Facebook looks to scale up extending “Boost Your Biz” prog’mme

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Bengaluru, April 16: Social media giant Facebook Friday said it is looking to scale up extending “Boost Your Business” programme to villages in India to help entrepreneurs in improving their business prospects.

 “We are doing a bunch of different initiatives catered  specifically to arts and crafts of India that live in  villages. The challenge before us now is of scaling this up,”  Head of Economic Growth Initiatives for Facebook India Ritesh Mehta said.

“So we will try to partner with the organisation which will help us scale because one company can do a limited  amount of things. But if we partner with 10 NGOs or  governments, then together we can do a lot more,” he added.

 Arts and crafts is a very big focus area for Facebook  and it is running a specific initiative for rural  entrepreneurs, he said.

 “When we visited five cities of Uttar Pradesh, we actually went out to the villages, not just the cities. When we were in Banaras, we also went outside Banaras as well, where weavers live and showed them the usage of Facebook page. Same thing we did in Kanauj and Kanpur,” he said.

 Facebook is starting to work with NGOs like Seva in  Gujarat that have a huge network of rural artisans, he said.

 When asked how many partnerships Facebook has struck to   take the programme to cities and villages, Mehta said,”Right  now we are not ready to announce the partnership with NGOs,  but we work with them for different initiatives.”

 Mehta also said Facebook is in talks with the Karnataka government, but do not have a formal package to take this programme to cities across the state.

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 “We are in conversation, but we don’t have a formal package as of now. We would love to take this programme to other cities across Karnataka,” he said.

 Asked why Karnataka was not the first destination to  implement the initiative, especially as Bengaluru is considered a hotbed for net connectivity, he said that before talking to the government, they wanted to be sure they establish their  initiative here.

 “We have started doing that,” Mehta said.

He said they had so far covered seven cities in India, including Hyderabad and Bengaluru and trained 4,000 women entrepreneurs. By year end, Facebook aims to cover 20 to 25 cities, training women entrepreneurs to use technological tools on Facebook to better their business prospects, Mehta said.

   “This year we aim to cover four or five other states. Apart from that we aim to cover eight to 10 other cities. Probably by year end we would have have gone to 20 to 25 cities,” he said.

 “We have cities like Jaipur, Ahmedabad and Indore already listed in our calendar, where we would be visiting,” he added.

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