Trackback test

April 28, 2008 by lkhogan

Writing on my own blog Going to Ghana I will reference a related blog Chicagohogans.com. Then I will add the trackback url for the post I am referencing below and see what happens.

Ghana Video Test 3 – Original video through YouTube

April 6, 2008 by lkhogan

This is video taken using a FlipVideo camera, uploaded to YouTube and posted here by pasting the YouTube embed code into the HTML code view.

Ghana Video test 2 – YouTube embed original video

April 6, 2008 by lkhogan

This is a link to uploaded video on You Tube added to the post by using the “add media” function in post edit window. Paste the YouTube url in url field and save to post. Edit link text in anchor text as desired.

Sunyani marketplace video

Ghana Test Video 1 – Embed code

April 5, 2008 by lkhogan

YouTube video added by plugging embed code into html view of WordPress post

Pomp, Circumstance And Kumasi

February 24, 2008 by duardf

Friday was Graduation Day.  Most of the students dressed up for the occasion. Two wore western-style suits and looked ready for their first shareholders meeting. Many more wore traditional clothing: flowing, colorful shirts, dresses and ’suits.’  They were effusive in their thanks, acknowledging they really didn’t know what to expect when they arrived on Monday, but they were especially impressed by our faith that they can make a change — by themselves — for Ghana.

Saturday was the long drive from Sunyani to Accra, with a stop in the ancient Ashante capital of Kumasi. We had hoped to see some history, but were running behind and only had time to check out a craft shop. The drive was something of an adventure… watching extremely top-heavy trucks navigate the two-lane, no guardrail road… we saw a few that didn’t make the turn and toppled over… can’t imagine the lost revenue for that business.  At one construction stoppage, we were swarmed by more than two dozen women, wares on their heads, nearly pressed against the window trying to get us to buy fruits or sweets. We could tell that this ad hoc marketplace had sprung up due to the construction…30 some-odd had just moved their operation to the construction zone, knowing they would have a captive audience. We bought a few oranges, but otherwise disappointed them.

More on our Friday trip to a truly heroic pair of schools in our next blog… as well as a stop in what might soon pass for a college town in Ghana.

Fuzz

Friends in a Snap

February 24, 2008 by sttkaufman

Living within a new culture for a week, you are bound to learn a few interesting subtleties. One of these is trying to master the handshake. There is the traditional western handshake that will do in most situations, but then there is the snap shake or so I call it. If another man is feeling chipper and wants to give you a real friend handshake, kinda like a high five, they give you more of a finger tip handshake but as they release they slide their fingers over yours and use your middle finger to make a S-N-A-P-! noise. If you do it right you can do that to them at the same time and both snaps blend together. I only got it right a few times, but its really fun and if you do they laugh and laugh. All great fun.

 Not so fun is our flight home. Yesterday we found out that our flight is delayed out of Accra for 20 hours. This is a quick post, but in the next few days, when we have a bit of time and internet bandwidth, I will post some more pictures and a better decription of what we did during the trip.

 Stephen

Cashew-flavored soda and bush meat, mmm …

February 21, 2008 by lkhogan

Today the students finished their business-proposal exercise. They broke up into six groups of 6-7 members. In about three hours of prep time, they came up with solid business ideas, mission statements, marketing strategies, high-level staffing plans, three-month cash-flow projections and growth curves. They were awesome… awesome in the pre-Valley girl sense. I’m truly full of awe.
Each plan was excellent; I could see investing in each of the teams.
But, of course, the most creative is what caught my eye. One firm planned a meat-packer… specializing in bush meat, what Americans would call “game.” Of course, one of the other students asked “wait a minute, isn’t the government going to ban hunting? How would you keep up with supply?” “With a corral on our grounds,” was the response. “Okay,” asked the questioner, “then is it still bush meat (ie wild) anymore?” Good question.
To wash down your antelope, try some cashew-flavored soda from another group. The soda will be all natural, made with organically grown cashews (just as their juice made from pineapples and oranges), because that will aid their marketing differentiation strategy). Plus, they would emphasize that the product is made in Ghana, adding to the customer loyalty and sense of community.
These, of course, are the made-up companies. After we return to the states, many of the group will send real proposals for real businesses, in the hopes of securing funding from GBA. If they impressed me after three hours, imagine what they can pull off in three weeks or more?
Tomorrow’s graduation day…someone ship me some mortar boards!
-Fuzz

Not too chicken to go to a poultry farm

February 21, 2008 by sttkaufman

Today was a really great day. Wednesday is the day that the students take the two days of learning we have given them and go “on the road.” We broke up into six groups and traveled all around Sunyani to look for businesses.

The goal was to interview business owners and for the students themselves to drive the process. They asked questions like: What is your business about? What value do you bring to your customers? What are your biggest challenges? What is your target market? I visited a poultry farm with my group. We took a taxi out of town and stopped by the farm. We met the laborer and he told us all about his business. The students asked questions and began to probe, politely but to the point. When asked what the “competitive advantage” of his business was , the worker explained that the owner went to university and learned how to compose a feed for chickens that would yield the maximum number of eggs at minimum costs. Great answer.

poultry farm

We traveled back to class where the group shared information and experiences. Tomorrow we will teach cash management and the students will start on their final business plan for presentation. I can’t wait. Will let you know what happens in the next blog.

Stephen

A seamstress, two women and nut-flavored pop

February 20, 2008 by duardf

Last post, I mentioned how most of the folks in class have trouble getting loans from conventional banks — no collateral, no loan. But these eager businessmen and women have proven they have the talent to make something from essentially nothing. So, how do you bridge that gap between talent and opportunity? Part of that answer is what we’re doing this week. The other part comes from two dynamic woman, Doris and Meta.

They’re sisters who run the Africa Assistance Project. The project doles out small loans to local budding entrepreneurs, mostly women. Those loans need to be paid back … and while the loan is yours to invest, the burden of repayment falls on a small group of about a dozen fellow shop owners and merchants. If someone in your group runs into trouble and can’t pay back their portion, the rest of the group has to chip in. They’ve had several successes, from bread makers to seamstresses. So, when you give to any micro-lending program, including GBA’s… you support women like this. To paraphrase the Peach Corps motto, a help up not a handout.

The folks in our class have slightly bigger businesses (3-10 employees) than the folks who’ve been helped by AAP (who are mostly one-person operations). Our students have dreams of multiple locations and, in some cases, growth beyond Sunyani.

Anyone for some cashew-flavored soda? More on that in my next blog.

- Fuzz

Professor Fuzz at Work

February 20, 2008 by lkhogan

Fuzz sent this picture today. I count more than 30 students, including several women. Go Ghana gals! – LizaFuzz teaching