Muhammad Yunus: Building Social Business Ventures

July 9, 2009

muhammad_yunus_banker_entrepreneur_nobel_prize_winner

“Whether for profit or for non-profit our involvement relates to benefiting people” one of his very famous quote which you can hear him saying in the video here. One man, One dream, One organisation “Grameen Bank” . Being a professor he could have easily chosen to sit back, relax and lecture on “how to eradicate poverty in this world” instead he chose to do it himself by establishing grameen bank, a bank which gives out small amount of money to poor people who want to start a business. These business ventures may be small like opening up a tea shop, a tailor shop but they are a big for the people who are starting it because the income they gonna generate out of it will change there life forever. Pull them out form the dungeons of  poverty.The idea of microfinance lives with an idea of inclusive growth, where we concentrate on the bottom of the pyramid, the term made popular by C.K Prahlad. The logic is simple if you treat this strata of society as beggars, they will remain so. But you empower them, do a bit of  hand holding then they can create wonders.  I would like to share a small incident that moved me a lot.

I somehow managed to miss my train for mumbai (i do it everytime, miss trains, miss busses, loosing tickets in the train, forgetting ATM pins etc. i am that perpetual poor guy that you see in a bollywood flick who always managed to get into some trouble..:) )..i was in Guntakal and wanted to catch Udyan express to mumbai, it was early morning i think around 3 or something. I missed my train and had to wait on the station. Desperately wanted to have tea but couldnt find any stall open that time, suddenly a boy, i think aged 16 appeared like an angel and asked me if i wanted tea.  I said yes and took a cup and given my talkative nature i started asking him question, what does he do apart from selling tea and stuff like that and what does he dream of becoming one day. I was surprised to hear him,he told me that he do 4 different jobs(i can hardly manage to do one!). First he drops newspaper in the morning, and whatever he earns from it goes to cook meal at home (he told me a trick of  putting in inserts in the newsaper to make some extra buck, there was a sparkle in his eyes when he was telling me this.).Second, he supply packaging material (rope, plastic etc) to the daily vegetable haat (Sabzi mandi..yeah i know hindi too). Third, he  cleans up a small school in the evening daily along with his other freinds. And the fourth he sells tea on the station. I asked why he cant do just one and find ways to make more money out of that. He said that last two job he is doing is to collect money to open up a tea stall on the station. Because one of his distant realtive works in the railway, and he has promised him to get him a license to do so. That is his dream a stall on the station, and he feel it will be his day, a day when he will feel that he has arrived, he has made a mark, the day when he will feel that he is breathing in a free country!

Microfinance is just the thing that the doctor prescribed, it could fast forward and save poor Raman from all that labour and lend him money to start a tea stal or whatever else he can dream off.  Grameen  bank is just doing that and something  similar is done being done in India by Vikram Akula of SKS Microfinance.

Let me know what do feel about this or your story that you want to share with all of us here.

Entry Filed under: Articles. Tags: , , .



3 Comments Add your own

  • 1.    Charu Gupta  |  July 9th, 2009 at 10:16 am

    Hey Suhel,

    What a touching incident. I immediately felt like helping out that guy. I just look up to all those people who work very hard to make their way. Life is hard on them, yet they continue to fight and strive. If a helping hand is provided, these hard working fellas can do wonders.

    I would love to be of help to these people, but don’t know where to start and how to go about it. Let me know if you have any ideas.

    Warm Regards,
    Charu Gupta

  • 2.    Suhel Khan  |  July 9th, 2009 at 12:11 pm

    Charu,

    Thanks for appreciating! And i feel happy that i have a person like you on this community who have mind & heart to understand the pain of these so called denizen of “the bottom of the pyramid”.

    Sure i can tell you with a way to help them out but for that you need to wait for my next post..I am just giving final touches to it, actually had to rewrite it, because as usual i lost the notepad on which i have written the whole article…:)

    Regards,

    Suhel Khan
    http://twitter.com/suhel_khan

  • 3.    Kunal Jain  |  July 9th, 2009 at 1:10 pm

    We entrepreneurs complain about issues such as VC funding drying up, recruiting issues for startups, getting the right media attention. The problems that are faced by poor people to even start a tiny business like a tea stall really puts things in perspective. While we try to learn from successful entrepreneurs, the poor man’s entrepreneurial spirit to succeed in realizing his dreams in the face of overwhelming obstacles can be inspiring too.

    I keep hearing about micro finance initiatives in other countries and I am so glad that our country is not far behind in them as well.

    Keep up the good work Suhel, I look forward to your next post.

Leave a comment

Required

Required, hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> <p> <br>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


March 2010
M T W T F S S
« Jul    
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031