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REBUILD, RESTORE, RENEW: SUPPORT AN ENTREPRENEUR

Raised
$1,268
Goal
$25,000

Give women entrepreneurs in eastern DRC the tools, training, and access they need to rebuild livelihoods and strengthen communities disrupted by conflict; because resilient small businesses are the fastest path to lasting recovery.

For thousands of families across North Kivu and South Kivu, weekly life is shaped by uncertainty. Conflict has closed banks, broken supply chains, and left markets shuttered. Small traders, artisans, farmers, and service providers lose income overnight. Young people with ideas don’t have access to affordable capital or relevant skills. Women; who shoulder household recovery; are often the last to receive support.

SAGE ENTREPRENEURS ACADEMY (SEA) works where emergency relief stops: we invest in people and local markets so communities can rebuild from the inside out. We believe supporting women entrepreneurs creates jobs, restores dignity, and multiplies impact across families and neighborhoods. When a small business survives and grows, it pays school fees, improves nutrition, hires local workers, and reduces pressure to migrate or join risky coping strategies.

This campaign is important to us because; many of us at SEA have seen firsthand the difference that one committed entrepreneur can make. I remember meeting Claudette, a mother of three, who used to sell vegetables from a single tin tray outside a closed market. After an accelerated microbusiness course and a small loan, she rented a stall, negotiated bulk supply with a local farmer cooperative, and hired two youths who formerly sold charcoal. Within eleven months her income doubled and her children returned to school. That transformation; from desperation to dignity; is the reason we wake up every day. The conflicts in eastern DRC are complex, but supporting entrepreneurs like Charlotte is one concrete, high-leverage way to rebuild communities sustainably.

 Who we serve;

  • Micro and small business owners in conflict-affected areas of eastern DRC (farmers, market traders, artisans, tailors, transporters, small shopkeepers).
  • Women-led households and youth entrepreneurs (aged 18–35), who face the biggest barriers to finance and skills.
  • Local supplier groups and market associations to rebuild resilient supply chains.

 What your donation will do;

We design programs that combine practical training, flexible microgrants, and market-linkage support. Below are concrete uses and expected results from donations:

  • $35: Covers the cost of a business toolkit (record book, basic accounting templates, price lists) for one microbusiness.
  • $75: Funds a skills-training seat on our 2-week intensive microbusiness course (business planning, cashflow management, basic marketing, negotiation) for one entrepreneur.
  • $200: Provides a start-up or resilience grant to restock inventory, repair equipment, or bridge cashflow after market closures (expected to stabilize one business for 3–6 months).
  • $500: Supports a village market revival package: training for 20 entrepreneurs + a facilitator + market liaison to negotiate supplier access and logistics.
  • $2,000: Underwrites a 6-month blended program (training + mentorship + seed capital + supply-chain bridging) for a cohort of 30 entrepreneurs, with monitoring and impact evaluation.

 Expected outcomes (12 months)

  • 1,200 entrepreneurs trained in practical business and resilience skills.
  • 760 microgrants supplied to stabilize or scale businesses.
  • 3,500 jobs preserved or created across households and value chains (direct and indirect).
  • Average household income increase of 35% for participating families within 6–12 months.
  • 60% of women-led businesses reporting improved access to suppliers and clients within 3 months.

 How we work (our approach)

  1. Fast, local assessment: We map market disruptions, closed financial services, and supply bottlenecks in each zone to tailor support.
  2. Practical training: Short, hands-on modules focused on cashflow management, inventory planning, supplier negotiation, and safe market practices in conflict settings.
  3. Flexible finance: Small, rapid-response grants (not debt-driven) and links to local savings groups where possible; designed to bridge gaps caused by bank closures and disrupted remittance routes.
  4. Market rebuilding: We negotiate with local cooperatives and transporters to rebuild supply corridors and restart market linkages.
  5. Mentorship and networks: Local mentors and peer groups support entrepreneurs through the first 6 months after training.
  6. Measurement and accountability: Monitoring visits, beneficiary feedback loops, and financial audits to ensure funds reach those most in need.

 Why SEA is a strong partner

  • Local presence: Our teams are embedded in target communities with trusted relationships and rapid-response capacity.
  • Context expertise: Deep understanding of conflict-sensitive programming, market systems, and local finance constraints (including bank closures and informal remittance networks).
  • Cost-effective: Low overheads and community-based delivery maximize the share of funds reaching entrepreneurs.
  • Transparent reporting: Donors receive quarterly impact reports, photos and beneficiary stories, and a final evaluation for larger grants.

Risks and how we mitigate them

  • Security disruptions: Work conducted with flexible timelines and local staff who know safe routes and times; remote coaching where in-person activity is unsafe.
  • Market volatility: Training emphasizes cash-flow buffers, flexible sourcing, and digital/mobile money where available.
  • Unequal access: We prioritize women and youth and work with local leaders to ensure equitable selection of beneficiaries.

How you can help

  • Give: A one-time gift or monthly support helps us plan multi-phase programs and respond quickly when markets reopen.
  • Sponsor a cohort: Fund a full cohort of 30 entrepreneurs for $2,000 to directly facilitate training, grants, and mentorship.
  • Spread the word: Share this campaign with your network and on social media to multiply impact.
  • Corporate partnerships: Help us rebuild supply chains by pairing city-based buyers with eastern DRC producer groups.

 Transparency and stewardship

Every donation is tracked through our program budgets and reported. For donations above $2,000 we provide a short mid-program report with beneficiary lists, photos, and a summary of expenditures. All funds are used to directly support program delivery, local staffing, and monitoring; administrative costs are kept under 12%.

 Join us:

Conflict has taken markets, savings, and certainty. But it hasn’t stolen ambition, skill, or the courage to rebuild. Your support helps entrepreneurs in eastern DRC restart businesses, put food on the table, and restore hope. Give today to Rebuild, Restore, Renew — because resilient local businesses are the foundation of lasting recovery.

 Contact and donation details

https://sageacademies.org/donate

For more information, please email at partnership@sageacademies.org or call or WhatsApp: +243979422785

Thank you for standing with entrepreneurs in eastern DRC. Together we can turn disruption into durable opportunity.

Empowers youth and displaced people in East Africa with training, mentorship, and resources to build sustainable businesses.

sageacademies.org

Donors

  • Niven Postma1
Raised
$1,268
Goal
$25,000
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