The Silicon Valley Microfinance Network

The Bay Area’s premier microfinance education and networking organization

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December 6th Meeting Recap – Panel: Is Microfinance Dying?

Posted by hilarywilson on December 12, 2011

SVMN Panel: Is Microfinance Dying?

Featuring: Dr. Ruth Shapiro, Maya Chorengel, Sean Foote, Dr. Lamia Karim

Tuesday, December 6th 2011

Panel Recap Written by SVMN Volunteer Elayna Yussen

SVMN packed the house last Tuesday evening with a diverse speaker panel including Maya Chorengel of Elevar Equity, Sean Foote of Labrador Ventures and faculty at UC Berkeley Haas School of Business, and Dr. Lamia Karim, Author, Anthropologist and Associate Director of Center for the Study of Women and Society at University of Oregon.  Dr. Ruth Shapiro moderated the panel.  While collectively, we may not have reached conclusive agreement regarding the assertion that Microfinance is dying, we did hear a wide range of interesting analogies to the Microfinance Industry – from the recent housing crisis to the French Revolution.

Following opening statements the moderator asked the panel for their thoughts on privatization within the industry.  Dr. Karim was skeptical of the benefits and stressed how careful we must be when working with very poor people.  This topic was close to home for Maya, whose firm was an early investor in SKS Finance.  She noted the benefits of transparency, getting professionals involved in organizational governance, and improving access to capital.  At the same time, she said privatization provides incentive to scale and realize profits to attract investors.  This, then, can create temptation for lenders to become unscrupulous, especially if industry regulation is lacking.  Sean agreed that not all lenders are ethical, but felt that the influx of capital to the market was overall, a positive.

Idealism is directly proportional to your distance from the problem.  – Sean Foote on the concept of Microfinance

“Most microfinance borrowers don’t need a business plan to get a loan – is this a fundamental problem?” Dr. Shapiro challenged the panel.  This question sparked interesting debate, noting that leading uses of microfinance loan funds include cash flow / smoothing, covering old debt, and health care.  Are these things not important for poor people too?  After all, lenders in the developed world offer many loans that do not dictate how the funds must be spent.  Sean conceded that the industry “oversold” their story of how microfinance loans primarily fund or expand small businesses for poor entrepreneurs in the developing world, but recognized the vast opportunity to make a difference with a multitude of products for this market.  Of key importance is to develop success measurement tools that accurately reflect improvements to borrowers lives, not just profit of the lender.

The panel concluded with industry best practices including: self-regulation, leveraging networks of people that have been brought together for microfinance loans to address other social or environmental challenges, MFIs holding themselves accountable to the standards of the banking industry.  Though the microfinance industry has grown and has recently come under fire for questionable lending practices, Sean reminded us that “Idealism is directly proportional to your distance from the problem.”

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June 8th Meeting: Economic Empowerment for Women in Liberia

Posted by hilarywilson on June 3, 2011

Economic Empowerment for Women in Liberia

Featuring Chid Liberty of Made In: Liberia

-June 8th, 2011-

The next Silicon Valley Microfinance Network (SVMN) meeting will take place on Wednesday June 8th, 2011 and will feature Chid Liberty (Co-Founder of Liberty & Justice and Founder of Made In: Liberia) as he discusses his thriving, multi-national social enterprises.  Together, Liberty & Justice and Made In: Liberia provides the platform and tools necessary for enterprising women in Liberia to shift from unproductive trades in the informal economy to formal employment in productive small to medium enterprises (SMEs).

Join us as Chid discusses how his organization is revolutionizing the fair trade industry while providing economic opportunity for women in post-conflict Liberia.

