whythawk ratings: measuring effective development

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Start your business in Johannesburg but hire your advisor in Cape Town
 

By Gavin Chait, on 11 June 2007

ImageSmall business development is a crucial part of government's strategy to reduce unemployment and increase black economic empowerment.

Whythawk has recently completed rating individual small business development consultants in the Western Cape and Gauteng as well as their overall impact on supporting emerging entrepreneurs.

Gauteng beneficiaries' businesses are three times larger, employ 30% more staff and pay a third higher wages than those in the Western Cape.   Yet only 47% of beneficiaries of small business programs in Gauteng are self-employed one year after the intervention compared to 76% for the Western Cape. "This is despite greater opportunities in Gauteng," says Hermann Jeuschenak, Director of Ratings at Whythawk.

Gauteng entrepreneurs secure significantly less finance (R 42 000 per business relative to R 233 000 in the Western Cape), are less likely to invest and three times more likely to remain unemployed post intervention. In addition service providers in Gauteng charge 250% more for their services than in the Western Cape.

Many of the small business support voucher programs, such as the Umsobomvu Youth Fund, do not require consultants to conduct follow-ups, guide their clients through the loan application or implementation phases post-intervention, or even to provide mentorship. Many consultants in the Western Cape endeavour to provide this anyway while virtually no Gauteng consultants do. The results are visible in significantly higher implementation rates in the Western Cape.

Gauteng service providers, in particular, regularly make unrealistic loan applications with limited hope of success. Both regions make similar loan representations (58% vs 59% of all clients) but only 15% in the Western Cape and 11% in Gauteng go on to have their loan applications granted.

"These are poor results and indicate consultants have little interest in progressing beyond simply producing business plans," says Jeuschenak.  "This is a pity as banks have expressed interest in working with consultants who consistently identify and support successful entrepreneurs."

This is the first year that ratings of this nature have been conducted and the objective is to improve the transparency of development as well as offering beneficiaries the ability to choose consultants who will offer them the greatest chance of success.

"Our results offer consultants, as well as development programs, the opportunity to improve their effectiveness in order to create more businesses and more jobs," says Jeuschenak.

The full report is available to subscribers at http://www.whythawk.com/ 

Keywords : development ratings, enterprise development, small business, consultants, gauteng, western cape
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Two Frontiers: wars of liberation and of determination
 

By Gavin Chait, on 09 June 2007

The chasm between knowledge and responsibility
The chasm between knowledge and responsibility is littered with stones
Never has the chasm between the expectations and concerns of the rich and those of the poor been greater.

The youngsters lighting fires in Germany at the G8 Summit to protest about globalisation and capitalism have little in common with the striking protestors in South Africa this week although they express themselves as vitriolically and explosively. This correlation of outrage leads each to believe they have something in common. They don't.

This past week saw the collection of 1 600 journalists, editors and newspaper owners at the 60th congress of the World Association of Newspapers held in Cape Town. While delegates from the developed world debated their response to the dramatic undermining of their industry wrought by blogging and social networking; those from the developing world expressed their despair at bannings, torture and exile.

Keywords : liberation, freedom, free speech, media freedom, globalisation, torture, liberty
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What comes after Capitalism?
 

By Gavin Chait, on 07 June 2007

Burn all the Air! Be Free!
Burn all the Air! Be Free!
The panel debated long and loud. Much argument both for and against. Civil society groups protested outside, each outdoing the next in plaintive cries and outlandish dress. Eventually the chairman spoke:

"Ladies and gentlemen, a decision has been reached. The system is beyond reform. We need something new that represents all. We have decided. Air will be replaced."

Outlandish? Perhaps. But so is the argument against Capitalism.

Keywords : Capitalism, free trade, reform, G8 summit, protest
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The Golden Pen, Yahoo, and the worst country in the world to be a journalist
 

By Gavin Chait, on 05 June 2007

Flesh against Steel
Flesh against Steel
Timothy Balding, CEO of the World Association of Newspapers, is no softy. Neither are any of the other 1 600 journalists and news editors from around the world gathered in Cape Town at the 60th World Annual Newspaper Congress.

Yet Balding was not alone in wiping eyes blinded by tears during the presentation of the Golden Pen award.

The Pen is presented annually by WAN to honour the journalist who, against great odds, has done the most to champion the cause of free speech. This year it went to Shi Tao, a Chinese journalist. And today, 4 June, is the 18th anniversary of the massacre at Tiananmen Square.

You may never have heard of him, but Shi is the first casualty in new-media's complicity in yielding up its users to brutal regimes. Shi is currently serving a ten-year sentence for distributing Chinese state secrets. What secrets?

Keywords : China, press freedom, free speech, world newspaper congress, golden pen
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The efficiency of markets and how protectionism leaves the poor behind
 

By Gavin Chait, on 01 June 2007


Image

There is something magnificent about the way that modern, market-driven businesses get ever more efficient. How they are able to derive ever more from ever less.

Agriculture used to be a matter of ploughing the soil, dropping in the seeds and rotating the crops every season to get nitrogen back into the ground. Now entire farms are mapped according to alkalinity, fertility, moisture, sunlight, orientation. Tractors are linked via GPS to ensure that precisely the right amount of fertiliser and water gets put in just the right places. Sophisticated breeding programs and genetic modification produces bumper yields.

Soon wireless sensors are to be mixed in with the soil to send even more data to computerised tractors.

The result of this in both Europe and the US has been that farms get by on less water and less land yet produce more food. Agricultural-subsidy addicted Europe has even started paying farmers not to return land to nature to ensure that the "historic and cultural" nature of farm-studded Europe is maintained.

This sort of progression isn't limited just to farming.


Keywords : capitalism, efficiency, markets, globalisation, poverty, trade barriers, protectionism
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