Helps International (HINT)

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You are here: Home / Archives for microcredit

NOW ACCEPTING VOLUNTEERS!

June 5, 2015 by Jessa Coleman Leave a Comment

VolunteerWorldWho wants to join us in Cameroon?

If you’re looking for a rewarding experience, a new adventure, an eye-opening summer, or an educational year, look no further than Helps International. We are currently (and always) accepting volunteers to manage a myriad of projects in health, education, IT, and microfinance. Our programs support the local community of Buea and its environs.

Buea, Cameroon is located in the Southwest Province, one of two Anglophone provinces in Cameroon. Francophone Douala is a mere hour by car, as is the seaside town of Limbe. Discover African culture, fall sleep beneath stunning sunsets, hike an active volcano, explore the metropolis of Douala, and enjoy the vibrant life of Cameroon! Most importantly, spend your summer (or two week vacation… or year….) working to build a better world.

HINT has recently partnered with VolunteerWorld, a German organization that sources volunteers from around the world to work with enterprises like ours who need the extra help. Check out their user-friendly new website: VolunteerWorld.

For more information on our volunteer positions, click below:

Microfinance Fund Manager
Health Outreach Program Coordinator
Summer Sports Camp Coordinator
IT Training and Support

Keep in mind that HINT always welcomes volunteers with new ideas. If you have an idea for a program that you would like to run other than those listed above, please contact us. We can also find placements with local organizations for volunteers who wish to work with orphanages, teach English, and more.

As always, if you would like to contact us, donate, or get involved, you can find us on: Twitter, Facebook, by email, or by contacting us online.

We wish you continued success in your social enterprises and endeavors in 2015! Together, we can improve our local (and global) communities.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Africa, Cameroon, children, community, development, digital, health, HINT, HIV/AIDS, Information, IT, Kingdom Community Fund, microcredit, microfinance, soccer, sport, summer camp, tech, training, volunteer

HINT would like to announce a new partnership…

May 25, 2015 by Jessa Coleman Leave a Comment

Remember that time we promised that more changes were coming your way? Well, yet another of those changes has arrived! HINT is proud to announce that it has now entered into a partnership with the Frontier Market Scouts fellowship program!

The Frontier Market Scouts (FMS) fellowship offers professional training in social enterprise and impact investing to those seeking a career shift. Twice each year, FMS offers two week training programs in Monterey, CA, USA and in Amsterdam, NL with courses taught by leading professionals in the social impact space. Following successful completion of their training, fellows receive a certificate from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies (MIIS) at Monterey. Recognized as a leader in international studies, MIIS’s academic programs are world-renowned for their academic rigor and professional impact. After certification, fellows spend 2 – 12 months working with a FMS partner organization in the social impact space.

HINT will be one of FMS’s social impact partners, bringing fellows to Cameroon to work in the social impact space. FMS fellows will join HINT’s microfinance program, called Kingdom Community Fund (KCF), as fund managers. This opportunity will provide valuable professional experience for FMS fellows in managing a microfinance fund and working in developing markets with small-business entrepreneurs. Alternatively, FMS fellows will be able to provide business training to KCF’s entrepreneurs and consistent management of the Kingdom Community Fund.

We look forward to sharing more with you about our HINT – FMS partnership in the coming months! Feel free to click on the link to FMS above to explore the FMS program. Perhaps HINT will see one of you in Cameroon as an FMS fellow in the future!

As always, if you would like to contact us, donate, or get involved, you can find us on: Twitter, Facebook, by email, or by contacting us online.

We wish you continued success in your social enterprises and endeavors in 2015! Together, we can improve our local (and global) communities.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: change, development, enterprise, FMS, HINT, impact, impact investing, KCF, Kingdom Community Fund, microcredit, microfinance, social enterprise, social entrepreneurship, social impact, training

Change is in the air: Join HINT in all the excitement of 2015

May 6, 2015 by Jessa Coleman 1 Comment

After some peace and quiet at HINT, we are now back in action with several changes coming your way in 2015! We have continued our works to help the poor and underprivileged, but are now pleased to announce that some exciting new changes are being incorporated into the programs.

The year started off well, with HINT welcoming its first volunteer in almost five years on March 1st. Jessa Coleman arrived off an overnight flight from Amsterdam, where she had been engaged in a fellowship in impact investing and social entrepreneurship. After a day to recuperate, she was bright-eyes, excited, and ready to apply the knowledge she had gained at her training to HINT’s programs and business model. Jessa will be with us for four months total, until July 1st. In that time, she has accepted a heavy burden of responsibility. Jessa agreed to work on several different aspects of HINT’s operations, including: updating HINT’s online and social media presence; revitalizing the Kingdom Community Fund; developing a sustainable business plan for HINT; and reaching out to new donors and partners.

Jessa has taken on the title of “Fund Manager” of the Kingdom Community Fund (KCF), HINT’s microfinance institution. She has been developing a more efficient management and accounting system for the fund while meeting the fund’s current clients. Under Jessa’s leadership, the fund is once again open to new clients (having been recently closed to new clients). Most excitingly, a savings scheme has been incorporated into the fund, such that KCF is no longer limited to offering only microcredit loans, but is now a full-blown microfinance service. Jessa has also begun hosting monthly business seminars with the fund’s members and is encouraging greater involvement in the non-solidarity groups. As a result of these ambitious changes, KCF now offers microcredit loans to local entrepreneurs in addition to savings schemes and small- and medium-enterprise (SME) business training.

