Saturday, March 29, 2014

...Sustainable Finance

Wednesday March 19th -Friday March 21st




Our first day of the course was focused on laying the foundation for the Girls for Girls programme, facilitation and money earning. I think the dramas (aka: skits) on the different ways to access funding were the highlights of the day. I think the “Mico-Finance” team, my team, did a great job! It was fun and informative.

Our second day was focused on building business skills. We did several activities with the participants that focused on setting a price for an item and writing contracts. The market research game was a fun new element and of course the “run my biz” market game was a crowd pleaser.

A guest speaker also come and talked to the group about Table Banking. Table Banking is a phenomenon that is sweeping the region. At the most basic level, Table Banking is a group model that works like a traditional bank with lower fees for loans etc. A saving element is built into each transaction and members of each Table Bank pay a monthly fee to be a part of the group.

One of the moments I loved most from the course happened on the third day. I arrived in the training room and found some math on the board. Someone was trying to figure out price of an item by including depreciation. After I chatted with the other members of the training team, we discovered that the figures must have been from one the participants who were working out how to price an item or product. Excellent. Not only did the participants understand what we were trying to share, they were working to figure out their own pricing. Very cool.

Our third training day concluded with the famous Steps to Change activity and preliminary work on action plans. The group did super on their action plans. I am very excited to hear which plans become realities. I think there is a ton of potential.

Our final day did also involve a very important discussion between Friends of Londiani and the school teachers and principals. The discussion centered on cost sharing for the Girls for Girls programme and making sanitary towels accessible to all girls in Kipkelion East and West.



From my perspective, the most interesting part of this discussion was the demonstration of how to care for the reusable sanitary towels and the feedback from participants on which towels they thought would work best for the girls.

The girls will be giving the most important feedback. Once the schools turn in an approved action plan for an income generation project, they will receive one of three types of sanitary pads on the market. The girls will test them and give feedback to Friends of Londiani. The goal will be to settle on one or two choices for the girls to use as part of the Girls for Girls programme.

Our third day ended with a bit of a celebration that included singing and dancing. It was brilliant. Of course, my dancing made the crowd laugh, but it was all in good fun. At one point, I closed my eyes and just listened to all of the voices signing. The sound filled my soul.


Londiani is a special place but I think what makes it incredibly special is its people. They care so much to make their community better for the girl child. It is a long journey but they aren’t afraid to take Steps to Change to get them to the goal and in my opinion that makes all of the difference.


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