Last Blogpost I mentioned the large group of people willing to spend lots of effort and time on projects in developing countries. These people mostly do this during weekends and after working hours. They spend a lot of time writing project proposals, looking for funds, emailing with their partners in the South and meeting with the board of their foundation to make future plans. They mostly do not have a lot of time but their ambitions are huge.
Quality improvement through Crowd involvement
In the Netherlands there are about 15.000 what we call ‘Private Initiatives’. People who, in most cases, have travelled to or did volunteer work in development countries and who started an NGO (Non-governmental organization) when they came back from their trip. The reason for doing this was that they saw with their own eyes that with small solutions often great things were possible. At the same time friends, family, neighbours and colleagues were willing to give a donations to the projects they started together with their partners in Africa, Asia or Latin America.
Me, myself; (Hi, my name is Margreet van der Pijl and I am the project manager at the 1%CLUB) I was also involved in a private initiative in Ghana. A couple of years ago we were extremely enthusiastic about the project we were planning to implement. We were building a factory where the local inhabitants of the village in which we were working could process cassava into “Gari” a local product used in many different dishes. We gathered money, hired a local contractor and started the project. After a couple of months the building was finished and the factory was ready to be used. In the beginning many cassavas were processed and many bags of Gari produced. But after a while the problem of distribution occurred: there was no system of profit sharing. As a result of this the farmers who were donating their cassava stopped doing this and the factory closed on a temporary notice.
Obviously we forgot to contribute to what is called “knowledge building of the local community”, a common point of critique towards “Private Initiatives” . The project collapsed as a result of this mistake as soon as we left the project location. The lack of local knowledge building and many other points of critique are mentioned in several research reports (Schulpen (2007), Kinsbergen(2010)). Issues on sustainability, a good project team and effectiveness are crucial for the success of a project. Organizing a project which include all these factors and which was thought through from different perspectives is what we understand as a project with high quality.
Who are we alone (as ‘experts’) to judge what the quality of a project is? Many people together know more than one (collective intelligence). That is why we invite the whole world to watch with us and together help innovative ideas to become successful. Welcome to the 1%CROWD.
In the next blogs I will share more with you on the subject of small-scale projects, quality standards and improvement of long-term results of these projects.
Picture by: Bernard Uyttendaele
Write it down: 1%EVENT Amsterdam – September 17th
1%EVENT Amsterdam supposed to take place in May. Due to the availability of the keynote speakers, and because 1%EVENT Amsterdam deserves the best preparation, we postponed 1%EVENT Amsterdam to Friday, September 17th. Location: Pakhuis de Zwijger in Amsterdam.
So, grab your agenda right now, take a marker and write down on September 17th:
1%EVENT Amsterdam!
Bottom Up Marketing
Trough all my adult life I have been forced to see and hear mostly just hollow marketing messages. Just driven to trigger my emotional response to make me buy a product mostly using cliches that don’t tell the whole or even the real story.
The last couple of days at the 1%CLUB were all about marketing. We had an internal meeting about how to generate more exposure and people that wanted to donate to the projects we facilitate on onepercentclub.com. We had a meeting with Accenture about the strategic path to create a presence on the international market. And today we had a super talk with @buccaneer and Jeroen of Purple Cows unlimited about some great marketing campain(s) on the Dutch market.
And now I have to adjust my ideas a bit. Both parties we met were really personally involved in the 1%CLUB. This makes me very happy and I trust we will make the right choices and create some great marketing moments to make people aware of the possibilities we provide to support local projects. Finding the right mix between “old fashion marketing” and social marketing.
Image thanks to this post of Jeroen with more marketing beauties.
George Ayittey about African solutions for African problems
This post is a follow up on the post we did about his TED talk on Hippo’s and cheetahs. In this talk George Ayittey, one of the top 100 global thinkers, gives you a more profound insight into Africa as a continent, it’s people, culture and why, after 50 years of freedom and 600 bilion of Western aid, it’s still in tremendous crisis.
Questions like:
- Why a continent that is so rich on minaral and natural resources is not able to lift it’s people out of poverty?
- Why there is so many catastrophic leadership failure and government disfunction?
- Why countries implode?
- What should we do to help?
- Why most aid doesn’t and didn’t work?
- What is the african sollution?
- What are it’s succeses?
(via @sanneroemen)













