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Commercially Viable Business for sustainable O&M of WASH installations and services
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- paresh
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- Budding WASH researcher, especially interested in governance, public policy, finance, politics and social justice. Architect, Urban & Regional planner by training, Ex. C-WAS, India.I am a patient person :)
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Re: Commercially Viable Business for sustainable O&M of WASH installations and services
I know of a couple of general arrangements that can be used by sanitation entrepreneurs
- Many leading universities in India have incubation centres. However, most incubate innovative initiatives of their own students only or team that has atleast one student from the university. Students get expert guidance, office space to work from and some seed funding (may vary). For
- The Mudra Yojana of the Government of India offers subsidised loans for individuals that can be used for sanitation service provision.
I am curious to know where are you looking for opportunities and what kind of support is needed.
Regards
paresh
Researcher at Indian Institute of Technology - Bombay, India
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Re: Commercially Viable Business for sustainable O&M of WASH installations and services
By the way, are there any initiatives in supporting development of commercially viable entrepreneurs for providing services for Sustainable Operation and Maintenance of the WASH installations and services. We wish to explore Sustainable Operation and Maintenance of WASH installations and services in Health Care Facilities to begin with along with an enabling environment to foster business development. Thanks.
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Much appreciated!
Ossai Ilome,
Creator & Executive Director,
Miss Microfinance Nigeria Organization
Suit B-50, Danziyal Plaza,
Central Business District,
Abuja - Nigeria.
Convener,
SuSanA Nigeria Coalition
www.missmicrofinance.org
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
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Serves as the Special Advisor,
to the President,
Association of Non-Bank Microfinance Institutions of Nigeria
www.anmfinigeria.org
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Re: Commercially Viable Business Development Centers
Regards,
Daniel
Note by moderator: More information about this project by PSI is available in this discussion thread:
forum.susana.org/167-market-development-...-program-in-ethiopia
The project is called USAID Transform WASH Program in Ethiopia.
I am working as WASH technical manager for PSI Ethiopia. PSI/E has a flagship USAID Transform WASH project aim to test and develop market-based models that will increase use of improved WASH products and services in Ethiopia with consortium members.
Contact address:
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skype- daniel. tesfaye2012
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How are you?
Any progress with your project.
Thank you,
Ossai Ilome,
Creator & Executive Director,
Miss Microfinance Nigeria Organization
Suit B-50, Danziyal Plaza,
Central Business District,
Abuja - Nigeria.
Convener,
SuSanA Nigeria Coalition
www.missmicrofinance.org
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Serves as the Special Advisor,
to the President,
Association of Non-Bank Microfinance Institutions of Nigeria
www.anmfinigeria.org
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Thank you for your response to my request. It was indeed heartwarming to hear from you and your position well taken. Thankfully, you are still hoping to expand your reach, to this end, we would be glad to standby to have the opportunity to collaborate with you in the nearest future.
Again, thank you and remain blessed.
Ossai Ilome,
Creator & Executive Director,
Miss Microfinance Nigeria Organization
Suit B-50, Danziyal Plaza,
Central Business District,
Abuja - Nigeria.
Convener,
SuSanA Nigeria Coalition
www.missmicrofinance.org
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Serves as the Special Advisor,
to the President,
Association of Non-Bank Microfinance Institutions of Nigeria
www.anmfinigeria.org
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You need to login to reply- kengelly
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Re: Commercially Viable Business Development Centers
Thank you so much for the responses - especially to Elisabeth for revitalizing the conversation!
Elisabeth:
Could you expand a bit on that? What are success factors for those? Is it comparable to WASH? Perhaps not as the agriculture sector is directly about selling products, not about a public good like health and sanitation. Should you perhaps rather look at the health sector for comparable models? Or can you piggy back on models of other sectors (like agriculture) rather than trying to set up a stand-alone business development centre for WASH?
The best example - and why we were asked to do WASH service centers - is described in this 2014 Africa AgriBusiness Article on Ethiopia Service Centers which includes a pretty thorough description of the model. As we understand it, this model was the inspiration behind the USAID RFA for Growth Through Nutrition (won by Save The Children with PSI as subs focused on WASH); we did not select this approach ourselves but are explori ng it in response to the donor request.
