Girish Mahajan (Editor)

The SEEP Network

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Number of employees
  
~ 30 (2010)

Headquarters
  
Founded
  
1985

Type of business
  
Nonprofit organization


Website
  
www.seepnetwork.org www.seepcommunity.com

Similar
  
Microfinance Information Exchange, Freedom from Hunger, ACCION International, Grameen Foundation, ACDI/VOCA

Profiles

The seep network value initiative and access development services jjade baseline 2010


The SEEP Network (The Small Enterprise Education and Promotion Network) is a non-profit organization that acts as a network for practitioners working in microenterprise development and microfinance fields. Founded in 1985 by Elaine Edgcomb and Candace Nelson and sponsored by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Ford Foundation, Citi Foundation, USAID, and Omidyar Network, The SEEP Network since then has developed into a global learning community of 124 member organizations.

Contents

Global Learning Exchange

SEEP documents and gathers the experience of practitioners through its Working Groups, made-up of self-selected individuals, they serve as the vehicle for SEEP members to engage in participatory research, applied learning, documentation, and training on a particular topic. Some of the working groups include: Poverty Outreach Working Group, Social Performance Working Group, Consumer Protection Working Group, and Market Facilitation Initiative. The research accumulated through the Working Groups is disseminated via various publications, training tools, as well as SEEP Communities of Practice. Each Community of Practice provides practitioners an opportunity to collaborate on particular areas of shared interest while ensuring cross-collaboration between Communities where priorities or programs overlap and align. Currently there are three overlapping Communities of Practice: Financial Services, Enterprise Development, and Associations along with many cross-cutting initiatives.

The Practitioner Learning Program (PLP)

PLP was developed by the SEEP Network to engage practitioners in a collaborative learning process to document and share findings and help identify effective and replicable practices and innovations. The PLP is a process oriented program rather than an output oriented program as it emphasizes on the lateral learning opposed to producing documents or deliverables. The outputs produced are practically written, as peer-to-peer “how-to” guides, technical notes, case studies, and even a periodic newsletter to maximize their effectiveness with practitioners and the industry at large. The PLP’s comparative advantage – practicing locally, sharing globally – is based on working with on-the-ground organizations to test strategies in institutional settings common to many practitioners. Furthermore, this model of “learning by doing” has the added benefit of more institutionalized knowledge, because when practitioners learn from their own experiences, mistakes and discoveries, the learning itself is often more sustainable.

Value Initiative

The Value Initiative advances urban value-chain development to help millions of people work their way out of poverty. Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Value Initiative is in the third of four years of learning with urban value-chain development program partners in India, Kenya, Jamaica, and Indonesia. The project includes:

  • an on-line community, Enterprise Development Exchange, where practitioners can post their profile, opportunities and documents, and participate in on-line conferences;
  • the “Global Enterprise Development Network,” which is an open, online platform on the Enterprise Development Exchange to bring together different stakeholders to advance sustainable enterprise development; and
  • two Practitioner Learning Programs (PLP) on “urban Value Chain Development (uVCD)” and “Business Planning for Sustainability and Scale-up.”
  • The Value Initiative and partner ACCESS Development Services of India produced a 2009 video baseline survey of the initial stages of the ACCESS JJADE project, which supports artisans and microenterprises from the Jaipur jewelry industry with training and services to improve their income and quality of life.

    The SEEP Annual Conference

    The Annual Conference attracts a broad cross-section of key players in microenterprise and microfinance industries including NGOs, private sector firms, foundations, investment funds, and bilateral agencies. In 2009, more than 500 people representing 225 organizations and 56 countries participated. The SEEP Annual Conference consists not only of traditional plenary sessions, but also of workshops, two-days skill-building trainings, and Global Network Summit.

