Starting My Own Small Business-Participant's Guide
Starting My Own Small Business-Participant's Guide
Starting My Own Small Business-Participant's Guide
Participants workbook
Foreword
he Education For All (EFA) process, for which UNESCO is the lead Agency, has spurred considerable increases in primary school enrolments in many Least Developed Countries (LDCs). As these young people complete their primary education, their governments will be faced with the challenge of providing them with opportunities for further learning either in the form of general secondary education or some preparation for the world of work. Many countries, particularly in Africa, consider that technical and vocational education and training (TVET) can equip young people with skills that enable them to engage in productive livelihoods. Yet in the past, TVET programmes have not led to increased employment, despite the obvious need in these countries for technical and vocational services. This has been due, in large part, to a dearth of wage employment opportunities for technically trained workers. UNESCOs Section for Technical and Vocational Education is addressing this issue by proposing that entrepreneurial skills should augment the technical knowledge and skills learners might already have. Entrepreneurial skills will help them to acquire the mindset and know-how necessary to make self-employment a viable career option. Since there is currently little resource material available for teaching and learning about entrepreneurship, especially for learners in the non-formal setting, UNESCO has developed this prototype of a modular training package in entrepreneurship entitled Starting my own small business. It is my fervent hope that education authorities, and non-governmental organizations and others will utilize this training package for non-formal learners in conjunction with vocational skills training programmes. This can help prepare learners of all ages and backgrounds to have productive livelihoods as self-employed entrepreneurs. In countries where signicant numbers of young people work in the informal economy, this resource material may be used to train those already in the workforce to systematize and improve the quality of their work, with the goal of eventually becoming contributors to the formal economy. UNESCO views the ability to engage in a livelihood as a vital life skill. Therefore, this training package in entrepreneurship may be considered a contribution towards achieving goal 3 of the EFA agenda providing young people and adults with access to quality lifeskills programmes. Peter Smith Assistant Director-General for Education UNESCO Paris, March 2006
Preface
tarting my own small business is a prototype modular training package in entrepreneurship that is intended to provide supplementary knowledge to young people receiving technical and vocational education and training (TVET), in formal or non-formal settings, so that they may acquire an entrepreneurial mindset and the knowledge to set up a small business, if they so wish. The training packages have been developed as a result of numerous requests from high-level education policy-makers in developing countries, particularly in Africa, who have bemoaned the lack of employment opportunities for the technically trained, while at the same time the availability of technical services was very limited. They were convinced that young technically trained people needed to become self-employed as independent service providers rather than depend on nding wage employment. Young people would then be able to satisfy the demand for those services while carving out protable careers for themselves. Yet, there was little available resource material on entrepreneurship that could augment TVET. This led UNESCO to hold two workshops in Lusaka, Zambia and Kampala, Uganda bringing together TVET policy-makers from 11 East African countries to design modular training packages in entrepreneurship for higher secondary TVET learners and for non-formal learners. Following their guidelines and in close consultation with a core group of the workshop participants, UNESCOs Section for Technical and Vocational Education developed these prototype training packages for the two groups of learners. The training packages are elementary and are intended to be an introduction to ethical entrepreneurship. They make no claim to be a complete resource material on starting a small business. Rather, they are core programmes that outline the key topics on entrepreneurship and may be expanded or abbreviated as the teaching situation demands. They also aim at instilling a heightened sense of selfcondence, particularly among non-form al learners, and awakening them to the possibility that self-employment could be a viable career option. Launching a successful business requires an awareness of ones knowledge, skills, abilities, aptitudes, values and preferences. The training therefore begins by inviting students to consider their own strengths and weaknesses in these areas, so that they develop a clear sense of themselves. They are encouraged to perceive themselves as the actors responsible for their own lives. Learners are
Preface
then guided through the various stages of developing a commercial idea, from identifying a community need for a product or service to acquiring resources, organizing a workplace and marketing the product or service and nally preparing a business plan. At each step, the learner is encouraged to discover how his or her skills may be utilized to cater to a need in the community. While encouraging independent thought, creativity and initiative, the training demonstrates the benets of collaborative work by treating selected topics as group activities. Finally, a section on the use of information and communication technology (ICT) in a small business enables facilitators to introduce these concepts to the extent that is relevant. The rapid spread of ICT usage lends this topic increasing signicance. Such a discussion may also help to dispel the mystique that may persist in the minds of some learners regarding ICT. For learners completing secondary-level education the training may help to make the transition from the structured atmosphere of the school to the world of work. For some non-formal learners it may provide the keys to a livelihood and for others it may lend legitimacy and system to work they are already doing. By promoting economic self-reliance and the need to play a constructive role in the community, the training also aims at human capacity building, a key element of sustainable development. Furthermore, empowering young people to engage in productive livelihoods is consistent with the rst of the Millennium Development Goals, which is concerned with poverty eradication. Each training package consists of two parts a facilitators guide and a participants workbook. Facilitators may adapt and interpret the training material to suit the unique situations in each community. The packages may be translated into local languages and reproduced without restriction, provided UNESCO is acknowledged as their source.
My
workbook
How would you like to earn your living?
ou want to be independent and to take your place in your community and the wider world. A good way to achieve this would be by using your practical knowledge and skills, together with knowledge about entrepreneurship, to launch your own business. This course will help you to develop your entrepreneurial skills and start a business that could give you a livelihood that can support you and your family. Your business will contribute to the economic activity in your community and you may even go on to employ others. This would be a service to your community. Most people who would like to work for themselves nd it difcult to decide what type of business to start. If you wish to choose a business that suits you, you should start by thinking about yourself. You have knowledge and skills that are needed by both the community and business. Your ideas are needed. You can produce something or provide a service that you can sell. If youre already involved in some trade, this course will help you to rene your skills. As a self-employed businessperson, you will be responsible only to yourself. You will not have to report to supervisors or take instructions from anyone. You will be your own boss! However, you will have to use your judgment and your sense of what is right and wrong. You have a responsibility to your community to be an ethical entrepreneur. This class involves you personally, and you need to be an active participant to benet fully from it. While you need to contribute your ideas and views, it is equally important to listen to your classmates in an open-minded and respectful way. You are encouraged to think positively about how this course can help you to full your career aspirations.
Contents
PART A: BUSINESS SKILLS Unit 01 Learning together Unit 02 My entrepreneurial skills Unit 03 My ideas for small business Unit 04 My market Unit 05 Setting my prices Unit 06 Finding the money to start my business Unit 07 Banking Unit 08 Keeping track of my money Unit 9 Communicating with my customers and business partners Unit 10 Making the best use of my time Unit 11 Observing rules and regulations Unit 12 Managing my workplace Unit 13 My business plan PART B: INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY (ICT) Unit 01 Contacting my clients and partners with ICT Unit 02 The Internet and e-business CHECKLIST
7 8 10 12 14 16 20 24 26 28 30 32 34 36
39
40 42 44
Business skills
This part of the course will help you discover the qualities and skills you possess that will assist you to become a successful entrepreneur. It will also introduce you to a few basic concepts in business.
Part A
7
Unit 1
Learning together
u Why am I attending this course? m What do I expect to learn?
Unit 1
Learning together