28 June 2012

5 Basic facts about Cambodia

Cambodia is located in Southeast Asia
  1.       Cambodia is a country located in the southern portion of
           the 
Indochina Peninsula in Southeast Asia. With a total
           landmass of 
181,035 square kilometres, it is bordered by
           
Thailand to the northwest, Laos to the northeast, Vietnam to
           the east, and the
 Gulf of Thailand to the southwest.


  2.       With a population of over 14.8 million, Cambodia is the
            69th most populous
 country in the world. For comparison
            (view here), The 
Netherlands is at place 62 and France is
                                         at place 21. 


Cambodia's official religion is Theravada Buddhism
    3.     The official religion is Theravada Buddhism, which is
             practiced 
by approximately 95% of the Cambodian population.
             It is the 
oldest surviving Buddhist doctrine and was founded in
             India. It is relatively conservative, and generally closer to
             early Buddhism than the other existing Buddhist traditions.


     4.    The capital and largest city is Phnom Penh; the
             political, economic, and cultural centre of Cambodia. Located
             on the banks of the Mekong River, