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The Leila Janah Foundation has announced applications for its 2021 Winter Edition of the Give Work Challenge Program

 The Leila Janah Foundation has announced it is open to applications for its 2021 Winter Edition of the Give Work Challenge Program in which six teams from Kenya and Uganda will be granted seed funding of $4000 each.

The program is a social business plan competition for low-income and young enterprises in East Africa which runs two competitions per year – one for brand new businesses (Winter Edition), and one for existing businesses looking to grow (Spring Edition).

Through the 2021 Winter Edition, the Leila Janah Foundation is targeting women and youth with new business ideas or with existing businesses in the two countries that are not more than six months old. Selected teams will benefit from intensive training, mentorship, learning from each other, gaining market intelligence, and reaching potential new customer bases through various sessions.

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“We are delighted to be hosting the 5th edition of the social business plan competition. As we strive to end global poverty through Giving work, we are stepping outside of the Sama walls to expand our mission. There are Youth in East Africa who like Sama workers and Alumni, are keen to embark on the entrepreneurship journey, but too often lack basic information about how to start and scale a business,” said Liliosa Mbirimi, Program Lead at Leila Janah Foundation. “These entrepreneurs need access to inexpensive capacity building, which is what we are trying to provide through the Give Work Challenge. By doing this, we have seen different winning ventures become sufficient economically, and build household wealth for themselves and those that they employ.”

In order to qualify, all participants should submit a well-thought-out and complete business plan with a clear financial plan and pitch deck. All business plans submitted MUST ensure green business practices, align to the sustainable development goals, have sustainability and circularity principles built into the business model, and finally meet the criteria for providing living wages and spreading employment throughout the region.

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The evaluation process will be guided by the globally recognized Global Social Venture Competition (GSVC) in California and will be scored on a scale of 1-5, equally-weighted to determine a venture’s overall score at each stage of the competition, divided into three rounds.

Milcah Lukhanyu
Milcah Lukhanyuhttps://techmoran.com
I cover tech news across Africa. Drop me an email at [email protected]

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