Mabel Chinecherem
28 posts

Mabel Chinecherem
@MabelNecherem
CATHOLIC||Crop Scientist|| Landscape Architect|| Lover of Home Automation 🤏
Ebonyi, Nigeria Katılım Ekim 2023
134 Takip Edilen34 Takipçiler

@Akir_a997 Not yet
E hard to get followers, Not a single follow back after following them
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@readswithravi I keep going even when it's difficult just so we can see what it would build.
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Mabel Chinecherem retweetledi



Women are not in low-income work because they lack education.
Across many programs, women are trained in;
tailoring
hairdressing
petty trade
because those are the easiest sectors to enter and that decision shapes income long before any training begins.
Low barriers don’t just make entry easier.
They make markets crowded.
So income doesn’t depend on how skilled someone is, It depends on what the market can absorb.
A different starting point changes the outcome.
Not:
What skills can women learn?
But:
Where does real, paying demand already exist that women can access?
In Nigeria, that looks less like street vending,
and more like supplying food to hospitals and corporate kitchens.
processing agricultural products for structured buyers.
Basic solar installation in a growing energy market and construction trades where demand is constant and competition is low.
These are not higher-education sectors.
They are different market structures.
Each one has something most programs ignore:
a defined buyer before training begins.
A woman trained for a market with demand will earn even with basic skills.
A woman trained in a saturated market will struggle even with strong skills.
Before any program enrolls a single participant, three questions determine the outcome:
~ Who is the buyer?
~ Can that demand absorb the number being trained?
~ What income remains after costs and competition?
If those answers are unclear, training will increase participation not income.
This is what a market viability assessment reveals and why outcomes are often decided before a program begins.
What would your last program look like
If demand had been assessed before enrollment?

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@Kate24570294882 Have been here for years now, and not a single follow back
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