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Home » Archives for microfinance

Help us Celebrate Kiva’s 4th Birthday!

October 19th, 2009
San Francisco
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Christine Oneto

Kiva is celebrating, not only turning 4, but also nearing its milestone of $100 million in microloans to small business entrepreneurs around the world! They are celebrating this event on November 3rd by co-hosting a party at the Brower406136Center 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.

There will be two floors of music and beats from around the globe, including Baba Ken and the Afrobeat Connexion, Shovelman, Gaucho Gypsey Jazz Band, and Erin Brazil. Food from the Slanted Door, Café Gratitude, Neighborhood Fruit, FeelGood Grilled Cheese, and others. Drinks generously provided by Drake’s Brewing Company, Barefoot Winery, and SKYY Vodka. 

Together, we will share the underlying story of Kiva’s milestone and the global inspiration it has created through pioneering community building for social change.  I hope you can make it on November 3rd!

For tickets & to RSVP, see their link at:
http://kivaatthehub.eventbrite.com/%20%0A.
Details:
Date: Tues, November 3, 2009
Time: 6:30 – 9:30 PM
Place: HUB Berkeley at The David Brower Center
2150 Allston Way
Suite 400
Berkeley, CA

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Tags: Birthday, Christine Oneto, girls in tech, Kiva, microfinance, Microlending, Social Good
Posted in San Francisco | No Comments »

The World of Microfinance and How You Can Get Involved

August 21st, 2009
San Francisco
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Tina Tran

On Wednesday, Girls in Tech hosted a panel discussion on “How Microfinance is Changing the Way We Live” featuring an all-star group of women who are leading the charge in microfinance today.  Emily Gasner, executive director of TMC Development Working Solutions, Ashwini Narayanan, general manager at MicroPlace, Casey Wilson co-founder of Wokai, Michelle Kreger, microfinance partnerships manager at Kiva, and Shubha Shankaran, co-founder of United Prosperity shared their personal stories about how they came to be involved with microfinance, and how their organizations are using microfinance loans to help the working poor build self-sustaining businesses to pull themselves out of poverty.securedownload-6

While some organizations mainly provide only microfinance loan support to the poor, TMC Working Solutions and Wokai also provide training and support to help borrowers be better entrepreneurs with technical and business plan development assistance.  This increases the likelihood that the business will be successful and the loan repaid.

Throughout the evening it was clear that the panelists all shared two traits: a deep passion for their work and a deep love of their jobs!  What lucky women!  To be sure, there were many of us in the audience who wanted to know how we could get involved in microfinance.  Michelle from Kiva suggested that people start by going to Kiva.org to view the stories of borrowers, and start lending to get a sense for what it feels like.  For those with language skills, she suggested volunteering translation services to Kiva by translating borrowers’ stories and profiles in their native language to English.  Finally, she stressed getting on-the-ground field experience as the best way to get your foot in the door.

Emily from TMC Working Solutions pointed the audience to MicroMentor.org and suggested people who are interested in microfinance join the group Women Advancing Microfinance, where members meet once a month to provide professional development and support to each other and discuss  opportunities and innovation in the industry.

A big thanks to all of wonderful panelists for sharing their personal stories with us and giving us a glimpse into the power of microfinance to greatly impact the lives of the working poor.  Also, special thanks to Sundeep Ahuja, co-founder and president of The Extraordinaries, for moderating the evening’s panel.

