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Agora partnerships. A Better Solution to Nicaraguan Rural Poverty. Agenda:. Nicaraguan poverty The Agora Model Comparison to other methods A success story Improvements. Poverty in Context. 1980’s: Civil War 1985: U.S. Trade Embargo 1989: Collapse of the International Coffee Agreement
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Agora partnerships A Better Solution to Nicaraguan Rural Poverty
Agenda: • Nicaraguan poverty • The Agora Model • Comparison to other methods • A success story • Improvements
Poverty in Context • 1980’s: Civil War • 1985: U.S. Trade Embargo • 1989: Collapse of the International Coffee Agreement • 1998: Hurricane Mitch • Destroyed infrastructure • Economic crisis with inflation of 13,000% • Depressed coffee prices force farmers into debt • Over 500,000 people left homeless
The Agora Model: Barriers to Entrepreneurship Agora Solutions Access to Capital Entry Education Execution Merit-based identification of promising entrepreneurs. Intensive consultingby US-based graduate students. Direct investmentin promising ventures that meet strict criteria. Supportincluding: strategic advice, business contacts and financial management. Barriers to Entrepreneurship
The Agora Model: Company Profile Clearly defined constraint to growth Operate in sectors where Central America has natural competitive advantage Cash flow positive Innovative Require investment of $25K to $250K • Eco-tourism • Sustainable agriculture • Value-added manufacturing • Agricultural processing • Organic foods, etc. Or can be within 18 months Provide product or service that is new or reaches new customer base
The Agora Model: Social Impact An Agora Entrepreneur must: Be capable of creating a clear and quantifiable social impact through: Adhere to Agora’s social responsibility guidelines by meeting or exceeding: Support the 10 Principles of the UN Global Compact covering: • Human rights • Labor standards • Environment • Anti-corruption • Job creation • Protection of environment • Providing goods/services to the needy • Ethical, • Legal, • Commercial and • Public Expectations
Bambucasa • Jan Van Bilsen- successful entrepreneur • Harvests and converts bamboo into affordable building materials for housing • Jan had the business plan, but lacked business management expertise • Agora provided consulting services
Testimonial “The guys in the village next to my farm were making $1 a day, and that’s when they could find work. I offered them a consistent salary and trained them in bamboo treatment and construction... I trained them, prepared them, and taught them how to use bamboo as a building material. Now they are a solid, highly motivated team, with good skills, good salaries, and a long-term perspective on how to get out of poverty through training and learning skills... The success of the business is key to all of this. If we can't make the business side work, none of the change we hope for is going to happen. That's why an organization like Agora is essential.” – Jan Van Bilsen
Ways to Improve • Lack of strong quantitative metrics • No effective ways to measure impact of work • Best measures of workshop effectiveness currently come from participant surveys • New metrics such as ROI needed to evaluate success of entrepeneurs receiving consulting and funding • Consulting hours provided by MBA consulting teams: over 6,800 • Consulting hours from local Agora staff and volunteers: 3,000
Ways to Improve • More extensive and effective communication • New organization which is not widely known • Expand on website and annual report • Refine website: contains several links which do not work • Profiles of Agora’s work in local newspapers, television, and radio: 24
Ways to Improve • Increase Funding • Eventually start to increase size and scope • Applications to Agora program: 148 • Ventures matched with consultants: 32 • Consultants matched with ventures: 142 • Agora-supported companies receiving investment from the Agora Fund: 3 • Agora-supported companies receiving outside investment: 3