    Member organizations

    Academy for Educational DevelopmentACCESS Development ServicesAccion InternationalACDI/VOCAAction for Enterprise, Inc. (AFE)Affordable Housing InstituteAflatounAfrica Microfinance Network (AMFIN)Aga Khan FoundationAgency for Technical Cooperation and DevelopmentAll India Association for Microenterprise Development (AIAMED)American Refugee CommitteeAMPATHAsociacion de Instituciones de Microfinanzas del Peru (ASOMIF)Association of Ethiopian Microfinance Institutions (AEMFI)Associations of Microfinace Institutions of KenyaAssociation of Microfinance Institutions of KosovoAssociation of Microfinance Institutions of Uganda (AMFIU)Associations of Microfinance Organizations of KazakhstanAssociation of Microfinance Organizations of TajikistanAssociation of Professional Microfinance Institutions of Burkina Faso (APIM-BF)Azerbaijan Micro-finance Association (AMFA)Cambodia Microfinance Association (CMA)CARE USACatholic Relief ServicesCEDPACentre For Microfinance (CMF) NepalCHF InternationalChildFund InternationalChinese Association of MicrofinanceCoady International InstituteCoalition of Tanzania MicrofinanceConcern Worldwide USAConservation InternationalConsorcio ProMucConsortium ALAFIACOPEMECredit and Development Forum (CDF)Développement International Desjardins (DID)ECDI PakistanEcoVentures InternationalEndPoverty.orgFair Trade Forum - IndiaFair Trade USAFAM-F Cape Verdean National Microfinance NetworkFederation Nationale des Associations de Microcredit (FNAM)Federation of Chambers of Commerce and Industry of Sri LankaFinancial Institutions for a Rural Development Association (FINRURAL)FINCA InternationalFive TalentsFreedom from HungerFriendship Bridge (non-profit)Ghana Microfinance Institutions Network (GHAMFIN)Grameen FoundationHabitat for Humanity InternationalHeifer InternationalHope InternationalIndonesia Microfinance AssociationInternational Development EnterprisesInternational Network of Alternative Financial Institutions / Latin America (INAFI-LA)International Rescue CommitteeIRIS Center at the University of MarylandJoint Consultative Council (JCC)Lanka Microfinance AssociationMalawi Microfinance Network (MAMN)MambuMennonite Economic Development Associates (MEDA)Mercy CorpsMicrofinance African Institutions Network (MAIN)Microfinance Centre (MFC) for Central and Eastern Europe and the New Independent StatesMicrofinance Council of the Philippines, Inc.Microfinance Information ExchangeMicrofinance OpportunitiesMicrofinance Pasifika NetworkMicrofinance Transparency (MF Transparency)National Cooperative Business AssociationOIC InternationalOpportunity InternationalOrganismo Cooperativo Microempresarial de Colombia "Emprender Colombia"Oxfam AmericaPact, Inc.Pakistan Microfinance Network (PMN)Plan (aid organisation)Population CouncilPractical ActionPro MujerProDesarrollo, Finanzas y MicroempresaReach GlobalRed Argentina De Instituciones De Microcredito - RADIMRed Centroamericana de microfinanzas (REDCAMIF)Red de Microfinancieras de Honduras (REDMICROH)Red Financiera RuralRed KatalysisRegroupement des Acteurs de Microfinance au Nord Kivu RAMIF-NKRelief InternationalReseau des Institutions de Microfinance au BurundiRussian Microfinance Center (RMC)Sa DhanSANABEL - Microfinance Network of Arab CountriesSave the ChildrenShoreCap ExchangeSouth Asia Microfinance NetworkSwisscontactStreet Kids InternationalThe Foundation for Development CooperationThe Palestinian Network for Small and Microfinance (Sharakeh)Trickle UpUnion of Credit Organizations of the Republic of ArmeniaUnitusWater.orgWomen's World BankingWorld ConcernWorld Council of Credit UnionsWorld ReliefWorld Relief CanadaWorld VisionWorld Vision CanadaWorld Vision Inc.Yemen Microfinance Network (YMN)Zimbabwe Association of Microfinance Institutions (ZAMFI)

    References

    The SEEP Network Wikipedia


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