WOMEN SPECIAL How Women Are Changing the World
As social entrepreneurs, women are uniquely
positioned to understand and address society’s unmet needs.
When students from Egypt, Yemen and Palestine
presented their business plans to panel of judges at the finals of the INJAZ
Al-Arab enterprise competition in Marrakech, the high level businessmen
were forced to sit up and take notice. Challenged on their supply chains,
business models and ability to take on unexpected competition, the 16 and 17
year olds who comprised the teams, many of them girls, had answers for every
challenge, and could show that their innovative ventures were both financially
viable and addressed some of the region’s most pressing social needs.
The students were young team members who had
founded enterprises across the Middle East-North Africa (MENA) region and were
in Morocco for the final round of INJAZ – Al-Arab’s Regional Entrepreneurship
Competition. That these students were in town at the same time as the World
Economic Forum (WEF) was not coincidental. INJAZ founder and CEO, Soraya Salti
was leading a special WEF discussion on the need for innovation in education.
She saw this as an opportunity to both expose the students to the workings of
WEF and, perhaps even more importantly, expose WEF members to the high level of
talent, enthusiasm and passion of the next generation of entrepreneurs.
INJAZ Al-Arab, set up by Soraya, (whose unexpected
death late last year sparked an outpouring of grief in the MENA region) aims to address the massive mismatch
between education offerings and required job skills across the MENA region – a
tremendous task given a recent survey revealed one in three Egyptian university graduates are unemployed, two thirds of young women in the Arab World
remain outside of the workforce, and the MENA region has the highest youth unemployment
rate in the world. The initiative,
modelled on the global organisation, Junior Achievement, encourages students,
especially women, to join after-school clubs to develop their business skills
with topics such as financial and market analysis, business model development,
and leadership.
Having been stymied by the intransigence of the
region’s cumbersome education systems, Soraya approached corporate leaders
instead to help kick-start the initiative. Bypassing schools meant she was able
to organise funding and garner support from corporations and innovative
educators without the constraints of entrenched educational bureaucracies. Once
the business community was on board to offer expertise, experience and
financial support, the programme and the results were apparent, it was very
difficult for the educational institutions to say no.
Women's unorthodox approach to social entrepreneurship
This unorthodox approach to overcoming
bureaucratic hurdles is characteristic of many female social entrepreneurs.
While their male counterparts often see obstructions as battles that need to be
won, female entrepreneurs show a remarkable ability at finding alternative
solutions.
Whether it’s a start up or working through an
existing venture; combating poverty, ensuring access to healthcare, fair
housing or women's empowerment, MENA’s female social entrepreneurs are
addressing the region’s unmet social needs by using business practices and
market mechanisms.
Success stories like Soraya's include Laila
Iskander from Egypt who, through her organisation CID Consulting, and the
zabbaleen garbage collectors of Cairo demonstrated that large-scale
recycling programmes offer employment, generate income and improve living
conditions.
Women see more..
Often initiatives start small – a single
person.
In Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, many ventures
begin with individual women helping traditional producers from their home
village upgrade the quality and marketability of their products to meet
domestic and tourist markets. Once the connection has been made and the
entrepreneur starts making regular trips between the rural community and the
city, the unmet needs of the rural areas become more glaring. Problems with
ineffective education and health care services, transport or housing create
even greater scope and opportunity to make a difference.
In many instances female social entrepreneurs
are more likely to have contact with people outside their own social strata,
than men do. They see more, have a bigger field of vision, and find it easier
to gain trust of women in smaller communities. In the majority of cases the
critical needs of society - education, healthcare, ageing, cultural
preservation –are all elements which are more likely to be attended to by a
community’s women.
Like Soraya, the majority of female social
entrepreneurs have a way of looking for solutions that are not obvious. They
are adept at finding indirect channels to a solution to meet the challenge at
hand.
However there are challenges. In many
traditional communities in all parts of the world there is a great demand on
women to fulfil obligations in the home before attending to those outside. Even
women who have the financial resources to bring in home help, shoulder the full
responsibility of running the household. But while this creates an additional
burden, it also brings into focus more gaps and inefficiencies and hence more
opportunities for social entrepreneurs.
Social enterprise mean business
Another obstacle for women is finance.
Investors hear the word "social"
entrepreneurship and they think charity – when women enter the room and talk
about a social enterprise it exacerbates this assumption and becomes an
additional hurdle for them to overcome.
Social enterprises are not charities, they are
initiatives which use business models and market mechanisms to meet social
needs and rely on a revenue stream to keep their operations sustainable.
A recent study commissioned
by the Cartier Women’s Initiative Awards, (a Cartier, INSEAD
and McKinsey & Company partnership) found that women setting up
entrepreneurial ventures consistently had less access to finance than their
male counterparts. Not only are their business ventures taken less
seriously by financial institutions but they, themselves, set their horizons
below their male counterparts. When seeking financing, women survey their peers
and are more likely to ask investors for $50,000 or $100,000 whereas men,
looking at their peers, ask for 10 or even 100 times that amount. The
report noted that as well as having less capital to work with, women spend more
of their time seeking funding than their male counterparts. It’s a completely
different perspective and highlights a downside to women’s networks; when
women only see other business women as their peers it can diminish
expectations.
Projects like the Cartier Women’s Initiatives
Awards are seeking to change this by expanding women’s circles, giving
participants access to finance, market outlets, supply chains, media, and other
resources that are outside their normal circle of contacts.
Basic needs spur innovation
The rising role of female social entrepreneurs
in the Middle East and North Africa mirrors the rising role and impact of women
across emerging growth markets. Balancing innovation and impact with financial
sustainability is a formidable challenge. But it is from these areas where
people feel they can make a difference in their community, that the most
entrepreneurial ideas take hold.
Hans Wahl, is a director of the INSEAD Social Entrepreneurship Initiative.
Read more at http://knowledge.insead.edu/blog/insead-blog/how-women-are-changing-the-world-4566?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=e939e08e00-10_Mar_mailer3_10_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-e939e08e00-249840429#wTmetJ2uiQqlDFJ6.99
No comments:
Post a Comment