|
Emmanuel Faber
 |
Co-Chief
Operating Officer of Groupe
DANONE
After education in finance
and management, he started his career in 1987 with Bain & Company, as a
management consultant. He then joined Baring Brothers, the London-based
investment bank for 4 years, where he held various positions advising
clients on corporate finance and mergers and acquisition projects. In
1993, he joined Legris Industries, a French main board listed company
specializing in mechanical engineering, as Chief Financial Officer.
In 1997, he joined Danone to head the M&A and corporate strategy
departments. He was appointed to the executive committee of Groupe
Danone,
as Executive Vice
President and CFO late 1999, and was subsequently elected a Director of
the board of Groupe Danone in 2002. On July 1st, 2005, he was
appointed Senior Executive Vice President of the Asia Pacific World Wide
Business Unit.
On January 1st,
2008, he has been appointed
Co-Chief Operating Officer of Groupe DANONE.
Mr. Faber
holds seats on the board of various French and Asian companies. |
|
Alex Counts

|
President and
Founder,
Grameen Foundation
The
Grameen Foundation is a dynamic nonprofit, Washington D.C.-based
organization that has grown to a global network of 46 microfinance
partners in 25 countries. Today, under Alex’s leadership, Grameen
Foundation impacts an estimated 20 million lives in Asia, Africa, the
Americas, and the Arab World. Prior to founding the Grameen Foundation,
Alex worked for ten years in microfinance and poverty reduction,
primarily with the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh. He trained under and
worked closely with Prof. Muhammad Yunus, the founder and managing
director of the Grameen Bank, and the 2006 winner of the Nobel Peace
Prize. Alex has written numerous articles and book chapters on poverty
and microcredit for the poor. He has also authored a book entitled
Give
Us Credit: How Muhammad Yunus' Microlending Revolution is Empowering
Women from Bangladesh to Chicago,
which was published by Random House in 1996. Alex is a 1988 Cornell
University graduate, with a degree in economics. Alex speaks fluent
Bengali and lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife Emily and cat,
Seymour. |
|
Anthony Curci
 |
Senior Director for
Corporate Responsibility,
Crocs
Anthony joined Crocs
in June of 2007 with responsibilities of overseeing all the
philanthropic and environmental programs. The primary initiative to be
launched is SolesUnited, the first of its kind recycled footwear
donation program. The program combines recycling into raw materials, and
recombining with reclaimed and new material, to produce recycled shoes.
The recycled shoes are donated to populations in extreme poverty due to
war, disease and economic and political instability as well as to
respond to natural disasters/relief efforts worldwide. Additionally,
Anthony will serve as the Executive Director of the Crocs Foundation
which will be launching during 2008. Prior to Crocs, Anthony was the
President and CEO of SafetyMate, a consumer safety products manufacturer
targeting both commercial and consumer markets. Anthony started as an
entrepreneur, consultant and investors with 15 years of operating and
investing experience. Anthony earned a Bachelor’s degree in Psychology
with an emphasis in Business Administration from UCLA, a Master's Degree
in Psychology and an MBA in Finance from the Graziadio School at
Pepperdine University. |
|
Christopher Dunford
 |
President,
Freedom From Hunger
Christopher, President of Freedom from Hunger
since 1991, is an international development specialist and non-profit
organization manager with 31 years of work experience in Africa, Asia,
Latin America and the United States with practitioners, technical
assistance providers, and donors. Dr. Dunford provides strategic
leadership, participates in program development, speaks and writes for
international audiences, and leads development of partnerships for
Freedom from Hunger. Dr. Dunford joined the staff of Freedom from
Hunger in 1984, first as Director, Arizona Programs; then Regional
Director, U.S. Programs; Director, International Operations; and Vice
President for Programs prior to becoming President. Before joining
Freedom from Hunger, Dr. Dunford was a program officer for the U.N.
