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USAID & Partners: Building an ecosystem for incubation

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USAID & Partners: Building an ecosystem for incubation

India has an infant mortality rate of 39 per 1000 live births (2014, World Bank). Newborn babies, fragile and delicate, are prone to fevers and infections, which, in a resource-poor country like India, can become fatal. New parents, barely making ends meet on highly unreliable incomes, don’t have the resources to track their baby’s’ health and often wait till it’s too late to take the child in for treatment.

Like most problems in India, this is a complex one, with multiple challenges and solutions. But then again, like most problems in India, there can be simple and effective solutions and people who care enough to find them: Such as a temperature monitoring device fashioned like a wristband that beeps and alerts caregivers when a baby’s temperature drops, now available for as little as $30 (Rs 2,000) in clinics and pharmacies. And the entrepreneur and Stanford mechanical engineer who cared enough to try and treat hypothermia in newborn children to save lives and make healthcare a few steps more accessible for the poor.

When Bempu, the social enterprise founded by Ratul Narain, was incubated by Villgro in 2014, it was still developing a prototype. The company’s biggest challenges were completing the steps necessary  – including risk assessment and sourcing options – to take their brand-new product to market and, subsequently, marketing the product and executing a sales strategy. A year-and-a-half later, Bempu has started selling the bracelet to private hospitals and has provided hundreds of doctors with samples of the final product. (Ratul was also selected for the Echoing Green Fellowship, while Bempu won funding from Gates Foundation, Grand Challenges Canada, and was one of 17 awardees from USAID’s Saving Lives at Birth program).

Villgro’s approach to incubating social enterprises or startups with social impact has been evolving since 2001 – when social entrepreneurship was a rarely mentioned term in India – and continues to stay agile and grow based on entrepreneurs’ needs.

Our biggest learning has been that there is no one-size-fits-all model of incubation: While a company like Bempu may need more support around marketing and sales another health startup might need a large infusion of funds infusion for R&D and prototyping and access to doctors and labs. Social enterprises working in the education space have a completely different set of needs, such as how to create awareness for their products, integrate them into the classroom, and shape policy, whereas startups working in energy and agriculture may need help with last-mile distribution.

Our pioneering success – over 120 innovators supported in 15 years – is also reliant on factors like deep-dive portfolio management and enabling access to experts and resources within niche sectors, and more importantly:

a) Innovative techniques for an evolving space
From an entrepreneur-in-residence program to an accelerator style year-long program with classroom sessions to ‘diagnostic panels’ that bring together business and sector experts and entrepreneurs to brainstorm and develop strategies, we have continuously experimented with and then scaled (and occasionally discarded) tools and techniques that seek to magnify our portfolio companies growth and impact.

b) High-touch mentoring for customised solutions
Time and again, whether it’s through a formal survey or in casual conversations, we have heard that mentoring – especially the brand of high-touch sector expertise offered at Villgro – is the most valuable service they receive. We run a highly engaged mentoring program that recruits former senior executives or experienced entrepreneurs and pairs them to work closely with portfolio companies. This has shown impressive results for the long run.

c) Building an ecosystem
No company or entrepreneur can work in isolation. Where there is funding, they need talent; where there is expert guidance, they need labs. An ecosystem of support – from events that bring people together to mentors to early-stage funding and more, you need an ecosystem to raise a start-up.

In the next phase of Villgro’s incubation model, these techniques and knowledge are being taken to a global context, to be replicated in other markets where social enterprise is on the rise, such as Kenya and Vietnam. New regions but similar contexts, where innovative market-based solutions are needed for age-old problems.

This partnership between Villgro and USAID’s Partnering to Accelerate Entrepreneurship (PACE) Initiative will help catalyze the implementation of what has been a highly effective approach into Villgro Kenya, a health-focused incubator set up in partnership with The Lemelson Foundation, and an incubation and investment program in Vietnam along with the Lotus Impact and local angel investor networks, such as the Mekong Angel Investor Network.

This partnership combines the knowledge and implementation of Villgro with the expertise and networks of PACE, setting the stage for even greater successes in the coming years. There will be new lessons to learn which will help us refine our approach, as we continue to grow our work and our impact.

This blog post is part of USAID’s Global Entrepreneurship Week Blog Series, which focuses on the importance of entrepreneurs for development, the challenges they face, and innovative models being developed to address them.

