Visa and Supérate joined forces that bore fruit upon successfully completing the training for female entrepreneurs who are beneficiaries of the government’s new vision of social assistance, which seeks to promote entrepreneurship as a tool to overcome poverty and facilitate their incorporation into the labor market.
The participants accessed the online training platform “Enko / Visa”, a tool that seeks to help the micro-entrepreneur to meet their goals through the development of skills that allow their businesses to grow. Modules were taught in different areas of business entrepreneurship, sales, finance, marketing, administration and personal development.
“We are happy to make available to the beneficiaries of Supérate these initiatives that range from mentoring, educational platforms and work consultancies for the advancement and professional improvement of women entrepreneurs, not only because of how critical this program is in the country, but also because of the inspiration and growth that its hundreds of thousands of entrepreneurs can have ”, commented Sofía Antor, general manager of Visa Dominican Republic.
“Now, more than ever, women are setting their own path and our increasingly firm commitment is to address the challenges they face by fostering a more inclusive and connected digital economy,” added Antor.
Gloria Reyes, general director of Supérate, highlighted that the training program with Visa “is a significant step to promote financial and digital inclusion of those families living in vulnerable situations and shows the commitment that we assume with the less favored and the need to link all the social actors to build the progress of the country ”.
Participants in the women’s initiative Super Entrepreneurs de Supérate received in addition to the online training, the donation of tablets with memories by Visa. With the support of the Visa Innovation Center in Miami, work initiatives for the development of the Supérate Social Projects Accelerator will also be expanded.
The results of the use of the Enko / Visa platform have been excellent according to the testimony of the participants who expressed their gratitude to Visa for the opportunity to meet and learn about issues that they did not handle and that will allow them to make significant changes in their business. See video of program participants.
In this first Visa and Supérate training program, women entrepreneurs from the provinces of Santo Domingo, Monte Plata, San Cristóbal, La Altagracia, La Romana, Montecristi, Santiago Rodriguez, Espaillat, Moca, Barahona, San Pedro de Macorís and Puerto participated. Silver.
Visa and Supérate are also preparing to analyze the women’s project “Supérate-Girls In Tech”, with the aim of working with the participants for talks and mentoring and establishing a work table for the implementation of an operational plan, among other points. –
About Visa Inc.
Visa Inc. (NYSE: V) is the world’s leading digital payments company. Our mission is to connect the world with the most innovative, reliable and secure payment network, to help individuals, businesses and economies prosper. Our advanced global processing network, VisaNet, provides secure and reliable payments around the world and is capable of processing more than 65,000 transaction messages per second. The company’s continued focus on innovation is a catalyst for the rapid growth of digital commerce on any device, for everyone, everywhere. As the world moves from analog to digital, Visa applies its brand, its products, its people, its network and its scale to the task of shaping the new future of commerce. For more information visit About Visa, visa.com/blog and @VisaNews.
About Supérate
Supérate is the new program of the Dominican Government, Supérate, will facilitate the incorporation of participants into the labor market so that they can obtain a decent and quality job that guarantees their exit from poverty. It also has a money transfer voucher that replaced Comer es Primero with an amount of RD $ 1,650.00, double the amount they received. Supérate’s scope is one million households, categorized as vulnerable according to the Quality of Life Index (ICV) of the Unified System of Beneficiaries (SIUBEN).