We do not intend to set up a standalone WASH business,[/url] but we are still struggling to find examples of successful models - whether standalone or piggy-backing - that have made the WASH component commercially viable in rural areas. As you've already mentioned, with agriculture the market is far more mature (in Ethiopia) and the products and services sold are income-generating, making it difficult to convince an agribusiness to include WASH products, training etc. into their model. We're looking at health centers as well, but in Ethiopia there are few - if any - privately-run clinics operating in rural areas.
Ossai:
We are operating in Ethiopia - not Nigeria - therefore I'm not sure we can be of much help in response to your request. We are still in early stages of the project, and have yet to identify the full suite of products and services that we aim to promote. We have financing through our USAID project funding that we will use to fund capacity building of the centers, but we have yet to determine if/how else we may support the ongoing activities.
Regards,
Genevieve
Graduate Student | MBA & MPH
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD USA | tel: 570-854-5075 skype: kengelly
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You need to login to reply- Elisabeth
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Re: Commercially Viable Business Development Centers
I would like to re-vitalise this thread as it sounds like a very interesting and different initiative. In order to get people thinking, could you perhaps clarify for us the following:
You said:
what is often found in the agriculture sector of commercial training centers
Could you expand a bit on that? What are success factors for those? Is it comparable to WASH? Perhaps not as the agriculture sector is directly about selling products, not about a public good like health and sanitation. Should you perhaps rather look at the health sector for comparable models? Or can you piggy back on models of other sectors (like agriculture) rather than trying to set up a stand-alone business development centre for WASH?
How did this idea come about and who would initially fund it?
Regards,
Elisabeth
P.S. Another option to get more replies from SuSanA members would be to send an e-mail to one of the working group mailing lists, like Working Group 2. The e-mail address for the moderated mailing list is This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. . I suggest you send an e-mail to that group as well, providing a link to this thread so that people reply by e-mail or better here on the forum.
Freelance consultant on environmental and climate projects
Located in Ulm, Germany
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Will like to hear from you at your earliest convenience.
Ossai Ilome,
Creator & Executive Director,
Miss Microfinance Nigeria Organization
Suit B-50, Danziyal Plaza,
Central Business District,
Abuja - Nigeria.
Convener,
SuSanA Nigeria Coalition
www.missmicrofinance.org
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Serves as the Special Advisor,
to the President,
Association of Non-Bank Microfinance Institutions of Nigeria
www.anmfinigeria.org
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You need to login to reply- kengelly
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Re: Commercially Viable Business Development Centers
Thank you so much for the response. Our objective is to sell products such as latrine pans, covers, liners as well as to provide training (slab-making, installation, business management etc.) to local enterprises. With the microfinance institutions, were you able to integrate this type of work?
Regards,
Genevieve
Graduate Student | MBA & MPH
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD USA | tel: 570-854-5075 skype: kengelly
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Ossai Ilome,
Creator & Executive Director,
Miss Microfinance Nigeria Organization
Suit B-50, Danziyal Plaza,
Central Business District,
Abuja - Nigeria.
Convener,
SuSanA Nigeria Coalition
www.missmicrofinance.org
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Serves as the Special Advisor,
to the President,
Association of Non-Bank Microfinance Institutions of Nigeria
www.anmfinigeria.org
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You need to login to reply- kengelly
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Commercially Viable Business Development Centers
I'm searching for examples similar to what is often found in the agriculture sector of commercial training centers, but for WASH-related products and services (or just water or sanitation).
For example, we are exploring the opportunity in Ethiopia to establish "WASH centers" that will function as wholesalers of products (to local enterprises) as well as to provide business and technical training (e.g. bookkeeping, stock management, promotion, slab construction etc.)
Ideally, we'd like to explore ways to make these commercially viable without public sector or other subsidy in the long term. Does anyone have examples of business development/training centers that have successfully operated with local enterprises buying their services? Or even with subsidy, some particularly good examples of how this has been done elsewhere?
Thanks!
Genevieve
Graduate Student | MBA & MPH
Johns Hopkins University
Baltimore, MD USA | tel: 570-854-5075 skype: kengelly
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