Environment Program in Nairobi, Kenya and a rural development and
environmental assessment consultant for the World Conservation Union (IUCN),
Development Alternatives, Inc. and the University of Arizona Office of
Arid Lands Studies. Dr. Dunford has a Ph.D. in Ecology from the
University of Arizona in Tucson. |
|
Laura Fleischer Proaño
 |
Technical Associate,
Freedom From Hunger
Laura Fleischer Proaño,
joined Freedom from Hunger in 2005 and has five years of international
development experience. Ms. Fleischer Proaño develops training manuals
and trains partners on savings group formation, financial literacy, and
health topics for women and adolescent girls in Africa, Asia and Latin
America. Prior to joining Freedom from Hunger, she provided research and
technical support to state senators and communities in the impoverished
region of Appalachian Ohio. Ms. Fleischer Proaño has served as a Peace
Corps volunteer in Ecuador, where she managed savings-led community
banks, trained microentrepreneurs and taught adolescents in high
schools. She has also conducted research in Brazil on Brazilian
microcredit programs. She holds a Master of Arts from Ohio University in
International Affairs and a Bachelor of Arts from the University of
Pittsburgh in Business and International Studies. Ms. Fleischer Proaño
speaks fluent Spanish and English and is proficient in Portuguese.
|
|
Stacy Edgar
 |
Founder and CEO,
Global Girlfriend
Global Girlfirend believes passionately that economic opportunity for
women holds the promise for real change in the world; because when women
have an income, they reinvest in themselves and in their children's
health, education and nutrition, building stronger families and
communities over time. Many women try desperately to make a living
selling their artisan quality goods but find that they have little
access to market opportunities. Through fair trade practices, Global
Girlfriend brings the work of these disadvantaged groups directly to
you. Global Girlfriend believes in forming long-term partnerships that
provide women a fair living wage with equal employment opportunities,
healthy and safe working conditions, technical assistance and
development strategies to foster prosperity and reduce poverty. |
|
Mary Houghton
 |
Founder, ShoreBank
ShoreBank's
shareholders and employees believe that a banking corporation can earn
competitive profits by helping its customers build their own wealth and
invest in their communities, and by working to create a healthier
environment. Therefore, we measure our success against three bottom
lines of profitability, community development and conservation. |
|
Ros Tennyson
 |
Director, Development Partnership Solutions
International Business Leader’s Forum
Building on earlier careers in theatre
and in the NGO sector, Ros started working with the International
Business Leader's Forum (IBLF) in 1991. IBLF is an educational charity
dedicated to putting business at the heart of sustainable development –
with a particular focus on social issues including health, youth
enterprise and education. Ros has been responsible for developing IBLF's
leading edge work in building cross-sector partnership approaches,
working in more than 40 countries – largely emerging and transition
economies. She has authored a number of seminal books on different
aspects of the partnering challenge (brokering, communications,
institutional engagement, evaluation and more). The Partnering Toolbook
is currently available on-line in 19 languages and is used worldwide by
all sectors. As Director of IBLF's global programme, The Partnering
Initiative – a joint venture between IBLF and the University of
Cambridge Programme for Industry – Ros has undertaken innumerable
partnership capacity and skills-building programmes for a wide range of
organisations at both strategic and operational levels.
For more information:
www.ThePartneringInitiative.org
|
|
Andrew Kassoy

|
Co-Founder
BCorporation Board Member,
Echoing Green
Andrew is Co-Founder of B Lab, a nonprofit
organization that is building the capital markets
infrastructure to unify sustainable business and
social enterprise through the creation of B
Corporations. B Corporations harness the
power of private enterprise to create public benefit
by allowing entrepreneurs, consumers, and investors
to distinguish “good” companies from good
marketing. These companies meet comprehensive
social and environmental performance standards,
institutionalize stakeholder interests in their
corporate articles, and create collective voice
through a global brand.
