From Mangoes to Skype – A Kiva Fellow’s Take on the Transformative Power of Technology
Have you met my friend Stephanie Sibal? She is dynamite.
A San Francisco local who spent her childhood in Manila, Philippines, Stephanie is a globetrotter and master of reinvention. A tech PR executive turned fashion student and an aspiring entrepreneur, she became a member of Kiva’s 14th class of fellows in Cambodia in January. Many of you who read this blog are familiar with Kiva, a well-regarded non-profit organization with a mission to alleviate poverty. The organization uses the Internet and a worldwide network of microfinance institutions to allow people like you and me lend as little as $25 to help create opportunity for someone in a developing country.
Since Cambodia’s unreliable postal system prevented care packages filled with the latest issues of Vogue and Elle, Stephanie and I relied on the mighty Web to stay in touch throughout her fellowship. In her limited time at Internet Cafes, I fed her nuggets of information from her homeland, including mobile shots of the latest window displays in SoHo and news regarding Charlie Sheen’s meltdown, Kim Kardashian’s omnipresence and New York’s schizophrenic weather. In return, Stephanie told me about her latest field trips to Kiva borrowers’ mango field and silk factory near Siem Reap, Cambodia’s local and expat community, and her unexpected house guests, two geckos named Gordon Gecko and Lady Koko.
Through our chats and recreational reading, I learned a great deal about microfinance and became fascinated with stories of female entrepreneurs in rural Cambodia. I decided to interview Stephanie as she wrapped up her Kiva projects and prepared for an enviable stopover in Koh Phi Phi before returning to the beautiful Bay Area this month. I hope you enjoy this Q&A and share your thoughts with us.
Read the rest of this entry »



















Center in Berkeley, with The Hub Bay Area and GOOD Magazine. So, come help toast their 4 years of wonderful work with Kiva and these two great organizations.
I was recently introduced to the non-profit organization, CARE, by a friend CEO of 






Last week I spent the better part of three days in Palo Alto at the annual meeting for the 
Now is a great time for us to pitch in, forget our own problems for a little while, and gain perspective and balance by helping those who are struggling with life’s necessities — food, shelter and safety. There’s no gift like the gift of hope. And lucky us, there are so many opportunities for giving. You can find the cause that resonates most with you through 



















