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achievement art Featured Notices Opportunities youth entrepreneurship

INVITATION TO APPLY: Cassirer Welz Award 2017

”The Cassirer Welz Award, funded by art auctioneers Strauss & Co and the Everard Read Gallery provides an opportunity to an emerging South African artist, in the field of drawing, painting or sculpture, under the age of 35 to spend 10 weeks at the Bag Factory’s studios”.

For more information on the Award visit: http://www.bagfactoryart.org.za/2017/10/19/cassirer-welz-2017/

For more information on how to apply: https://madmimi.com/s/072afa

Author: Bag Factory

Image Source: Bag Factory Image Gallery

 

 

 

 

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achievement competition creative economy economic development education enterprise development entrepreneurship Events Featured finance funding Notices Opportunities small business

Polishing your business pitch

Engen Petroleum and Nedbank have partnered with Raizcorp to bring the ENGEN Pitch & Polish programme to cities and towns across South Africa, for the eighth time. The programme helps to educate and grow entrepreneurs.  It teaches entrepreneurs how to polish their business pitch in order to obtain funding.

What type of Pitcher are you?

 

Pitching your business is an essential skill to master in order to grow your business. And, if you want to grow your business, you must be able to pitch it successfully. The way you say things is as important as what you actually say – and could mean the difference between attaining the investment needed – or being turned away. No matter the result, every opportunity to pitch is an opportunity to get better!

 

Now in their eighth year of listening to entrepreneurial pitches, ENGEN Pitch & Polish, in association with Engen Petroleum, Nedbank and Raizcorp, have identified six distinct pitching types. Which one are you?

 

The first three types fall into the category of ‘content pitchers’. These types are either getting it wrong – or right – from a content point of view.

 

The Investor-Ready Pitcher

  • You are the ideal pitcher! Your business case is clear with a defined product or service, which is ready to be taken to customers.
  • You have done your market research and can prove that people want what you are offering.
  • Your sums add up and you can demonstrate a clear Return on Investment (ROI).

 

The Salesman

  • Your pitch is purely sales-focused, with a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach.
  • Investors want to see the real you and understand your business – they are far more interested in you, than your product or service.
  • Be real and be honest.

 

The Technician

  • Technicians only want to speak about the finer details of their product or service. They use too much jargon and technical terminology. The result is that the investors’ attention is lost as they stop listening.
  • Investors need the whole picture to make the ultimate decision.
  • Focus your pitch on how your business is going to make money.

 

The next three types fall into the category of ‘style pitchers’. These types are, unfortunately, getting it wrong from a style point of view! When you are confident in what you are saying, you will come across as authentic, credible and authoritative in your field.

 

The Floor-Gazing Dancer

  • These pitchers are so nervous they can’t look the investor in the eye. Instead, they stare at the floor and tend to move from side to side.
  • This pitch is hard work for an investor as the movement is dizzying and lack of eye-contact alienating.
  • Resolve to make a concerted effort to stand straight and look people in the eyes.

 

The Mumbler

  • The mumbler speaks incoherently and softly.
  • If investors cannot hear your pitch, they aren’t going to invest in your business.
  • Practice is key to gaining confidence in yourself and what you are saying. Record your pitch and listen to yourself. Become aware of your fillers and replace them with pauses.

 

The Racing Driver

  • You speak so fast that it is difficult to grasp your business offering and model.
  • This can intrigue an investor if spoken with confidence. However, it often leads to an ineffective pitch.
  • Refine your pitch. Shorten it and select places to breathe and connect with the investors. Plan your pauses. Enunciate clearly.

 

No matter the content, or style, of your pitch, a good pitch tells a story and a good story needs refining and rehearsal. As Alan Shannon, head of Nedbank Relationship Banking Sales, says “anything that distracts the audience from your message makes the message less effective.” To learn how to hook your audience, by creating your best business pitch, come to the ENGEN Pitch & Polish workshop and competition.

Author: Engen Pitch and Polish

 

For a list of this year’s workshops, and to experience the magic of ENGEN Pitch & Polish for yourself, visit www.pitchandpolish.com.

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Featured mzansipreneur Notices Opportunities writing

Mzansipreneur Reading Room

The Mzansipreneur Reading Room offers hot-desks that you can use for a couple of hours to work, and enjoy coffee and food ordered from one of the many restaurants in Grant Avenue.

