Adsense

Friday, April 10, 2015

Thinking like a CEO: Why a 19-year-old is winning the clean energy game in Kenya

Tom Osborn has a humble manner about him, which is
surprising since, at the age of 19, he has already been
recognised as one of world’s top young entrepreneurs.
“In Africa there are a lot of young entrepreneurs who
have great ideas but they never get noticed or past the
small-scale level. I think one reason is that they poorly
position themselves and the organisation,” says Tom
Osborn.
He is the founder of GreenChar in Kenya, a clean energy
start-up that produces charcoal briquettes for cooking
purposes that are both healthier to use and last longer.
His coals are produced from recycled agricultural waste
such as sugarcane, which studies show emit 90% less
smoke, and have 60% more energy than the normal
charcoal used for cooking.
GreenChar is less than two years old, but has already
caused a buzz. Osborn has recently been named as one
of Forbes ‘ global ’30 under 30′ social entrepreneurs, and
last year was selected as a 2014 Anzisha Fellow,
winning US$10,000 from Donors’ Circle at the Anzisha
Prize Gala Awards.
He was also chosen as a global Echoing Green Fellow
for 2014, which comes with two years of funding
totalling $80,000. He is the youngest recipient to receive
the fellowship in the organisation’s 27-year-history.
Humble beginnings
Osborn’s inspiration behind starting GreenChar was
based on a concern for the health of his community,
particularly his mom. Growing up in Awendo, a small
town in Kenya, he watched how women in the
community would cook meals for their families on
charcoal-fuelled cookstoves. And as a young child, it
was Osborn’s duty to light the cookstove for his mother
every day for lunch.
But in high school he discovered something that worried
him. “I randomly came across a report saying smoke
from firewood and charcoal killed more people than
AIDS, Malaria and TB combined,” he explained.
“That really shocked me and made me start thinking of
my mom, and that maybe she was slowly dying from all
the times she had cooked for us. And I felt guilty
because I was one of the people she was cooking for.
So I wanted to try to help her.”
He started researching online and came across students
at MIT who were testing the potential of converting
agricultural waste into charcoal. Osborn got in touch
with them and found out how to produce the healthier
charcoal briquettes that GreenChar now offers the
market.
Thinking like a CEO
It wasn’t just a good idea that led to GreenChar’s
success today. Osborn had to think strategically to
overcome a number of challenges facing adoption of his
company’s product in the market. For starters, he
needed to convince consumers to change the way they
have always cooked.
“Initially we had to give free samples, because it is a big
thing in Kenya that people don’t like to change,” he
said.
The free samples allowed him to educate consumers on
the benefit of using his eco-friendly charcoal briquettes.
Another strategic decision was to make sure
GreenChar’s product could compete with the price of
normal charcoal. “For our target customers the biggest
factor for them is price. So we believe that even though
our product is better quality, it should not be
expensive.”
For this reason, Osborn began offering their product at a
cheaper price. “And that is why I think we have been
very successful so far with sales. Once someone uses it
and is able to experience the benefits, and also realises
it is cheaper, they come back to buy it again.”
Growth supported by product diversification
When GreenChar first started it had the capacity to
produce 30kgs of its charcoal briquettes a day, but it
wasn’t long before Osborn and his team were unable to
keep up with demand. Using their revenue from sales,
they managed to increase this to 50kgs per day. This
soon proved not to be enough either.
However, to increase their production capacity further,
he realised they had to hire more staff, and this meant
they needed more money. The solution: product
diversification.
“At that point we decided to start selling cookstoves to
increase our revenue base so that in turn we could
scale up the charcoal production,” he recalled.
GreenChar partnered with Envirofit, a global
manufacturer of cookstoves that ensured optimum
efficiency of his eco-friendly charcoal briquettes. The
company started selling these in bundles to groups of
women, where the group pays instalments and the
women act as security for each other.
The revenue generated from this was enough to allow
GreenChar to scale up production to 150kgs a day. But
of course even this proved not to be enough.
Using funds Osborn received from Echoing Green last
year, GreenChar bought two acres of land and started
building its own manufacturing plant. The factory was
completed in November and the company produces
2,000kgs of briquettes a day, with the capacity to
increase this to 3,000kgs.
The company has also set up a research and
development team of university students to design
GreenChar’s own cookstoves.
Be well aware of risks
“I think in Africa there are a lot of young entrepreneurs
who have great ideas but they never get noticed or past
the small-scale level. I think one reason is that they
poorly position themselves and the organisation. They
don’t know how to tell their story. They don’t know
how to create their brand. And I think that is also very
important,” said Osborn.
“So I think entrepreneurs should spend a lot of time not
only on their products, but also on working out how
they are going to sell them.”
Osborn believes solutions to many of Africa’s problems
lie in its youth, and advises aspiring entrepreneurs to
take the most important step and start. However, he
added, they should be aware of the risks.
“In my case I have sacrificed a college education for two
years, and if GreenChar doesn’t work I might be
screwed up for the rest of my life. And that is very
scary,” he noted.

