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DijITali equips cyber cafés with skills for more employment opportunities

DijITali, a social enterprise that offers entrepreneurship skills to over 480 digital centers also known as cybercafes has launched an innovative B2B offering that connects clients and partners,

the Dijitali centers act as the client’s local, periodical satellite offices or solution partners, giving them access to a community that already has a trusting relationship with the centers

Dijitali selected the digital centers to work with based on the locations and capacity (they each need to have basic computing equipment and capacity to participate in the offerings).

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DijITali’s targeted intitiatives has seen the number of digital centers grow from 172 at the end of 2020 to 487 in October, with more cybercafes applying to be considered.

The project has so far created 200 new jobs in the last 18 months, as well as supported employment for an additional 500 young people who own digital centers across the country

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‘’Since we started working with our Dijitali centers in June 2020, over 33% of the centers have increased their incomes by between 60% and 200%. This impact is as a result of capacity building, asset financing, upskilling and opportunity creation.’’ Said Tania Ngima, Managing Director DijITali.

Ms Ngima explained that part of the capacity and skills developed for the Dijitali centers and their shop attendants include design skills, marketing 101, tendering services, e-commerce, and digital marketing, E-citizen, and E-government training (HELB, NSSF, Ekra, NEMIC/TSC), cashflow and financial management. 

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According to the company, their ideal client is one who wants to expand their footprint into the peri-urban and rural areas without significant investment into rent, staff and other overheads.

Their departure from the term ‘cybercafe’ into digital center has been prompted by the fact that these micro-enterprises are no longer just serving as a platform for people to access the internet, but doing a lot more in the communities by working with larger businesses, schools etc.

83.4 percent of Kenya’s workforce is in the informal sector and because of the pandemic, 544,000 people in this sector lost their source of income according to the economic survey 2021. This means there is a need to focus on the informal sector and enhance their skills to ensure they can sustain themselves. 

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

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