Facebook dangles leadership $3m
Mark Zuckerberg, founder, Facebook |
An evolution of the Facebook Community Leadership Programme (FCLP), this six-month accelerator programme provides training, mentorship and funding to help community leaders grow their communities.
And up to $3m in total will be
awarded to 80 programme participants worldwide.
Selected community leaders will
spend three months learning from experts, coaches and a customised curriculum
to create a plan to grow their communities. They will spend the next three months
iterating and executing their plans with funding and support from their
networks.
“Our mission is to empower the
leaders who foster community - people who offer support, encourage others and
make real change,” says Kiran Yoliswa, Strategic Partner Manager, Communities
SSA, Facebook. "We’re investing in leaders because we believe and know
they make significant contributions to today's social challenges by sharing
knowledge and information, and helping people connect with others that share
same interests or passions for a good cause.”
In 2019, the FCLP provided
training, funding and support to 115 community leaders. The leaders reported
that their projects impacted over 1.9 million lives through online community
support, the use of helpful resources and other activities made possible by the
programme.
The 12 leaders from Sub-Saharan
Africa said their projects impacted over 80,000 lives. They are:
Noah Kadima Nasiali
(http://bit.ly/2TUL08I) Africa Farmers Club (Kenya)
Felista Wangari
(http://bit.ly/2IBf7wx) 52-Week Savings
Challenge (Kenya)
Pamellah Oduor
(http://bit.ly/2W31Nci) Let's Cook Kenyan
Meals (Kenya)
Asha Mweru
(http://bit.ly/2W1wDBW) #WomenWorkKE (Kenya)
Caroline Kihusa, Still A Mum
(http://bit.ly/2TSe80m) (Kenya)
Truphosah Monah, Women And
Realities of Disability Society (http://bit.ly/2vafxqB) (Kenya)
Anike Lawal
(http://bit.ly/39Qy7U1), Mamalette (Nigeria)
Mamadou Sy
(http://bit.ly/2wMKIso) Docteur Nakamou
(Senegal)
Gabriel Hoosain Khan
(http://bit.ly/2TYgcDQ) LGBTI community, Human Rights (South Africa)
Lusanda Magwape
(http://bit.ly/2TTIKyr), Dream Factory
Foundation (South Africa)
Nadine Maselesele
(http://bit.ly/39Havki) Salt River High Tutoring (South Africa)
Savio Lule Mark
(http://bit.ly/2Q4cQhB) The Youth Hub Uganda (Uganda)
Facebook also announced that it
has built new tools to help community leaders add new members and moderate
conversations in their groups. The improved membership management tool improves
how group admins can manage new member requests and content moderation features
that make it easier for admins to see important posts and find specific
content.
The Community Accelerator
programme is one of the many investments Facebook is making in community
leaders. The Facebook Community Learning Labs (http://bit.ly/2VWTyyx) bring group
admins with similar goals together into a collaborative digital classroom for
structured learning and a dedicated Facebook team with experience helps group
admins achieve their goals.
The Community Hub
(http://bit.ly/334Z6Zc), meanwhile, is a place where anyone can access product
education and learn more about Facebook’s programmes. It includes tips and
tools for starting, managing and growing a community.
If you run an impactful,
established community, ready to grow using Facebook’s apps and have the time and
energy to invest in this programme, you can apply here (http://bit.ly/38KIJm0)
before 10 April 2020 if you are 18 years and older.
Community leaders from the
selected programme countries, including those without a presence on one of
Facebook’s apps, are welcome to apply.
The programme will begin June
2020.
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