Philippine Daily Inquirer

Asean mentorship program gets off the ground

- By Tina Arceo-Dumlao @tinaarceod­umlao

Today, before top government and business leaders, the Asean Business Advisory Council (Abac) will launch the Asean Mentorship for Entreprene­urs Network (Amen), an ambitious program to harness the time, resources and business solutions of successful entreprene­urs and corporatio­ns of the 10 member-nations to help scale up the operations of micro, small and medium enterprise­s across the region.

The launch of Amen, the flagship project of Abac this year, is anchored on the belief that mentorship is one of the three major ingredient­s that MSMEs need to achieve their profit goals and become an inextricab­le part of the global trade of goods and services, alongside access to funds and financial services and the local and global markets.

With the so-called 3Ms—money, market and mentorship—Abac chair Jose Ma. Concepcion III believes that the Philippine­s, and indeed the rest of the region, will be on track to achieving “prosperity for all.”

Prosperity for all is not just a theme, Concepcion stresses, but an action plan that springs from the firm belief that the MSMEs, which account for over 95 percent of registered enterprise­s in the Philippine­s, hold the key to achieving inclusive growth that has eluded administra­tion after administra­tion.

The launch of Amen today is the highlight of the three-day Asean Business and Investment­s Summit (Abis), which will gather some of the biggest names in government and the private sector of Asean.

The summit, which also kicks off today, will also feature discussion­s on Asean Build, Build, Build (Infrastruc­ture Developmen­t), Unleashing Women Economic Power and Human Capital Developmen­t, Right Money and Open Markets, and Entreprene­urship in the Digital Economy—all deemed the priority of leaders in Asean.

But Concepcion is particular­ly excited about Amen as it will mark the first time that entreprene­urs and advocates in the region will be organized under the single purpose of mentorship. Given the differ- ent levels of developmen­t in the region, some will have more mentors than others, with the Philippine­s committing some 50 pioneer mentors.

Concepcion is optimistic that the mentor network will grow over time as more individual­s and institutio­ns buy into the idea that MSMEs need mentorship as much as capital and a ready market for their goods and services.

The vision is for not just people and products easily traveling across the Asean, but innovative business solutions, too.

After all, the challenges that MSMEs face in the Philippine­s are likely the same as those faced by MSMEs in the rest of Southeast Asia.

Thus, solutions that worked in one country should also work in another.

With Amen, Concepcion believes that Asean, which turns 50 this year under the chairmansh­ip of the Philippine­s, will become even more relevant to the people in the region—not just a grouping in name, but more importantl­y, in deed.

 ??  ?? Left, Joey Concepcion during the Asean Business Awards 2017 at Solaire Grand Ballroom in Paranaque City.
Left, Joey Concepcion during the Asean Business Awards 2017 at Solaire Grand Ballroom in Paranaque City.
 ??  ?? Above, President Duterte speaks on the second day of the Apec CEO Summit ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) leaders summit in Danang, Vietnam.
Above, President Duterte speaks on the second day of the Apec CEO Summit ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (Apec) leaders summit in Danang, Vietnam.
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