How Wanda successfully builds her business:
Wango buys various products and successfully sells them in her village. She opens a market stall and sells food and other things. With the proceeds from her business she can build her house and also support her children's education as she can now pay for school supplies.
After 12 months she passes the money on to another woman.
How Wanda successfully builds her business:
Wango buys various products and successfully sells them in her village. She opens a market stall and sells food and other things. With the proceeds from her business she can build her house and also support her children's education as she can now pay for school supplies.
After 12 months she passes the money on to another woman.
How Wanda successfully builds her business:
Wango buys various products and successfully sells them in her village. She opens a market stall and sells food and other things. With the proceeds from her business she can build her house and also support her children's education as she can now pay for school supplies.
After 12 months she passes the money on to another woman.
Wango Kamanda is 41 years old and received 100 euros in microfinance from the NGO 'Society for Empowering the Needy' (SEN) in 2019. She is one of the group's beneficiaries in Nyanyahun town. Her wish was to open a shop where she could sell her things. She says that selling goods on a table can be very tiring because she has to pack and unpack her goods every day. With the help of microfinance, she would build a permanent building in which she could house all her products and thus expand her business.
Wango Kamanda is 41 years old and received 100 euros in microfinance from the NGO 'Society for Empowering the Needy' (SEN) in 2019. She is one of the group's beneficiaries in Nyanyahun town. Her wish was to open a shop where she could sell her things. She says that selling goods on a table can be very tiring because she has to pack and unpack her goods every day. With the help of microfinance, she would build a permanent building in which she could house all her products and thus expand her business.
Wango Kamanda is 41 years old and received 100 euros in microfinance from the NGO 'Society for Empowering the Needy' (SEN) in 2019. She is one of the group's beneficiaries in Nyanyahun town. Her wish was to open a shop where she could sell her things. She says that selling goods on a table can be very tiring because she has to pack and unpack her goods every day. With the help of microfinance, she would build a permanent building in which she could house all her products and thus expand her business.
Wango's family consists of her husband, who is 48 years old, and five other children aged 7 to 21. She also lives with her niece and nephew, who are 17 and 15 years old, respectively. There are also five other people living in the house who are not part of her family but who share the house. The house is made of mud bricks and cement. It has four rooms. One of these rooms is used to store the products that Wango sells at her market stall.
Her life improved after receiving microfinance and expanding her business, she said. Now she can provide her children and family with an education and enough food.
Wango's family consists of her husband, who is 48 years old, and five other children aged 7 to 21. She also lives with her niece and nephew, who are 17 and 15 years old, respectively. There are also five other people living in the house who are not part of her family but who share the house. The house is made of mud bricks and cement. It has four rooms. One of these rooms is used to store the products that Wango sells at her market stall.
Her life improved after receiving microfinance and expanding her business, she said. Now she can provide her children and family with an education and enough food.
Wango's family consists of her husband, who is 48 years old, and five other children aged 7 to 21. She also lives with her niece and nephew, who are 17 and 15 years old, respectively. There are also five other people living in the house who are not part of her family but who share the house. The house is made of mud bricks and cement. It has four rooms. One of these rooms is used to store the products that Wango sells at her market stall.
Her life improved after receiving microfinance and expanding her business, she said. Now she can provide her children and family with an education and enough food.
During the holidays, the children help sell goods in the surrounding villages, four to five miles away. Wango says that the best time to benefit from sales is the months of October to January. Wango also engages in animal breeding. She has chickens which are used for domestic purposes.
In the microfinance group, she can exchange ideas with other women about how she can improve their business and what experiences they have had with microfinance. As the family's main earner, she is keen to further expand her business in order to finance her children's further education.
During the holidays, the children help sell goods in the surrounding villages, four to five miles away. Wango says that the best time to benefit from sales is the months of October to January. Wango also engages in animal breeding. She has chickens which are used for domestic purposes.
In the microfinance group, she can exchange ideas with other women about how she can improve their business and what experiences they have had with microfinance. As the family's main earner, she is keen to further expand her business in order to finance her children's further education.
During the holidays, the children help sell goods in the surrounding villages, four to five miles away. Wango says that the best time to benefit from sales is the months of October to January. Wango also engages in animal breeding. She has chickens which are used for domestic purposes.
In the microfinance group, she can exchange ideas with other women about how she can improve their business and what experiences they have had with microfinance. As the family's main earner, she is keen to further expand her business in order to finance her children's further education.
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