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Mentoring as a provision for Latvia rural women entrepreneurship. Prof. Baiba Rivza, Mg. oec. Laura Rivza Latvia Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences. Mentoring for increasing entrepreneurship potential.
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Mentoring as a provision for Latvia rural women entrepreneurship Prof. Baiba Rivza, Mg. oec. Laura Rivza Latvia Academy of Agricultural and Forestry Sciences
Mentoring for increasing entrepreneurship potential • Mentoring in entrepreneurship means that somebody more experienced in business (Mentor) guides and helps the less experienced (Mentee) to succeed in his/her enterprise development
Mentoring as important tool for entrepreneurship support • Promote new entrants in entrepreneurial environment, • Encourage people to be entrepreneurs and set up their own business, • To ensure unified and effective support in setting up a business, increasing competitiveness of enterprise, • Let existing enterprises overcome difficulties, barriers and keep developing and also promoting substitute products based on innovative and knowledge based technologies
INTERREG IIIB project FEM “Women entrepreneurship development in Baltic See region” • 2004 – 2007 • Mentoring, networking, resource centres, microcredit groups, e-comerce • Partners: Baltic countries, Finland, Sweden, Norway, Poland.
Internationalproject 5 – O • 2008 – 2009 • Mentoring, rural development, enterpreneurship in rural areas • Zonta and Soroptimists
EuropeanGuidelinesforMentoringProgrammes • August 2009 - May 2010 • Developing a Guideline for Setting up and Running Mentoring Programmes for Women • Austria, Estonia, Germany, UK, Latvia, Greece, Romania
NORDPLUS project„TheCulturalHeritageofWomenandEntrepreneurship” 2011 -2012 Source: www.womenculture.eu , 2012.
Women entrepreneurship support tools Resource centers Information points Micro-credit groups Mentoring pairs and groups Local organizations of LRWA
Source: association “Līdere” & “Latvijas Fakti” & publishing – house “Lietišķās informācijas dienests” (www.em.gov.lv/em/2nd/)
The most interesting aspects in entrepreneurship to women • Possibility to be independent • Possibility to maintain her family • Possibility to do the work she likes • Self-realizing possibility Sourse:www.em.gov.lv/em/2nd/
Profile of women entrepreneurship • Trades • Service • Tourism • Health care/social welfare • Education/science • Agriculture /forestry • Industry • Others. Sourse:www.em.gov.lv/em/2nd/
More significant problems for women entrepreneurs in Latvia • High taxes • Lack of qualified work force • Large number of controlling institutions • Lack of appropriate normative acts and support • High competition Sourse:www.em.gov.lv/em/2nd/
Number of farms and utilized agricultural land in farms of different size in 2010 Total 83,1 thsd.farms Source: Central statistical bureau
Farm income and income of population employed in agriculture Source: Economic accounts for agriculture (EAA)
Social factors: • - Emotional encouragement • Networking and cooperation • Sense of safety • Win-win principle • Guidance that allows mentee come to solution by him/herself • Political/ Economical factors: • - Administrative capacity • Potential of mentors in rural areas • Technological factors: • Geographical distance • Limited access to Internet, e-mail • Social factors: • Potential of young entrepreneurs; • Supportive local media Strengths Weaknesses Mentoring in Latvia Threats Opportunities Social factors: - Interest of mentors as volunteers • Social factors: • Lack of information and reconcilability • Lack of time for cooperation • Different levels of • knowledge • Economical factors: • - Unified and effective support in setting up business • Increase the number of new enterprises • increasing competitiveness of enterprise • Political/Economical factors: • - Support and possibilities to enchain state, municipality and EU financing; • Possibility to introduce mentoring in educational system SWOT and PEST analysis
QuintupleHelixmodel Private sector Media
ManuelCastells • Networks have become the basic units of modern society. • These units still are individuals, groups, organizations and communities, though they may increasingly be linked by networks.
Holberg International Memorial Prize 2012 is awarded to Manuel Castells. Citation of the Holberg Prize Academic Committee: "Manuel Castells is the leading sociologist of the city and new information and media technologies. His ideas and writings have shaped our understanding of the political dynamics of urban and global economies in the network society.
ManuelCastells • It is not purely the technology that defines modern societies, but also cultural, economic and political factors that make up the network society. • Influences such as religion, cultural upbringing, political organizations, and social status all shape the network society. • Societies are shaped by these factors in many ways.
(GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP MMONITOR 2010 Report: WomenEntrepreneursWorldwide) GEM, 2011. • Networks play amultifaceted role for women entrepreneurs and business owners, helping them to gain advice, form partnerships, secure financing, access qualified management and employees, and build value chain relationships. • Entrepreneurs and business owners tended to seek advice most often from those with whom they had personal relationships—their private environment.
Conclusions • The mentoring and microcredit movement should be widely used since they proved to be relevant form of economic activity for Latvia regions conditions which do not require large investments but extensive training network. • Our countries have experience in mentoring and networking. • Social networks have become the basic units of modern society and also in mentoring .
Conclusions_2 • Helix model can help in mentoring and social networking. • Using of the cultural heritage in rural tourism is important and additional financial source . We need strong mentoring support in it.