Credit : www.anzishaprize.org

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

The Promise --- Romans 2:4

4 "Or do you presume on the riches of his kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that God's kindness is meant to lead you to repentance?"
(ESV)

Sunday, April 5, 2015

What Easter Means to Me

Easter morning, God be praised,
Allelujah!
Jesus Christ from death was raised.
Allelujah.
On Good Friday, Jesus died;
Allelujah!
All for us, He was crucified.
Allelujah.
Jesus bore the pain for me,
Allelujah!
From my sin, to set me free.
Allelujah.
Death could not confine our Lord,
Allelujah!
And to life He was restored.
Allelujah.
Easter morn we consecrate,
Allelujah!
His resurrection to celebrate.
Allelujah.
Jesus’ love means when we die,
Allelujah!
We’ll live in heaven with Him on high.
Allelujah.
Our Savior loves us awesomely;
Allelujah!
That’s what Easter means to me.
Allelujah.
By Joanna Fuchs

Credit: www.poemsource.com

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Rhythm of Life

All stance feel nice,
When the heart is in tune,
I see myself in line,
With all rhythm of life,
I find peace for concepts,

My precious soul,
Wouldn't you lose yourself?
In common cause,
Fall into worldly lust,

Yes, I fear,
Yet I trust,
My hope in Christ,
His word my fate,
Rhythms of life,
Can't tear me apart.

Friday, April 3, 2015

4 Things I Wish Someone Had Told Me in My Twenties

It's never too late to learn what you wish you'd known.
by JEFF GOINS

“Just one big idea. One big idea, and we can change the
world.”

I made the mistake of uttering those words in the back
seat of a car many years ago in the companyi of some
older, wiser colleagues. We were racing from one
meeting to the next, and I, the token twentysomething,
was trying to divert attention away from work to a more
exciting subject. Dreams.
Rattling off recent causes and businesses that had
suddenly exploded, I marveled at the power of big ideas.
It was, apparently, all you needed to change the world—
and make a million dollars.
One of my colleagues smiled as I went on and on about
the power of creativity. He eventually burst into laughter
saying, “Really?! You think that’s all it takes? A big
idea? You’ve got a lot to learn.”
At first, the words stung. But years later, after actually
pursuing a dream, I realized how true they were. Finding
your purpose is rarely as easy as we think it is. We tell
millennials to go set fire to the world, that all they need
is a big idea and enough passion to sustain them. But I
have to wonder: are we doing them, and the world, a
disservice?
Looking back, I wish someone would have told me these
things earlier—or if they did, that I would have listened:
Don’t Just Chase Passion, Look for Opportunity
Telling someone to chase their passion is just plain bad
advice. Or at very least, it’s incomplete.

FINDING PURPOSE IS REALLY ABOUT OPPORTUNITY—
THAT PLACE WHERE YOUR PASSION, SKILLS AND THE
NEEDS OF THE WORLD CONNECT.

So many people are wandering from one job to the next,
wasting the best years of their life chasing a dream
instead of mastering a skill. This problem doesn’t apply
to just twentysomethings; it also affects people in their
thirties, forties and even fifties.
Frederick Buechner wrote that vocation is the place
where our deep joy meets the world’s need. I think
that’s true. Finding your purpose isn’t about doing just
what you’re passionate about. Of course, that’s part of
the formula, but it’s only one part.
Finding purpose is really about opportunity—that place
where your passion, skills and the needs of the world
connect. When you find what you’re good at, what you
love and what people want, you’ve found something
special.
I used to think life was all about pursuing your passion.
Now, I understand it’s about identifying opportunities
and going after the ones that align with what makes
you come alive.

