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Citi Micro Entrepreneurs Awards 2007

by Sagar Gubbi last modified 2007-12-18 13:05

Celebrating entrepreneurial spirit at the base of the pyramid

Sonalben Rajebhai Parmar’s life story seems to be taken straight out of a ‘70s Bollywood masala movie with a quintessential rags-to-riches story. From being a wandering daily wage labourer to running a successful retail business in Gujarat’s remote Nani Rabdal village, Sonalben has not only turned around the fortunes of her family but has also become a role model to several women in the village. Shaheeda Begum, a resident of the holy city of Banares in North India, turned her husband’s struggling cloth weaving shop into a profitable, branded apparel-making business. Nipu Bhattacharjee of Assam was once a school drop out but now runs a highly successful oil manufacturing business. Krishna Amin from Udupi in Karnataka, who once struggled to support his family due to his meagre income, not only runs a successful construction material supplier business now but also funds eye surgeries and healthcare for the poor.

What is common to all these men and women? They are all successful Micro Entrepreneurs who built sustainable businesses using micro-credit and are also recipients of the 2007 Micro Entrepreneurs Awards presented by Citibank’s Citi Foundation in collaboration with a Delhi-based NGO named Partners in Change. A ceremony to honour the 2007 awardees was held in Mumbai recently.

Since its inception in 2004, the Citi Micro Entrepreneurs Awards program has recognized and awarded several entrepreneurial talents at the base of the pyramid. This year, 11 worthy winners were chosen from an applicant pool of more than 1000 micro entrepreneurs. Women accounted for nearly 50% of all the applicants, indicating micro-credit’s popularity among them. Among the winners, apart from Kusum Tanwar of Delhi, all the others come from semi-urban and rural areas. A press release from the Citi Foundation says: The awards were classified in three distinct categories- National Winner, National Runner-up and Social Responsibility. Keeping in mind the social, cultural and economic challenges in different parts of the country, awards in each category were presented to winners from four regions- East, West, North and South. Each National Winner of the 2007 Citigroup Micro Entrepreneur Awards received a cash prize of Rs.200,000/-. The National Runners-Up and winners in the Social Responsibility category received prize money of Rs.100,000/- each. NGOs, which nominated the awardees, received a special citation commending their efforts”.

The Citi Micro Entrepreneurs Awards program is a fantastic initiative that encourages entrepreneurship as a driver of social and economic change at the base of the pyramid. The program also provides us with real-life examples to understand the tremendous amount of impact that micro-credit can have at the base of the pyramid.

Here’s wishing everyone a happy holiday season! Merry Christmas!

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