Soccer Balls Kick-Start Afghan Peace and Prosperity

Finalista del desafío

Esta presentción ha sido seleccionada como finalista del desafío
Gamechangers: Change the Game for Women in Sport .

Encourage girls to make their soccer-ball purchases count by buying balls hand-stitched by poor, widowed Afghan women.

Sobre ti

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

Información de contacto

Title

Ms.

First name

Marla

Last name

Gitterman

Your job title

Program Director

Name of your organization

Bpeace

Organization type

Non-profit 501 C 3

Annual budget/currency

$540,000

Mailing address

Bpeace
5 E. 22nd Street
Suite 9J
New York, NY 10010

Telephone number

212-696-9696

F-a-x number

212-696-9699

Country

Estados Unidos

Email address

Alternative email address

Ubicación

Project Street Address

7221 sarak awal, Karte-char, house-seh. 7221 first street, Karte-char, 3rd district. Kabul, Afghanistan

Project City

Kabul, Mazar

Project Province/State

Kabul, Dai Kundi and Balkh

Project Postal/Zip Code

Kabul

Project Country

Afganistán

tu idea

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

Choose your sport: (check all that apply)

Soccer/Football

If you chose "other" for Sport, please define in 1-2 words below

What approach does your initiative incorporate?

Product

Year the initiative began (yyyy)

2007

Paste your video code here:

If your project has a website, paste the web address here:

Ubica tu innovación en el mapa de innovaciones:

Barrier

Social stigmas and prohibitions

Insight

Make the first step easier

This field has not been completed.

Name Your Project

Soccer Balls Kick-Start Afghan Peace and Prosperity

Describe Your Idea

Encourage girls to make their soccer-ball purchases count by buying balls hand-stitched by poor, widowed Afghan women.

Innovación

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

What is your signature innovation, your new idea, in one sentence?

Encourage girls to make their soccer-ball purchases count by buying balls hand-stitched by poor, widowed Afghan women.

How many people does your innovation serve or plan to serve? Exactly who will benefit?

In year 1, 12,000 girl soccer players, 12,000 parents and 600 coaches will benefit by knowing they are making a difference with their ball purchases.
In year 1, 150 Afghan family members will benefit with sustainable income coming into their families.
By 2015, 1 million girl soccer players, 1 million parents, 50,000 coaches will benefit knowing they are making a difference with their ball purchases.
By 2015, 12,000 Afghan family members will benefit with sustainable income.

Do you have any existing partnerships? If so, please list and describe.

The U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Educational and Cultural Exchanges provided seed funding to bring three Afghan women soccer-ball manufacturers to the U.S. in October 2008 to meet with potential partners.

LeadDog Marketing, an award-winning marketing agency specializing in brand promotions, sports marketing, events, grassroots, experiential and cause-related marketing, signed on to create the logo and soccer ball designs on a pro-bono basis.

Beyond the 11th provided funding for the Afghan women entrepreneurs to build their capacity with equipment and raw materials, and thereby create additional employment and ramp up to increase their soccer ball production. Beyond the 11th is a non-profit organization that provides support to widows in Afghanistan who have been affected by war, terrorism, and oppression.

In which sector do these partners work? (Check all that apply)

Citizen sector (non profits, NGOs) , Private sector , Public sector (government).

How do you implement your innovation and apply it to the challenge/problem you are addressing?

In Afghanistan, income-producing roles for women are extremely limited. Only 21% of Afghan women are literate. Over two million Afghan widows, mostly caused by war, have little work experience and are often forced to beg as their only source of income.

Bpeace has united three female Afghan entrepreneurs who already had a track record of individually training and employing hundreds of otherwise unskilled Afghan women to hand stitch high-quality soccer balls. Aziza, Farishtah and Taj run soccer ball manufacturing businesses and provide safe, home-based jobs for their workers, all women--many of whom are widows. By stitching 500 soccer balls, a woman can earn enough income to support her family for a year and send her children to school. The sale of 1 million balls a year, will provide sustainable income to 2,000 women workers, and have a positive poverty-alleviating impact on their 14,000 Afghan family members.

Impacto

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

Provide one sentence describing your impact/intended impact

Girl players will expand their social consciousness and thousands of Afghan families will have sustainable livelihoods leading to education and hope.

What does impact/success look like? Please list any tangible measures of the impact of your innovation

--The Dosti soccer ball brand gains quantifiable visibility through publicity and web-based marketing.
--Outreach to leagues results in coaches recommending the benefits of purchasing Dosti soccer balls.
--12,000 Dosti balls are sold in year one, providing income to 150 Afghan family members.
--50,000 balls are sold in year two, proving income to 600 Afghan family members.
--By 2011, the Dosti brand has expanded outside the U.S. to Europe and Asia.
--By 2015, one million balls are sold a year, providing income to more than 12,000 Afghan family members.
--The Afghan women who stitch the balls are able to feed their families, send their children to school, and provide their communities with the opportunity for a more peaceful and stable future.

Is there a chance that your project could change policy (within an institution or government)?

