ 12:38 pm EDT

By Erica Dorn, moderator of the “Student-Led Microfinance” panel

I always look forward to attending a conference. But I have been especially eager to attend a conference specific to US Microfinance. As volunteer partnerships manager for ACCION USA, I am looking forward to meet staff from the other U.S. ACCION offices and to see first hand the scope of domestic microfinance. However, I am looking most forward to meeting some of the over 200 students that are pioneering involvement in US microfinance.

In my role at ACCION USA, I manage our relationships with students, and at the conference, I will be moderating the panel on Student-Led Microfinance. The panelists were chosen to highlight the spectrum of Campus Microfinance clubs. A professor, an advisor, a student leader, and the CEO of a student-driven MFI will be sparking the conversation.

Join us on Friday at 11 a.m. for a panel on Student-Led Microfinance to:

  • Discuss the scope of work in which student Microfinance clubs can be involved;
  • Meet students and professors from across the country that are forging innovations in US microfinance; and
  • Brainstorm the role that MFI’s can play in cultivating the next generation of microfinance practitioners.

Over the last few months I’ve had a chance to connect with students from  across the country, and on Thursday and Friday we will have a chance to explore the scale of Microfinance in the US. There is no doubt that many new ideas will arise. There are many reasons why I am so inspired by students. They bring a pure interest and dedication that can provide fuel to any movement. If US microfinance is to scale to reach millions, what part will students be having in this?

You can prep up for the panel with this  white paper co-authored by FIELD and ACCION USA, which discusses the scope of activities, successes, and challenges of student-led microfinance.

Erica 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.