Andrew is dedicated to growing innovative for-profit
and non-profit models for social change. He is a
Board Member of Working Today and the Freelancers
Union, which provide affordable health insurance and
other financial services to independent workers in
thirty-two states; a Board Member of Echoing Green,
a non-profit venture fund that provides seed capital
to exceptional emerging social entrepreneurs; an
Advisory Board member of Wall St. Without Walls, a
non-profit which provides capital markets and
investment banking expertise to community
development organizations; and an advisor to Civic
Builders, a non-profit developer of charter schools.
|
|
Lloyd McCormick
 |
MED Technical Advisor,
Christian Children's
Fund in Africa
Too many of the world's children suffer the debilitating effects of
poverty and violence.
Children have the
right to experience life with as much joy and hope as possible.
Christian Children's Fund creates an environment of hope and respect for
children in need in which they have opportunities to achieve their full
potential, and provides children, families and communities with
practical tools for positive change. |
|
Kyle Taylor
 |
Kyle is a four-year veteran of Youth
Venture, a program that supports young people in launching their own
social enterprises. In 2003 he started his own team called Operation
Outreach: Spring in to Reading and Writing in part, based on lessons
learned from reading Savage Inequalities, by Jonathan Kozol. Operation
Outreach works to build bridges between college mentors and elementary
school children to inspire them to work hard and stay in school.
Kyle is currently making his way around
the world as Youth Venture’s Global Representative, meeting with young
change makers on five continents while simultaneously documenting their
work in words, pictures and film to bring awareness to a global movement
that is reshaping our world. The North American leg is running from
February 10th to March 23rd, 2008, taking him to
32 US States and 2 Canadian Provinces in conjunction with Staples,
Starbuck’s and MySpace.
His journey is being documented online at
www.genv.net and
www.yvroadtrip.org and has been covered
extensively by the international press, including BBC News and The Times
of India.
|
|
Lena Miller
 |
Executive Director of Development
Hunter's Point
Family
The Hunters Point Family (HPF) is a
grass-roots, community-based, youth development agency that provides
holistic educational, social, and enrichment programs to youth and their
families living in the primarily African American Bayview Hunters Point
community of San Francisco.
The mission of The
Hunters Point Family is to prepare youth to become independent, strong,
and productive adults through comprehensive support services that
empower them to develop their full potential |
|
Lynne Randolph Patterson
 |
Lynne, Co-Founder and Executive Director ,
Pro Mujer
International, spent the first part of her career in
the United States as a teacher and administrator in the public school
systems of New York City and Port Washington, Long Island, promoting
educational programs for low income families and children. In 1990, she
moved with her family to Bolivia where she joined forces with Carmen
Velasco, a Bolivian psychologist, to develop training programs for women
receiving donated food. Together they developed an inclusive,
comprehensive program to address what the women said were their primary
needs. The training programs in business development, child development,
health and family planning eventually led to the founding of Pro Mujer,
a microfinance and women’s development network that combines financial
services with health care and other training programs so that women can
build sustainable lives for themselves and their families.
Pro Mujer
began in Bolivia in 1991, and has since been successfully expanded and
replicated in Nicaragua (1996), Peru (1999), Mexico (2001) and Argentina
(2005). Lynne has degrees in Government (B.A., Principia College);
Education (M.A., Teachers College, Columbia University); American
History (M.A., New York University) and Educational Administration (Ed.D.,
New York University). |
|
Catharyn A. Baird, JD
 |
Catharyn, is the
Founder/CEO of
EthicsGame.com, a company that provides
a family of web-based ethics and compliance simulations that can be used
for education, training, or individual professional development.
Catharyn is also
Professor Emerita of Business at Regis University, where she taught law,
ethics, and public policy. She has published extensively, consults in
the area of ethics and spirituality in the workplace, and is a highly
regarded speaker.