Chid Liberty

“We give the Gaps and Levis and Pranas of the world an easy way to buy sustainably sourced African cotton.” -Chid Liberty

When: Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

6:00pm – 6:30pm – Drinks, appetizers, networking
6:30pm – 7:15pm – Intros & Speaker presentation
7:15pm – 7:30pm – Q & A
7:30pm – 8:00pm – Networking

Cost:

in advance: $20 regular attendee | $10 students,  non-profits (w/ ID)
at the door: $30 regular attendee | $20 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
(includes dinner + drinks)

Where: Swedish American Hall (Upstairs) – 2174 Market Street , San Francisco, CA 94114

To register, please click on the SVMN registration link here (Order now – seating is limited!):

Speaker Bio

Chid Liberty

Before co-founding Liberty & Justice Chid worked in finance and information systems for several high growth technology companies including Metavante Corporation (now Fidelity National Information Services), Mindjet, and Trilogy Integrated Resources. A Liberian native, Chid left Africa as an eighteen month old baby when his father became the Liberia’s Ambassador to Germany with residence in Bonn. Chid’s family later fled to the United States to escape Liberia’s deteriorating political situation.

In addition to his work at Liberty & Justice, Chid lectures extensively on social entrepreneurship and innovation, most recently at Princeton University, Tennessee State, and the University of Liberia where he serves as Entrepreneur in Residence at the Monrovia Business Startup Center, a program funded by SPARK, a Dutch NGO, and other European partners. He sits on TransFair USA’s Fair Trade Certified Apparel Multistakeholder Group where he helps to guide Fair Trade Certified apparel policy for the United States. Chid was also awarded the Cordes Fellowship in 2010 and sits on the 2011 Cordes Fellowship Selection Committee where he helps give emerging social entrepreneurs a chance to attend the Opportunity Collaboration, a four-day problem-solving, strategic retreat for change-makers engaged in poverty alleviation and economic justice enterprises.

About Made In: Liberia

Made In: Liberia (MIL) is a US based non-profit organization, that supports capacity building programs in Liberia, West Africa. MIL exists to empower Liberian women by providing them with the training and skills necessary to participate in the global economic market while promoting sustainable development and increasing access to education and healthcare.


MIL’s mission is to provide the platform and the tools necessary for women in Liberia to transfer from unproductive trades in the informal economy to formal employment in productive Small and Medium Sized Enterprises making sustainable products and services for domestic markets.

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April 28th Meeting: “Financing Good” Featuring Jocelyn Wyatt & Chuck Slauther

Posted by hilarywilson on April 20, 2011

Financing Good: How Partnerships Between Microfinance & Social Enterprises Benefit the Bottom of the Pyramid

- Thursday, April 28th -

The next Silicon Valley Microfinance Network (SVMN) meeting will take place on Thursday, April 28th, 2011 and will feature Jocelyn Wyatt, Co-Lead & Executive Director of IDEO and Chuck Slaughter, Founder & President of LivingGoods as they discuss where social enterprise meets microfinance.

 

Where does social enterprise intersect microfinance?

In recent years, thriving social enterprises have joined forces with established microfinance organizations to leverage one another’s financial services and distribution channels in order to more effectively provide innovative products, tools and equipment to the rural poor.  During this panel, these industry leaders will address how the combination of microfinance financial tools and distribution channels with consumer products sales can provide financial sustainability for families in developing countries, and the pros and cons of this innovative business trend.

To register, please click on the SVMN registration link here (Order now – seating is limited!):

When: Thursday, April 28th, 2011

6:30pm – 7:00pm – Drinks, appetizers, networking
7:00pm – 7:45pm – Intros & Speaker presentation
7:45pm – 8:00pm – Q & A
8:00pm – 8:30pm – Networking

Cost:

in advance: $20 regular attendee | $10 students,  non-profits (w/ ID)
at the door: $30 regular attendee | $20 students & non-profits (w/ ID)
(includes dinner + drinks)

Where: O’Melveny & Myers San Francisco Office (Two Embarcadero Center, 28th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94111)

Speaker Bios

Charles Slaughter, Founder and President


Chuck earned both a BA and a Master’s in Public and Private Management from Yale. He is the Founder of TravelSmith Outfitters, a direct marketer of travel clothing and gear which he created in 1991 and built into the #1 brand in travel wear. In the late 1980’s he served as a Program Officer for Trickle Up, a pioneering micro-enterprise development program. Chuck sold TravelSmith in 2004. Shortly thereafter, as it’s pro-bono president, Chuck lead the turnaround of CFW Shops/ HealthStore, which employs a system of franchised rural clinics to reduce death and illness from infectious diseases in Kenya.