Your Best Mentor Is Right in Front of You
In my twenties, I worked for a nonprofit—first as a
copywriter, then as the marketing director. For the most
part, I liked my job, but that didn’t stop me from
wondering what I was missing out on. I spent seven
years dreaming, seven years of longing, frustration and
wondering what was next. Then one day, I met someone
who opened my eyes to everything I was doing wrong.
Who was this mysterious guide? My boss.
The executive director of our organization, Seth, had a
wealth of knowledge I was oblivious to, because I was
blinded by my own ambition and arrogance. Having
earned his MBA years ago, Seth was a smart
entrepreneur, had a sharp marketing mind and was a
great writer. I kept looking outside my circles for the
perfect mentor, while missing out on the one that was
right in front of me.
When I finally began taking Seth’s advice, I realized how
much I had been missing. Years later, when I told him it
was time for me to move on and start my own business,
he said he was proud of me and admitted that I had
outgrown my role. But it was his guidance that had
prepared me for such a transition in the first place.
We all want someone to show us the way, but the truth
is the best mentors are usually right in front of us.

Ideas Are Cheap, Action Is Costly
I used to be a big idea guy. Every few months, I’d tell
my wife about some new project I was going to launch.
This was it, I would tell her. This was the big idea that
was going to make me famous and change the world.
Usually, she would just smile and sometimes sigh
faintly.
And of course, it never happened. I would get bored or
distracted and move on, abandoning the big idea,
moving on to the next thing. For me, it was all about
novelty. The next, new thing was always better than the
old. But after years of doing this, never seeing any of my
ideas take off, I wondered if my approach was all
wrong.
It wasn’t until I read a book by Scott Belsky when I
began to reframe my understanding of creativity,
dreams and what it took to do meaningful work. In
Making Ideas Happen , Belsky writes, “It’s not about
ideas. It’s about making ideas happen.”
After that, I stopped worrying about better ideas and
started focusing on better execution. Sure, it’s great to
have a good idea. And it’s certainly easier to make a
good idea succeed than a bad one. But a decent idea
with good execution is better than a great idea with
zero execution.

It’s Not About You
Recently, I was in the back seat of a truck, driving
through rural Kenya. My business had generated enough
revenue the previous year that we were able to make a
donation to a small nonprofit, and now we were on our
way to see where it had gone. We were driving to the
site of the building we had helped construct in the
middle of a leper colony.

PASSION CAN ONLY GET YOU SO FAR. WHAT IT
REALLY TAKES TO FIND MEANINGFUL WORK IN THIS
WORK IN THIS WORLD IS COMMITMENT.

When we arrived, I was amazed at what I saw: The
building was a one-room workshop, full of mothers with
babies on their backs, furiously sewing handbags and
school uniforms. They would later sell these at the
market, giving a percentage of overhead to keep the
building operational and keeping the net profit for
themselves.
How did we get here? I don’t recall ever having a big
idea. All I did was start a blog, sharing what I knew.
Over time, this slowly grew into a business, which had
brought me halfway around the world to something so
much bigger than I ever could have imagined.
Honestly, I thought it was about me in the beginning,
and standing in that camp just outside of Mombasa,
surrounded by mud huts and red dirt, I realized how so
very little of it had to do with me.
It reminded me of just a few years before when I was
sitting in the back of another car and had made the
mistake of thinking big ideas are what change the
world. Now, I know better. Ideas are just the beginning.
Passion can only get you so far. What it really takes to
find meaningful work in this world is commitment. It
means using the opportunities you have right now,
sometimes sticking with a job longer than you’d like,
understanding how God uses everything but loves to
use our faithfulness.
Chances are, at some point in your life you’ll find
yourself in the backseat of one car or another. The
question is, will it be the one full of dreams, or the one
taking you somewhere you never could have imagined?

Credit : http://www.relevantmagazine.com/life/maker/4-things-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-my-twenties

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

What I Really Know

More confused than ever,
As each drop vanishes,
Have I lost it,
Or is it mystery seeking its way out?
Fate speak!!! can't take it anymore,

Fresh air calms the troubled soul,
Let fresh revelations calm your heart,
Though strong trees are unrooted,
Let the weak leaves decay,
Green leaves come alive,

To retain knowledge,
Let go of past believes,
Yes equally weigh it relevance,
See it through first, speckless view,
That relevance retained and nix eradicated

Ads "Clean 9 "

Are struggling with  overweight, do you  have protruding tummy or pot belly? Our amazing Weight management product will help you save yo...

Watch

Instagram