The author of
Everyday Ethics: Making Hard Choices in a Complex World, she
co-developed an assessment tool called the Ethical Lens Inventory
that assists people in determining the primary ethical perspective they
use to make decisions. |
 |
CFED expands
economic opportunity by helping Americans start
and grow businesses, go to college, own a home,
and save for their children’s and own economic
futures. We identify promising ideas, test and
refine them in communities to find out what
works, craft policies and products to help good
ideas reach scale, and develop partnerships to
promote lasting change. We bring together
community practice, public policy and private
markets in new and effective ways to achieve
greater economic impact.
|
|
Rev. Michael J. Sheeran, S.J.
 |
President,
Regis University
Father Sheeran became the 23rd
president of Regis University on January 1, 1993. and in August of
the same year he hosted the first meeting between Pope John Paul II and
President Bill Clinton at Regis University. He also served as an expert
commentator for Channel 4 in Denver during World Youth Day and the 2005
election of a new Pope.
Father Sheeran received his
doctorate in politics from Princeton University in 1977 and joined Regis
University in 1975 as Assistant Professor of History and Political
Science and Director of Student Academic Services. In 1977, he was
named Academic Dean of the College and became Academic Vice President in
1982. He also taught at St. Louis University and at Regis Jesuit High
School in Denver.
Regis University, with more than
16,000 students, continues to flourish under his leadership, earning a
top school in the Western United States ranking for the past ten
consecutive years from U.S. News & World Report, gaining
recognition from the Templeton Guide as one of the top 100 schools in
the nation for student character development, and hosting 11 Nobel Peace
Prize Laureates during the past seven years. |
|
Dr. Michael Goess
 |
Sullivan Professor, Regis
University
Dr. Goess has been part of Regis
University for 25 years, leading the graduate division of
business, charing the MBA program and teaching finance,
strategic planning, law, ethics, international business, and
accounting. With more than 17 years in the for profit
sector, over 10 years as small business owner and service on
multiple not for profit boards of directors, Michael is now
the Sullivan Professor for the John J. Sullivan Endowed
Chair for Free Enterprise.
Awards: Outstanding Professor in the
University of Denver's Weekend College Program in 1983. John
Francis Regis award in 2001 for outstanding contributions to
the Regis University community
|
|
Dr. Meg Thams
 |
Faculty, Assistant
Professor of Marketing, Division of
Business,
Regis
University
Meg Thams has taught for Regis University
for over 10 years. Prior to coming to Regis, Meg worked in
the medical device industry and has over 20 years experience
in product management, and marketing planning and strategy.
She has served on the boards of the American Marketing
Association, and the Medical Marketing Association.
Meg holds a Ph.D with a specialization in
Marketing; an MBA from the University of Colorado, and a
Bachelor of Arts Degree from Ohio State University.
|
|
Amy Luz |
President and CEO,
The
Association
for Enterprise Opportunity (AEO) is the national
leadership organization and the voice of microenterprise development. By
providing cutting edge training, knowledge sharing, Federal and State
public policy and advocacy, and communications, AEO empowers a community
of nearly 500 member organizations to be uniquely effective in serving
the needs of micro entrepreneurs who do not have access to traditional
sources of business education or capital. |
|
Annette Richter
 |
Member
of
The World Bank's
World Development Report 2007 team- Development and the Next
Generation.
As a
team member, Annette conducted research on education, demographics,
national youth policies and micro credit. She has been closely
involved with putting the Report into practice. She facilitated
consultations between youth and policy makers from eleven countries
throughout East Asia . She also developed facilities to support
youth employment in Africa and Middle East North Africa regions. Her
recent work has focused on youth and entrepreneurship development in
the South Asia Region. |
|
Carlos Perez-Brito |
USAID-Guatemala |
|
Steve Meyer
 |
Main Street Pedicabs
has been
perfecting the design of human powered pedal vehicles since 1992.