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Ms. Snider Mugese is a BSc. Financial Engineering graduate from Jomo Kenyatta university of Agriculture and technology (JKUAT). She is also a certified Public accountant (CPA K) currently pursuing a certification in Finance and Investment analysis. She previously worked as an accountant at NewQuest Consulting Limited, an accounting firm where she handled various companies in Bookkeeping and Tax and held a team supervisory role.

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Ordia Akelo holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Linguistics Media and Communication from Moi University. She was awarded a Climate Tracker Fellowship as a Climate journalist in 2016 & 2017. She has worked as a writer, editor and managed websites & social media sites for Standard Media Group and the African Network for Internationalization of Education.

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John has been CEO of Kenlloyd Logistics Ltd; which grew to be regional network partner and franchisee of DB Schenker of Germany; a leading global logistics service provider, negotiated and performed Fuel Supply Agreement with Jacobsen Elektro AS of Norway supporting seamlessly their 50Mw power plant in Uganda for 7 years, negotiated and signed a PPP concession with Government Of Uganda through City Authority and a subsidiary; Pioneer Easy Bus Ltd to operate public transport passenger services for 5 years. John has been instrumental in negotiating and introducing into East Africa innovative construction technologies and alternative building technologies; Probase Road System (‘’PRS’’) for roads and Lightweight Concrete Methodology (‘’LCM’’) for housing.

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Daniel Ohonde is a dynamic, strategic and visionary leader with more than 25 years of exceptional leadership experience in CEO / COO and investment stewardship roles managing high performance teams. He has a combination of international development experience and broad commercial experience gained from diverse markets. His experience in the provision of patient capital to small and growing businesses (SGBs) is extensive across Africa and, as a member of the Aspen Network of Development Entrepreneurs (ANDE) Global Executive Committee, he also brings on board a deep understanding of the SGB landscape in other developing and emerging markets globally. He is former CEO at the Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund (AECF). His passion is in supporting and catalyzing early stage (and scaling) innovative enterprises and business models that can sustainably deliver social change.
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Dr. Abdi Mohamed-01

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Paul Basil

Mr. Basil is Founder and CEO of Villgro Innovations Foundation. Over the last decade, Mr. Basil has incubated over 130 innovative enterprises, creating over 4000 jobs, touching around 5 million lives in villages across India.

Mr. Basil also co-founded Menterra Venture Advisors, a seed stage, impact fund that makes venture investments in for-profit, impactful enterprises.

Apart from the core of his mission, which is incubating early stage, innovative businesses, Paul also has contributed to building the social enterprise eco-system in India. Unconvention, India’s leading conference on innovation and social entrepreneurship is organized in 15 cities across India, a Centre for Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship at IIT-Madras that focuses on research and education, the ANDE India Chapter (Aspen Network for Development Entrepreneurs) a network of intermediaries that support small and growing businesses etc., are some of his achievements in building the eco-system in India.

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Paul

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Rob

Rob brings a unique combination of seasoned experience in business and social entrepreneurship, education and technology. Rob is a visionary leader who has lived in Kenya for the past 11 years and is fully aware of the unique challenges that Kenyans face seeking sustainable livelihoods within the East African context.

Robert

Robert serves as the CEO, Villgro Kenya where he is spearheading the replication of the Villgro incubation model of social entrepreneurship and impact investment in the healthcare and life sciences industry. He has over 10 years of experience in global health R&D as a biomedical scientist at the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI) where he discovered his passion for impacting peoples’ lives through science and innovation.

Wilfred

Wilfred brings in diverse experience having lived and worked in Middle East, Asia and Africa and travelled to 8 countries. His first immersion into startup and incubation world came while pitching his idea to a Jordanian based incubator, OASIS500. He went on to do a one year Villgro fellowship in India after which he took up the challenge of scaling Villgro to Africa.

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Dr. Kevin Muite is an Investment Manager with Villgro Kenya. Kevin holds a PhD in Immunology from the University of Chicago and a former consultant for large pharmaceutical clients. He began his scientific career in Durban South Africa researching HIV at the Doris Duke Medical Center at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal during his undergraduate years. He spent a year conducting research at Virginia Tech as an NIH post baccalaureate fellow researching mucosal immunology. ​

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Gibson holds a Bachelor’s degree in Arts (Economics) from the University of Nairobi. He is a Certified Public Accountant (CPA K) . He previously worked as a freelancing Accounts and Tax Consultant for SMEs and a junior financial analyst at Fledge-Africa, a financial consulting company providing investment readiness and fund raising support for Villgro Kenya’s portfolio, where he discovered his passion for due diligence and financial modeling

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