800 Housemaids Complete Entrepreneurship Course

Image Credit: Gulf News Archives

 

New wave of Filipino social entrepreneurs growing in numbers worldwide

Dubai: Can Filipino housemaids become the next wave of entrepreneurs in their home country?

Joan Francisco, 30, a nanny here for two years, offers a hint. The mother of one started dabbling in stocks trading three months ago using an online platform.

She sets aside Dh100 per month and invests it in a long-term stocks fund which she hopes would one day fund the college education of her five-year-old child.

Her “classmate” and friend, Christy Guinto, 40, meanwhile, has been a housemaid in Dubai for seven years. Guinto has prepared a business plan to organize a food business in her home province of Pampanga.

They are just two of the 800 housemaids dabbling in finance and entrepreneurship, through an intensive six-month course offered in cities around the world as part of the Manila-based Ateneo School of Government’s (Asog) outreach service.

Francisco and Guinto were part of about 100-member batch in Dubai feted on November 11 (Friday) in a ceremony graced by Dr Mario C. Villaverde, Ateneo’s Associate Dean for Academic Affairs.

Ateneo, ranked among the top Asian universities, launched the programme in 2008.

A great majority of those attending in other cities — Hong Kong, Singapore, Milan, Rome — are household service workers.

While the Jesuit-run institution charges tens of thousands of dirhams for their undergraduate and graduate courses in Manila, they charge a “token” fee of Dh350 from housemaids in Dubai, where classes are run at the Philippine consulate.

Many of the housemaids attend through sponsorships.

Some 1,300 individuals already completed the LSE program since 2008, when it was launched in Rome. 

At least 800 of them are housemaids, and many have started their own business and wen home for good, according to Ateneo officials.

Dr. Mario Villaverde, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs of AsoG, told the their Dubai graduates: “The knowledge and practical skills that you acquired from the LSE course will be indispensible tools as you continue your lifelong journey as global citizens.”

“Seek for excellence, live and work with integrity, and support one another to grow and develop as future entrepreneurs,” he said.

Four groups in each batch were lauded for their respective business plans deemed both viable and socially relevant.

Projects

Some of the Dubai-incubated projects are interesting, if they fly.

The highlight of the event was the awarding to a fifth group the Innovation Fund or I-Fund which is a “start-up” mechanism.

Pack Me of Batch 36 and Enerhiya Solutions and Technical Services of Batch 37 will receive a start-up fund of Dh4,000, and will be provided a business license extension for one year by Dagaz HR Consultancy, and will be assisted by BPO Consulting in managing the financial documentation.     

Pack Me is an App-based courier service concept that would rely on social network community. It has four members with the youngest at 27 and the oldest at 30.

Enerhiya Solutions and Technical Services’ concept is to finance, develop and implement projects and solutions aimed at enhancing client’s energy efficiency and reduced energy-related expenditures providing both economic and environmental benefits.

Three individuals also gave their graduation remarks.

It includes Cecilia Evangelista, a nanny for more than eight years in Dubai, who plans to go home for good in April 2017 to support the dress-making business of her mother using the tools she has learned from the program and then become an entrepreneur.

“I have also increased my social awareness to understand and respond to the needs of others. I am also self-assured that the business I will start is something I am passionate about,” she added.

Victor Manuel, who was celebrating his 41st birthday, expressed his utmost gratitude to ASoG, the Philippine Consulate, the Philippine Business Council-Dubai and Northern Emirates and the LSE Secretariat for the opportunity to experience how it is to graduate.

Manuel never went to college in the Philippines because he needed to work at a young age to support his parents. He currently works as a visual merchandiser and has financed his sister with her college degree in the Philippines.

Admin manager Arminda Armirol, who was one of the seven members of the practicum group, said that their business, Petshionista, a brand of fashionable pet wear, entail a lot of determination since she and two  other partners who are also part of the practicum group work full time. It is only on Fridays that they devote their time exclusively on their social enterprise.

“Together with my partners, Leo Barrameda and Emmie Garcia, we stepped out of our comfort zone and dared to risk. In life, you have to take risks to get ahead. The biggest risk will be the one you don’t take,” he further said.

 

(Source: GulfNews.com)

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