Last updated 2 years ago
Social enterprise related projects tend to struggle when it comes to raising funding for important issues and this can affect their well-being as well as subsequent motivation to continue.
We will carry out research to find out what works with those who have already submitted CLAP projects and what can be improved to encourage more submissions and then apply this to African proposers.
This is the total amount allocated to CLAP for impactful research.
We will carry out research to find out what works with those who have already submitted CLAP projects and what can be improved to encourage more submissions and then apply this to African proposers.
Community Advisor | Catalyst Challenge Team Lead | Community Manager for the Catalyst Africa Town Hall and Catalyst Africa School | Cardano Advocator | Postdoctoral Researcher at Oxford University | Crypto analyst |
This proposal aims to carry out crucial research in two folds to reach the objectives: namely, phase 1 and phase 2 outlined below.
Phase 1
Researching their current users/proposers enquiring about the process, what worked well, what they would improve
Use phase 1 to inform Phase 2 research on a niche area - how can more African people in the ecosystem be encouraged to apply for CLAP projects
Phase 3
Engaging workshops and new content with potential African proposers all about the Cardashift system and how they can apply with proposals that can make a difference!
NB: We are aware that there is an African challenge however, if one reads this CLAP challenge brief in full, it is still relevant for us to apply this research within this remit.
The two phase approach to our proposed solution will help to tackle the lack of financial attractiveness of impact projects in impact ecosystem with a focus of potential African proposers.
Our proposed solution will address the 'impact valuation & monetisation' part of the challenge by interviewing those who have already been funded successfully on Cardashift with CLAP. This will help to identify the number of proof of concept trials that can be run with impact-oriented projects. By researching with the funded proposals, we can also identify how much financial value can be derived from impact-oriented projects. Furthermore, teams from funded projects alongside Cardashift team members will help us identify the time required to validate the impact value.
Additionally and in-relation to phase 3 of our proposed solution: we will create resources to help potential proposers understand the differences between 'impact-oriented solutions' and projects that only focus on 'Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) criteria' as there is a general misconception with 'social entrepreneurship' for this reason.
The main risk would be access to the existing successful Cardashift proposers and their ability to liaise due to time constraints, however, we will communicate with the Cardashift team about the best way to approach this. For example, offering rewards (CLAP) for their time.
Additionally, from phase 1 of research, we will look into how best to encourage those from the African ecosystem to submit proposals on the Cardashift website, hence, we would have to simultaneously communicate with these people in question. To that end, this would be mitigated from our existing networks. For example, Daniel Lezu is a strong community member in the African Cardano ecosystem.
The timeline will be as follows:
Formulating the semi-structured research questions and final survey for the phase 1 research (1 month)
Assessing the Cardashift website for potential research questions
Integration of the challenge KPI's in the survey
Identifying a number of funded proposals to reach out to and creating a database (2-3 months)
Putting a call out on social media
Directly contacting teams on Cardashift
Getting connections from the Cardashift team
Research for phase 1 (3-5 months)
Interviewing the successful project teams from Cardashift using thematic analysis to assess results. Key themes will be identified and built upon for phase 2.
Identification of potential African proposers (5-6 months)
They will be identified from the Cardano Africa ecosystem and put out preliminary survey's to explore proposers will may be interested in applying for Cardashift/CLAP funding.
Research Phases for 6 months (Desk Research & Interviews)
$10,000
Findings Reporting
$5,000
Marketting and Advertisement $ 3000
Cardano Partnership, Advisory, & Maintenance $10,000
Miscellaneous $ 2,000
Total $ 30,000
Daniel David Lezu: a Front End web developer. He holds Bachelors of Science in Information Technology from Bluecrest College and Professional Diploma in Software Engineering from IPMC Ghana. He is passionate about Cloud computing, Cyber Security and Decentralized Applications. He was a Community Advisor in Catalyst fund 7 and Catalyst Challenge Team Lead for ‘Scale-UP Cardano’s Community Hubs’ challenge settings for fund 8 and Community Manager for the Catalyst Africa Town Hall. He envisions using Blockchain Technology to bridge the gap between human capabilities and machine learning (AI & IoT).
Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniel-david-lezu-7ba04b24/
Dr Adaku Jennifer Agwunobi: a researcher and entrepreneur. She holds a PhD, 2 Master's degrees and is a Postdoc at Oxford University. Fund 8 winner with 'Oxford Student Hub'. Community advisor in fund 8.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jenniferagwunobi/
Yes, we shall come for later round of funding because we aim to create resources to help potential proposers understand the differences between 'impact-oriented solutions' and projects that only focus on 'Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) criteria' as there is a general misconception with 'social entrepreneurship' for this reason.
For phase 3, will measure level of interest in our resources which would be posted in groups for Africans in the Cardano ecosystem. We will assess engagement with replies, views and comments. Though, month 5-6 is when we will formally reach out to African proposers, they will be made aware of the plans of research from month 1 and we will thus compare these metrics each month. By doing so, we will indicate whether interest is growing, declining, or staying the same.
Understanding what could encourage more African people to submit projects in Cardashift and potentially collaborate amongst each other to come out with solutions with really important areas whilst being financially secure.
This is a new proposal.
SDG goals:
Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all
Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work for all
Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
SDG subgoals:
By 2030, ensure that all youth and a substantial proportion of adults, both men and women, achieve literacy and numeracy
By 2020, substantially expand globally the number of scholarships available to developing countries, in particular least developed countries, small island developing States and African countries, for enrolment in higher education, including vocational training and information and communications technology, technical, engineering and scientific programmes, in developed countries and other developing countries
Key Performance Indicator (KPI):
Proportion of population in a given age group achieving at least a fixed level of proficiency in functional (a) literacy and (b) numeracy skills, by sex
Volume of official development assistance flows for scholarships by sector and type of study
Universal Human Rights Index (UHRI):
#proposertoolsdg
Community Advisor | Catalyst Challenge Team Lead | Community Manager for the Catalyst Africa Town Hall and Catalyst Africa School | Cardano Advocator | Postdoctoral Researcher at Oxford University | Crypto analyst |