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Tags: Ashwini Narayanan, Casey Wilson, Emily Gasner, Kiva, Michelle Kreger, microfinance, Microplace, Shubha Shankaran, Sundeep Ahuja, Tina Tran, TMC Development Working Solutions, United Prosperity, Wokai
Posted in San Francisco | 2 Comments »

How Microfinance + Technology are Changing the Way We Live

July 8th, 2009
San Francisco
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Adriana Gascoigne

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Tags: Adriana Gascoigne, Developing countries, eBay, girls in tech, Kiva, microfinance, Microplace, PayPal, San Francisco, Wokai, Women in Microfinance, women in tech
Posted in San Francisco | 1 Comment »

GIT Presents “How Microfinance is Changing the Way We Live”

July 1st, 2009
Events, San Francisco
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Adriana Gascoigne

Girls in Tech cordially invites you to attend
How Microfinance is Changing the Way We Live
featuring Kiva, Wokai, Microplace, TMC Working Solutions and PayPal3702803010_60418c1690_t

Microfinance is changing the way we look at sustainable living, economic development and welfare throughout the globe, even in the US.logoleafy3

During this Girls in Tech panel discussion we will highlight some of the most influential and powerful women in the microfinance world, as they share the trials and tribulations of running a microfinance or a microlending organization, share inspirational stories on helping women run businesses succeed in developing countries, provide insights on how technology is advancing global economies and more.logo

What is Microfinance?
Microfinance refers to the provision of financial services to low-income clients, including consumers and the self-employed. The term also refers to the practice of sustainably delivering those services. Microcredit (or loans to poor microenterprises) should not be confused with microfinance, which addresses a full range of banking needs for poor people.paypal_logo

More broadly, it refers to a movement that envisions “a world in which as many poor and near-poor households as possible have permanent access to an appropriate range of high quality financial services, including not just credit but also savings, insurance, and fund transfers.” Those who promote microfinance generally believe that such access will help poor people out of poverty.microplace-logo

RSVP at: http://gitmicrofinance.eventbrite.com/

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Tags: Adriana Gascoigne, girls in tech, Kiva, microfinance, Microlending, Microplace, PayPal, San Francisco, TMC Working Solutions, Wokai
Posted in Events, San Francisco | No Comments »

Using Technology to Disrupt Poverty

May 20th, 2009
All Chapters
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Tina Tran

Last week I spent the better part of three days in Palo Alto at the annual meeting for the National Center of Women in Technology (NCWIT). Over the three days, the speaker that inspired me most was Jessica Jackley, co-founder of Kiva, the world’s first micro-lending marketplace for the working poor.

Kiva works by connecting entrepreneurs in the developing world with lenders (people like you and me) who provide interest-free loans via the Kiva.org website. Millions of dollars in loans are provided each month to the working poor in over 50 developing countries. With a loan of only a few hundred dollars, the working poor are able to invest in a self-staining future. Examples of types of investments include the purchase of a cow to plow land, or purchase of materials to build a fruit stand.

Jessica emphasized four principles that have been key to Kiva’s success.

Know Your Mission – Kiva’s mission is to connect people through lending for poverty alleviation.

Stay Open – Kiva adopted crowdsourcing, which opened up the opportunity for volunteers to log onto Kiva’s site and translate people’s stories from all over the world. Everyone can give in their own way.

Iterate – Kiva took a simple idea and launched in 2005 with a site that consisted of only three pages. Today Kiva offers individual stories and profiles in many languages and provides a myriad of ways for people to build community and contribute.

Focus on Individuals – Kiva empowers individuals on both sides of the equation. Borrowers gain hope for a better, self-sustaining life, while the site gives lenders tools to easily build lending teams and spread the word about Kiva organically.  Kiva’s intense focus on individuals also allows it to have a loan pay-back rate in the high 90s.

Kiva’s growth has been phenomenal and these principles can certainly be applied to for profit and non-profit businesses alike.

It is amazing how the areas of microfinance and social good have become so sexy while traditional businesses are struggling to stay alive. It’s a tough time for a lot of us, but overall, perhaps the massive disruption of wealth will help us appreciate the important things in life, and replace our emphasis on wealth with that of meaning. Technology has powerfully transformed the way we live, breathe and do business. Why not harness technology as Kiva does — to disrupt poverty and advance social good.  That’s what I call having your cake and eating it too.

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Tags: Kiva, microfinance, NCWIT, Social Good, Tina Tran
Posted in All Chapters | No Comments »

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