Chuck also advises and invests in consumer businesses and as an affiliate of Golden Gate Capital, has participated in the acquisition of more than a dozen companies with combined sales in excess of $2 billion.

Chuck was a recipient of Ernst and Young’s Entrepreneur of the Year award. He currently serves on the boards of Living Goods, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Three Day Blinds and BRAC USA. He is a member of Technoserve and the Initiative for Global Development. Chuck lives in Sausalito, California with his wife Molly and sons Cooper, Riley and Jackson.

Jocelyn Wyatt, Co-Lead & Executive Director, IDEO

Jocelyn leads IDEO’s Social Innovation domain, which she has expanded over the past several years. In her work, she builds social enterprises and advises businesses in the developing world, using the market to create social change. She has lent her perspective to social-impact projects with clients such as the Acumen Fund, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Kickstart, and the Rockefeller Foundation. While grappling with strategies and issues related to product, service, and system design, she has worked in China, Ghana, India, Japan, Kenya and the U.K.

Prior to joining IDEO in 2007, Jocelyn worked in Kenya as an Acumen Fund fellow with an agro-pharmaceutical company involved in the production of malaria treatments. She served as VisionSpring’s interim country director in India, where she helped increase the distribution of low-cost reading glasses to the urban and rural poor. She also did international training, project management, and business development for Chemonics International, a contractor for the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Jocelyn received an MBA from Thunderbird School of Global Management and a bachelor’s degree in anthropology from Grinnell College in Iowa. She teaches social enterprise at the Haas School of Business at the University of California at Berkeley. She is a Catapult Design Advisory Board Member, a Tactical Philanthropy Advisory Board Member, an Aspen Institute First Movers Fellow and a Steelcase Green Giant. When she’s not traveling the world, Jocelyn enjoys hosting dinner parties, reading in the park, and exploring the neighborhoods of San Francisco.

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Opportunity Fund Microfinance Call Night

Posted by hilarywilson on March 11, 2011

Volunteers Needed! Opportunity Fund Microfinance Call Night

Want to roll up your sleeves and get involved in microfinance in your backyard?  Join us on  Tuesday, March 15th. Opportunity Fund is hosting a Call Night, an exciting event that allows YOU to be a part of the microloan process for Bay Area borrowers. We hope to see you there!

WHAT: 1.) Phone microloan borrowers with profiles posted on Kiva.org to collect journal entries reporting on how they benefited from the loan.  2.)Phone Opportunity Fund IDA MicroSavings clients who recently met their savings goal. A quick call to congratulate a major milestone!

WHY YOUR HELP IS NEEDED: A few hours of your time saves staff an entire day hammering the phone lines. You make local microfinance more efficient!

WHY YOU SHOULD JOIN: You get to speak with microfinance clients, and learn about how it works with people here in your own community. At the same time, get to know your fellow volunteers, microfinance enthusiasts in the Bay Area!

 

 

When: Tuesday, March 15 6:00-7:30pm

Where: Opportunity Fund’s San Francisco Office (785 Market Street, 17th Floor, San Francisco, CA)

Questions? Email Caitlin (at) opportunityfund.org

Details & RSVP: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=181160265262535&ref=mf

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Re-Cap SVMN Microfinance Photography Auction

Posted by hilarywilson on March 2, 2011

SVMN Cocktail Party & Photography Auction

Earlier this month, SVMN had the pleasure of working with Opportunity Fund to host an event in downtown San Francisco, featuring winning photos from the annual CGAP Photography Contest.  It was a great night filled with terrific people and beautiful photography, all benefiting a great cause!

Brian DiCola, a San Francisco-based photographer, was kind enough to document this evening for us. Please go to http://www.briandicola.com/blog/?p=196 to see the full blog post on this great event!

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