It already is on track to do so. The three Afghan women entrepreneurs who visited the U.S. in October 2008 gained new awareness of the importance of ensuring that girls under 16 years old are not stitching the balls. They have already drafted procedures to ensure compliance with their own code of child-labor practices, since Afghanistan does not have such a code. One of the entrepreneurs—Aziza—is a leader within the Afghan Women’s Business Federation (AWBF)—a membership organization of more than 3,500 women. She will bring this issue to the AWBF, which will in turn bring it to the Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs. The government of Afghanistan has many rules of law issues. The Dosti partners will put child labor into the hopper.

Entrepreneurial business, like Dosti, hits at the core of a sustainable economy and civil society, by fostering self-esteem, motivation, imagination, ownership, hope, contribution and service.

Aside from financial sustainability, how do you plan to grow the initiative or expand your intended impact?

Bpeace has a track record for generating excellent publicity and marketing effectiveness. Together with LeadDog, we will bring the Dosti story across the U.S. Every 500 balls we help sell, provides income to lift an Afghan family out of poverty with better nutrition, education and hope for the future.

Esta presentación se trata de

Sustenibilidad

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

How is your initiative financed (or how do you expect your initiative will be financed)?

The U.S. travel and capacity building has been partially financed by the U.S. Department of State, the non-profit Beyond the 11th, and individual donors to the non-profit Business Council for Peace (Bpeace). Bpeace is seeking foundation and grant support to provide on-the-ground consulting to the entrepreneurs in Afghanistan and to subsidize shipping costs until economies of scale kick-in to make container shipping possible.

Fuente de financiamiento

Annual budget

$80,000 in cash to cover costs in Afghanistan. This is amplified by the $250,000 in donated time and services of volunteers and pro-bono services

Annual revenue generated

N/A

Number of staff (full-time, part-time, volunteers)

One full-time staff in Afghanistan, 0.5 full-time staff in U.S., 28 volunteers.

What are the main barriers to financing your initiative, and how do you plan to address these barriers?

The U.S. recession necessitates a shift from fundraising among individuals to foundation and corporate support. We are ramping up our outreach to foundations to make the case for Dosti, a project that can be self-sustaining in 18 months with an excellent ROI (return on involvement).

What are the major challenges with regards to partnerships?

Major challenges are to keep an efficient communition flow and to keep everybody engaged and on the same time-line, especially as so many of the key players in the Dosti venture are volunteers and life tends to get in the way.

La historia

leer más↑ ocultar↑ ocultar

What stage is your project?

Ongoing project .

What was the motivation or defining moment that led to create this innovation? Tell us the story.

In December 2006, Bpeace launched a business plan competition to recruit Afghan women entrepreneurs for its three-year Fast Runner business development program. Applications for the expected businesses in food processing came in. But surprisingly, three Afghan soccer-ball manufacturers applied. Bpeace volunteers started to peel back the onion on this concentration and found that under the Taliban, Afghan families who fled to Pakistan had learned to stitch soccer balls in refugee camps and brought back the skill to Afghanistan. Bpeace believed if it could unite the three independent applicants under one export brand, it could make a U.S. market for the soccer balls and exponentially expand these three separate businesses, creating significant additional employment, and hope for thousands of Afghan families.

Bpeace invited Taj, Aziza and Ferishta into the Bpeace program and spent a week with them in Dubai in November 2007, in partnership with Dubai Women’s College. There Bpeace volunteers seeded the vision of an export brand, and left it to Taj, Aziza and Ferishta to see the possibilities. By the end of the week, they had bonded and agreed to find a way to work together.

Please tell us about the social innovator behind this initiative

There is not just one innovator behind Dosti. Bpeace co-founder Toni Maloney first saw the possibility of uniting Aziza, Taj and Ferishta’s soccer manufacturing entities under one export brand. Beyond the 11th believes in the power of helping Afghan widows provide for themselves. The U.S. Department of State invested in bringing the Afghans to the U.S. to explore their potential. And LeadDog Marketing provides the landing gears by marketing Dosti soccer balls in the U.S.

(Optional) To be eligible for an additional prize, please select age range

27 or older

163 weeks agoLaurie Chock said: Thank you for your question. There are two procedures the women will put in place to assure that child labor is not used. First, the ... about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
163 weeks agoCynthia Drayton said: Hi Marla, What a fascinating story-how Bpeace facilitated the meeting of these three women and the eventual business launch of their ... about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
169 weeks agoDonna Quadri said: What is encouraging about this model is that it builds on some of the already established and accepted, women created/supported markets. ... about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
171 weeks agoStephani Kobayashi Stevenson said: Congrats Bpeace! I love this idea and look forward to hearing more... Stephani Nike about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
173 weeks agoCharlie Brown said: Congratulations for winning the early entry prize. Your innovation is fantastic and good luck in the rest of the competition! about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
173 weeks agoRenata Affonso said: Hello Marla, What a great entry! Do you see possibilities of influencing public policy with the reconstruction of Afeganistan in a ... about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
173 weeks agoDana Frasz said: Dear Ms. Marla Gitterman, Congratulations! On behalf of Nike and the Ashoka's Changemakers team, we are honored to declare you a ... about this Competition Entry. - leer más >
175 weeks agoLaurie Chock submitted this idea.