The Pedicab or bicycle driven
pedestrian taxi is an environmentally friendly solution to the
challenges of modern transportation. Pioneering design and craftsmanship
combine to provide a viable alternative to the internal combustion
engine. This new layer of transportation provides many exciting
opportunities such as
Pedicabvertising. |
|
Natasha Cassinath
 |
Street Kids International believes that
street involved youth have the potential for transforming their own
lives when given non-judgmental support in developing skills, making
choices, and accessing opportunities. |
|
Bruce Hutton
 |
Dean Daniels School of Business,
University of Denver
Dr. Bruce Hutton serves as Dean of the Daniels
College of Business, holds the Piccinati Chair in Teaching Innovation,
and is a Professor of Marketing at the University of Denver. He
previously served as Dean of the College (1990-1994), Director of
off-site MBA programs (1986-1989), and Chairman of the Department of
Marketing (1980-1985). He has received the National Park Service’s
highest civilian honor, that of Honorary Ranger, and the Beyond Grey
Pinstripes 2001 Faculty Pioneer Institutional Leadership Award from the
World Resources Institute and the Aspen Institute Business and Society
Program. The award recognized Dr. Hutton’s leadership in integrating
social and environmental issues into business education. He was the
co-author of a proposal for enhancing MBA programs, which was
subsequently funded with an $11 million dollar matching gift. A
significant component of this program deals with issues of values and
social responsibility, including environmental ethics and sustainable
development. Dr. Hutton received his Ph.D. from the University of
Florida with a major in marketing and minors in social psychology and
social research methods. Dr. Hutton is active in the community, serving
on a variety of nonprofit boards, and is the co-founder of the Colorado
Ethics in Business Awards. |
|
Jennifer Denomy

|
Manager PPIC-Work Project,
MEDA
Jennifer Denomy has worked
in education and international development for 16 years and joined
Mennonite Economic Development Associates (MEDA) in 2006. She focuses
on youth, education and microfinance. As manager of the PPIC-Work
project, jointly run by MEDA and Partners in Technology Exchange, she
supports non-formal education and workplace safety initiatives with
children who work in microfinance-supported enterprises in Egypt. PPIC-Work
(which stands for “Promoting and Protecting the Interests of Children
who Work”) is currently examining how children can more effectively
learn business, life and academic skills in the workplace. Jennifer
holds an M.Ed in Comparative, International and Development Education
and has worked as a pedagogical manager, certified teacher trainer,
curriculum designer and research analyst for a range of organizations.
She has lived and worked in Bangladesh, Russia, Egypt and Germany.
|
|
Warner
Woodworth

|
Social
Entrepreneur, Co-Founder of
Enterprise Mentors,
HELP International, and
UNITUS Microfinance Accelerator
Warner
Woodworth is a social entrepreneur and professor of organizational
behavior at the Marriott School, Brigham Young University. He has been a
leader in the global movement to prepare a new generation of
college-age social entrepreneurs for fighting poverty. Using his courses
and the university as a social enterprise incubator, he has spun off
over 40 humanitarian projects in the past 15 years--providing
capacity-building mechanisms such as literacy, healthcare, microfinance,
appropriate technology, worker-owned co-ops, etc. Over the last decade,
Warner has been a founder, board chair, or director of
Enterprise Mentors,
HELP International, and the Unitus acceleration model that has become so
spectacular, as well as 13 other NGOs that have
established income-generating family microenterprises for self-reliance
in 22 countries. Collectively, Warner, his students, and their
associated NGOs have raised over $10 million for microfinance, trained
140,000 microentrepreneurs in small business skills, and served more
than a million impoverished microcredit clients in India, Mexico, Kenya,
the Philippines, and other countries—in 2006 alone. |
|
Jason Fairborne
 |
MicroFranchise Development Initiative, Director: Center for Economic
Self-Reliance,
Brigham Young University
Jason
is in demand internationally as a consultant to many organizations on
establishing microfranchises. He has served as a speaker on
microfranchising at numerous international conferences and several
Learning Labs. He is the author of MicroFranchising: Creating Wealth
at the Bottom of the Pyramid and he has written several pieces on
microfranchising. He co-authored the “MicroFranchise Handbook”,
outlining various microenterprises that are being replicated around the
world. He is editor and author of the “MicroFranchise Toolkit, a
guide to systematize and replicate microfranchises; He also authored the
articles “MicroFranchising: New Innovative Tool for Economic
Development and Microfranchising. Jason has an MSc in Development
Management from the London School of Economics and Political Science,
focusing his research on international political economy, Africa’s
informal economy, poverty, and development management. |
|
Fiona Macaulay

|
President,
Making Cents International
Fiona is committed to creating a legacy of
improved skills and economic opportunities at the individual, community,
and global levels. She is the Founder and President of
Making Cents International,
a specialized consulting and training firm based in Washington, D.C.
