Stabroek News Sunday

Young Leaders Fellows network to push entreprene­urship

- By Dreylan Johnson

The Fellows of the Young Leaders of the Americas Initiative (YLAI) recently hosted their first networking event, ‘YLAI Connect’, where as many as 70 business minds came together to share a whirlpool of innovative ideas.

The event was hosted by Triston Thompson, the first YLAI Fellow and cofounder of Intellect Storm, an informatio­n and communicat­ion technology engineerin­g group, along with the recent batch of participan­ts: Shaunda Yarde, CEO of Golden Crunch Coconut Biscuits; Judason Bess, co-founder and manager of the Farmacy, which deals with organic fruit and vegetable production; Abbigale Loncke, founder of Community Healthcare, a home care agency and Dason Anthony, CEO of 592 Dresses, an online clothing marketplac­e.

YLAI is an initiative of President Barack Obama. It was launched to link young leaders across the globe with the aim of providing them with the training, tools, networks and resources needed to transform their societies and drive economic developmen­t.

“The reason for this event is not just for you to come and meet the YLAI Fellows, it’s for us to form a youth movement, a movement that will drive this change, because we really need the driving force, the youthfulne­ss and innovation to push the developmen­t of Guyana,” Thompson told the young leaders.

The aim was to connect entreprene­urs at all levels and in various areas, to forge a sense of community and engage like-minded individual­s.

“The people we see in this room are possibly partners, are possibly customers, are possibly people we can serve in some capacity. But that opportunit­y is not just isolated to this room. We live in a world where the barriers just don’t exist anymore… There is no limit to who you can reach out to,” social media marketing expert Rosh Khan told them.

And reach out they did. The participan­ts made full use of the hours following the opening speeches to connect, forge relationsh­ips, and build their clientele.

The YLAI experience

“And in an essence I think that’s what YLAI is: it allows us to go into a space, interact with people, to show us that, you know, what we have is of value, that what we bring to the table is of value,” Yarde said.

She recounted her experience as a YLAI Fellow, recalling how out of place she had felt when she first arrived for the programme, and the moments that redefined her experience and by extension her life. She had arrived in Texas to meet 249 other fellows, and was overcome by feelings of uncertaint­y and inadequacy when she encountere­d persons who were “changing lives.” That was, of course, until she met a South African woman who sold gourmet cotton candy.

“If somebody can sell gourmet cotton candy, then by joy, I can sell a biscuit!” Yarde joked. She said that was her first “aha moment” during the Fellowship. The other was during a speech delivered by a Nobel Prize winner, who addressed learning to deal with failure. It was then she accepted that she needed to take a different approach when obstacles arose and rather than berate herself, learn to change her way of thinking.

“One of the things that happened to me at YLAI was, these two moments collided and I thought differentl­y about myself. I thought differentl­y about my product. I thought differentl­y about everything,” she said.

“So now I think my biscuits are a part of Guyana. I think they deserve to be shared. I think they deserve to be preserved. When you eat that biscuit it will take you right back to a child running in the street [when you could run in the street] and you’re running and you’re all messy and your grandmothe­r just baked

From left:

Judason Bess of The Farmacy; Abbigale Loncke, founder of Community Healthcare; Shaunda Yarde, owner of Golden Crunch Coconut Biscuits; Dason Anthony, CEO of 592 Dresses, Minister of Business Dominic Gaskin, Amanda Cauldwell, Public Affairs Officer at the US Embassy; Triston Thompson, co-founder of Intellect Storm and Rosh Khan, owner of SocialRank. this thing for you—that is what I’m selling.

“As one of the business owners in Miami said, ‘Shonda, what you have done is you have taken an integral piece of Guyana and you have placed it in a bag and you have made it accessible for every and anybody.’”

Yarde referred to YLAI programme as a “boot camp” for her business and a “re-boot camp” for her self-esteem and soul.

Government and the business community

The event was graced by Minister of Business Dominic Gaskin, as well as then Deputy Mayor Sherod Duncan and representa­tives from the US Embassy, the African Business Round Table, the Caricom Secretaria­t, Bank of Guyana, Partners of the Americas and the business community.

Gaskin, in his address, stated his belief that it was an enabling environmen­t and not support that was the most important thing for entreprene­urs in Guyana.

“… And an enabling business environmen­t for entreprene­urs is one in which there are appropriat­e options for developing ideas, applying solutions, financing ventures and capturing the value that you create,” he said. “And insofar as these elements are concerned, it is my belief that the current business environmen­t in Guyana, despite its challenges, does provide an [atmosphere] in which entreprene­urship thrive.”

Plans to continue to push it include the promotion of entreprene­urship in schools as a viable career option, the developmen­t of business incubators and the execution of the small

can business procuremen­t programme, which he noted will take effect from next year and allow registered small businesses to access government procuremen­t under a formal incentive system.

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