Here at HINT we are incredibly excited for these positive additions to the Kingdom Community Fund. We look forward to sharing with you the other new changes that take place in the coming months. As always, if you would like to contact us, donate, or get involved, you can find us on: Twitter, Facebook, by email, or by contacting us online.

We wish you continued success in your social enterprises and endeavors in 2015! Together, we can improve our local (and global) communities.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: changes, impact investing, Jessa, KCF, microcredit, microfinance, social entrepreneurship

38 Community Health Educators Trained

July 7, 2010 by hint Leave a Comment

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The 3-day HIV awareness seminar took place at Buea Community Church on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, the 10th, 11th, and 12th of June, 2010. On Saturday the 5th of June, at 11:30, I gave an announcement and a brief talk about the seminar on the Revival Gospel Radio. On Monday the 7th of June, I gave a talk about the seminar on Chariot Radio, at the University of Buea. I was on their radio programme for about 40 minutes. They asked me lots of questions so I got to talk about HINT, the seminar, HIV/AIDS (including here in Cameroon), and my experience in Buea so far.

We had said during the radio announcements and on the registration forms themselves that those not selected as part of the 25 selected trainees were still more than welcome to attend. We had about two or three people complain and suggest that if people do show up for all three days, who weren’t one of the 25 selected, they should still receive a certificate. So we agreed to this.

The chairs were set up with five around each table, facing the front stage. There were two reasons for creating this layout. The first was due to the fact that there were quite a few quizzes and questions that I wanted people to discuss in small groups before sharing their opinions with the whole group. The second reason was that I wanted people to engage with each other and gain confidence in the small group so they felt less intimidated to eventually stand up and speak in front of the whole group (apart from a few exceptions, they were all strangers to each other).

Day 1:
We looked at, “what is HIV/AIDS?” and “how is HIV spread?”
Day 1 of any programme is quite often a bit unpredictable. You don’t know if you’re going to get a group that are really quiet, or energetic, or aggressive, or passive, and it’s almost impossible to know before hand, how much they know about the topics.
We didn’t start the session until 4:15 pm because I wanted to have at least 25 people before we started. We had 35 people attend on this day.

The group was fairly quiet on this first day and I wasn’t sure if it was because they were bored, or if they knew everything. However, at the end of the seminar, I had four people come up to me to let me know they had learnt a lot, that the group was concentrating hard on the material being covered, and they were really happy they were attending. That positive feedback encouraged me to go a bit slower with the material on the second day, and generating a lot of questions and group discussion to make sure people were using the newly gained knowledge to make strong arguments concerning beliefs they had and to answers of the questions.

Day 2:
The session for today was: signs and symptoms of AIDS, HIV testing and treatment, and prevention. This was quite a heavy session as there was a lot of material to cover. I went slowly and thoroughly through the material, asking questions after each topic to make sure everyone was following.

The power went out for about 30 minutes so there were no lights, power for the microphone and the PowerPoint turned off. I had to read from the slides of the PowerPoint on the laptop, hoping the laptop wouldn’t run out of battery. By the time I was reaching the last couple of slides, the electricity came back on so I quickly backtracked for them to see the slides we’d missed (including a picture and a diagram regarding transmission).

Day 3:
On this final day, we looked at the following: the impact of HIV/AIDS on the world, Africa, and Cameroon, the problems we face locally, learning how to counsel others, and finally, teaching adults about HIV/AIDS.

A social worker was sent by Mama Bawa (Christi’s friend and work colleague at the hospital) to talk about HIV management. From testing to treatment. The seminar was going over time on this final day but there was definitely a flow of very interested people asking questions, raising concerns, and sharing stories. I felt that since this way the final day, I didn’t want to stop this flow, when that is really the aim of the seminar. We’d already gone through all the material in the manual. I’d gone to the HIV control centre by the PMI building, and from Mr Joele, I received up-to-date information (about Buea, the South West, and the other nine provinces) on the prevention of mother-to-child transmission statistics including figures on testing, infection rate, and re-testing.
At the end of the session, Levy and I handed out certificates. We took a few group pictures and made sure the 25 people got their 3,000 francs.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: adults, Africa, being, Buea, Cameroon, community, electricity, health, HINT, HIV/AIDS, Information, microcredit, mission, social, spread

Job Opportunities at HINT

December 30, 2009 by hint Leave a Comment

HINT currently has 5 job opportunities as follows:

  1. IT Project Manager
  2. Software & Hardware Computer Technician (Knowledge of Linux OS will be a high advantage)
  3. Office Secretary (Advanced skills in Microsoft Office is a plus)
  4. Accountant/Cashier (Any knowledge of Quickbooks Accounting Software will give a high advantage)
  5. Webmaster (Knowledge of CSS, HTML, WordPress, and related softwares is required).

If you believe you have the necessary skill in any of the positions above, submit your hand-written application to our Head Office at Bonduma, beside COGENI, Bonduma on or before January 15, 2010.

Attach the following to your application:

  • A copy of you most recent CV
  • Photocopies of your hightest two Diplomas or Certificates
  • Proof of work experience, if any.

Only successful candidates will be contacted after the January 15.

—

NOTE: These positions are not open to Internationals.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: cash, contact, HINT, International, job, microcredit, skill

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