that equips adults with the vision, confidence, and skills to create and
grow their own businesses. Under her leadership, Making Cents has
emerged as a leader in the development of the youth microenterprise
sector by creating learning opportunities and networks that inspire
youth, practitioners, policy makers, and funders to more effectively
share and develop programs, policies, and partnerships to impact youth's
economic opportunities.
Fiona has more than ten years of experience
in the international development sector and has worked closely with
local partners in Africa, the Middle East, Latin America and the Caribbean,
Europe and North America. Fiona is a founding member of the
International Development Effectiveness Alliance (IDEA) and Chair of the
Board for the Campaign for Female Education USA Foundation (CAMFED). She
is also active in domestic youth entrepreneurship and women’s small
business development networks and is regularly invited to speak at
conferences and other learning events. |
|
Joey Baum

|
Founder,
JB Pouches
Joey Baum is a freshman at the Wharton School of
Business at the University of Pennsylvania. He is originally from
Boulder, Colorado. He started his business, JB Pouches LLC, when he was
a junior at Boulder High School. JB Pouches imports reusable grocery
bags for distribution and resale. The business was started as a catalyst
to reduce the large number of plastic bags used in the United States.
He is grateful for the number of grocery stores that offer rebates for
reusable bags. He hopes this trend will continue and that the days of
“paper or plastic” are limited. |
|
Carrie Magnuson
 |
Franchise Partner Manager,
Scojo
Foundation
Scojo Foundation is a non-profit social
enterprise that trains entrepreneurs to start their own micro-franchises
selling low-cost reading glasses. Ms. Magnuson is responsible for
growing and managing the Franchise Partner Channel, Scojo Foundation’s
main mechanism for global growth. Scojo Foundation works with local
Franchise Partners organizations to bring its micro-franchise model to
South Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Scojo Foundation and its partners
support over 1,100 “Vision Entrepreneurs” and have served nearly 100,000
customers to date.
Prior to joining Scojo Foundation, Ms.
Magnuson worked in Guatemala, serving as Country Director for Community
Enterprise Solutions, a non-profit organization that creates sustainable
work opportunities through micro-consignment and other small business
ventures. As Country Director, she contributed to the creation and
growth of a locally owned business and their micro-consignment
distribution system. Ms. Magnuson was responsible for in-country
operations, including managing regional coordinators responsible for
over 60 rural entrepreneurs selling Scojo Foundation reading glasses,
seeds, water filters, wood-burning stoves and energy-saving light bulbs.
Ms. Magnuson received her B.S. in Business Administration and B.A. in
Geography from Miami University in Ohio. |
|
Chris Naylor
 |
Executive Director
RESULTS and the RESULTS Educational Fund
Chris
oversees the operations of the non-partisan, non-profit volunteer
citizen advocacy organization with grassroots groups in over 100
communities across the US, and affiliates in six countries. RESULTS is
committed to empowering citizens to lobby elected officials for
effective solutions and key policies to end hunger and to make poverty
history. Key issues impacted by RESULTS include microfinance and the
microfinance summit campaign, global health focused on tuberculosis
eradication, and early childhood development and education, among
others.
Chris Naylor comes to RESULTS with a
strong background in advocacy, political organizing, non-profit
management, and fundraising.