We have great WiFi but this is not a business services centre. This is like your old school library where you can punctuate work with browsing our evolving collection of books and magazines on business, creativity, leadership and entrepreneurship, that showcases diverse authors and ideas. Here you will find stories of local entrepreneurs like Miles Kubheka alongside a polemic on work/family balance by Anne-Marie Slaughter next to a back issue of the Gentlewoman. If you want to take a deeper look at a book or magazine, you can loan it out for a small fee for a week (in addition to an annual deposit).

Our Membership Fees and Working Hours:

Co-working space per person  
Opening hours: 900 to 1600  
Less than 4 hours 55
Day 110
Week 550
Month 1500
Per book for 1-week loan
Book loan 25
Deposit book loan (annual deposit) 250

Come by and have a look!

 

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entrepreneurship Featured Notices Opportunities youth entrepreneurship

Teenpreneur Festival seeks to celebrate teen-led businesses in Joburg

Beyond The Lemonade Stand (BTLS) is hosting its annual Teenpreneur Fest to showcase, celebrate and help accelerate small businesses owned by teenagers. The festival promises 4 master classes and teen pitches and exhibitions with the top teens standing to win great prizes to take their businesses to the next level.

“BTLS is hosting the Teenpreneur Fest to expose, celebrate and reward teenagers actively earning an income through operating businesses,” said Thokoza Mjo, the founder and director of BTLS.

The fest, which is free and open to the public, is set to take place on the 7th of October at the Tshimologong Precinct in Braamfontein running from 09h00 to 16h00.

On the day, teens with businesses will attend master classes with established entrepreneurs on failing forward, innovation and technology, social media and storytelling. Thereafter, they will be afforded the opportunity to pitch and showcase their businesses before the top teens are selected by a panel of judges for the award ceremony.

Teenpreneurs have until the 25th of September 2017 to apply in order to pitch and showcase at the fest. The application form link is on the Beyond The Lemonade Stand Facebook page.

The top 3 teens will each receive a cash prize of R10 000, a laptop, printer and smart phone, while the top 3 runners-up will each receive a cash prize of R 5000, a laptop, printer and smartphone courtesy of Canon, The Anzisha Prize and Old Mutual.

An Investment Analyst by profession, social entrepreneur, Mjo founded BTLS in 2014 to facilitate access to the market for teen-led enterprises. “I believe in an Africa with economically active youth,” she says on why she first founded the organisation.

The organisation plans to have backed 300 teen-led businesses by 2021, with 900 jobs created through those businesses, with a total of R 2 000 000 sent into the field to drive the impact.

For more information on how to apply or to partner with or sponsor BTLS visit www.btls.co.za. BTLS can also be found Twitter- @BTLS_Team, on Instagram- beyondthelemonadestand and on Facebook- Beyond The Lemonade Stand.
Author: Jeanette Nkwana
Events & Projects Head (Kane Prestige)
For comments, interview/PR enquiries-
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art Opportunities

Opportunities for artists at Bag Factory: applications open for residency (women) and studio space

The Bag Factory is looking for young emerging artists to apply to the Visiting Artist Residency Programme

The programme, sponsored by studio artist Benon Lutaaya will offer an emerging female artist working in the field of drawing, painting, printmaking, collage or sculpture a 5 month residency at the Bag Factory.

The residency will offer the selected artist an opportunity to interact with local artists, develop and grow their creative practice, to expand their network internationally and to experience a climate of cultural diversity.

Application requirements:
* Applicants must be female
* between 2 and 4 years practicing as an artist
* must work in the medium of either drawing, painting, printmaking and/or sculpture.
* applicants must be South African.

Visiting artists are expected to:
* work from the Bag Factory, interacting with Bag Factory and local artists, and experiencing the city,
* complete a written report on their visit,
* donate a work to the Bag Factory,
* arrive on time and stay for the full period (five months),

What will a successful applicant receive?
* A 5 month residency at the Bag Factory Artists’ Studios including a material stipend and accomodation if the winner is from outside Johannesburg
* Solo show with Lizamore & Associates Gallery at the end of at the residency
* A return flight ticket to France for a 10 week international residency with SAFFCA in 2018, including R45,000 stipend while on residency in France
* Turbine Art Fair group show together with the 2 runners-up

This applicant must be able to participate in the full programme starting on 01 July and ending on 30 November 2017.

Applicants should not expect to profit financially from their stay at the Bag Factory, as this is cultural development programme.