{"id":28226,"date":"2017-05-19T14:27:15","date_gmt":"2017-05-19T18:27:15","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/?p=28226"},"modified":"2018-05-15T12:17:01","modified_gmt":"2018-05-15T16:17:01","slug":"a-return-to-bandhwari-boosts-fiu-honor-societys-social-entrepreneurship-project","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/2017\/05\/a-return-to-bandhwari-boosts-fiu-honor-societys-social-entrepreneurship-project\/","title":{"rendered":"A return to Bandhwari boosts FIU honor society\u2019s social entrepreneurship project."},"content":{"rendered":"
It all began with a pouf, a fabric-covered hassock created last year by a group of village women of Bandhwari, India, in collaboration with nine Florida International University College of Business<\/a> students as part of their annual social entrepreneurship project. When the 2016 trip was over, the students, all members of the International Business Honors Society, vowed to return and help the women turn their crafts-making into a profitable business.<\/p>\n And return they did. In March, 10 society members, including some from last year, went back to Bandhwari. They now have new products, including a tote bag and carryall, and optimism that, with the women sewing in India and students setting up marketing and distribution in the United States, the enterprise will generate income for the village, to be used for better schooling, improved health care and higher living standards.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n But products are only the starting point. The students learned firsthand about the challenges of launching an international export business, and how to work collaboratively with people from vastly different cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds.<\/p>\n \u201cIt was so much more than I expected,\u201d said Andrea Alonso, a finance major, who went to Bandhwari for the first time this year. \u201cThe women were so welcoming. More than anything, they are open to learning. They really trust us.\u201d<\/p>\n This year, in addition to selling bracelets made in Nicaragua to help support the trip, students raised more than $7,000 in corporate sponsorships to help fund it. For example, Alonso and team member Mateo Palacio co-managed the business sponsorship committee, which researched and reached out to more than 15 companies.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Donators included Walmart, and the College of Business itself. Alonso herself donated $1,000 she won in an essay contest sponsored by logistics firm WTDC, which asked society members to write about what it means to give back the community. This was the second year in a row that WTDC, owned and operated by the Gazitua family, provided financial backing for the trip.<\/p>\n Corporate event planning company, Forums Inc., where FIU student Camila Li is an intern, donated $5,000. \u201cThey believe in empowering women and trust our vision about what we are doing in India,\u201d said Li, who went on both trips.<\/p>\n On the ground in Bandhwari.<\/em><\/p>\n Once back in the village, the FIU contingent found improved conditions, said David Wernick<\/a>, senior lecturer in the COB\u2019s Department of Management and International Business<\/a>, who acts as faculty advisor for the trip. Wernick had the initial contact with the village in 2012 on a professional development trip.<\/p>\n