At the Joint Center for Political and
Economic Studies, a national research institute dedicated to public
policy issues affecting minorities, Ms. Naylor served as Vice-President
for Corporate Relations and Strategic Planning. Previously, Ms. Naylor
was at WAMU 88.5 FM Radio in Washington, D.C., where she served as
Director of Public Affairs and was responsible for developing corporate
and community partnerships, leading corporate and special event
fundraising, and conducting communications outreach to extend the
station's impact.
|
|
Crickett Nicovich
 |
Washington DC based
Grassroots Organizer for
RESULTS
As a 2005 graduate
of Millsaps College, Crickett was commissioned by the General Board of
Global Ministries of the United Methodist Church to serve for three
years as a Mission Intern. The first year and a half of her service she
was placed SHADE, a faith-based NGO in Cape Town, South Africa, working
with the local refugee community and organizing international HIV/AIDS
conferences and gender rights trainings for rural women across
sub-Saharan Africa. Crickett also ran a weekly children’s program for
refugee and former street children. In January 2007 she started the
second half of her Mission Intern commitment with RESULTS working on the
Youth in Action project and grassroots organizing for the global
campaigns. Spearheading YIA, Crickett works to engage students and young
adults around the United States in advocacy efforts for microcredit,
HIV/AIDS/Tuberculosis/Malaria, child survival, and education for all.
Crickett also served two years with AmeriCorps doing campus volunteer
recruitment, worked on local campaigns, and as a case manager for the
homeless population of Washington, DC. She is originally from
Mississippi.
|
|
Nathan Burrell
 |
Social
Entrepreneur, Founder and President
The Minority E-Commerce Association
The Minority E-Commerce
Associate, (MECA) is a
nonprofit organization founded to promote economic development through
the utilization of technology. MECA is responsible for instituting
Community Technology Centers, Technology Business Centers, and a
Technology Think Tank, a consortium of engineers and business
professionals in search of innovative ideas and technology applications.
Currently, Nathan serves as the Founder/CEO of the "Honey Project", a
flagship program under MECA. The "Honey Project" is an innovative,
youth oriented enterprise that focuses on Youth Entrepreneurship and
Poverty Alleviation.
Nathan is also President and Chairman
of the Board of Community Equity Partners Group,
Inc., a social real-estate
holding and investment company, and manager of The Burrell Group, LLC a
strategic planning and consulting firm. He was formerly President and
CEO of VirtuPass Corp., an alternative payment platform company that
provided secure and anonymous e-commerce transactions. In this role, Mr.
Burrell successfully guided the company from start-up and capital
acquisition to product launch. |
|
Willeen Johnson Whipple
 |
NTDA &
The American Indian Youth Entrepreneurial
Empowerment Project
After administering a
highly successful
Credit Outreach
program over the past three and ½ years, the NTDA saw the
need to create a new component of the initiative that deals specifically
with American Indian youth. Since our current initiative only allows us
to assist American Indian youth in accessing FSA Youth Loans up to
$5,000 for a modest income-producing project many of the other
educational tools necessary for an American Indian youth to develop a
proper business plan is still left up to the individual youth.
The
NTDA,
on the other hand, has decided to take this one step further and are
proposing to create the
“American Indian Youth Entrepreneurial Empowerment Project.”
The project will eventually become an integral component of the
NTDA and will become a
self-sustaining ingredient in our already successful
credit outreach
initiative. The
NTDA
matches qualified business mentors with young entrepreneurs to allow
knowledge sharing and ensure a higher business success rate. Through
entrepreneurship education the NTDA not only empowers Native youth, but
assists them in seeking other financing sources for their
entrepreneurial projects. |
|
|
The
YouthWorks
program was launched
in 1999 to offer Denver’s youth, ages 25 and under, the opportunity to
experience entrepreneurship in a way that makes sense for their
lifestyle and gives them the time, individualized support, and resources
they need to meet their personal and business goals.
|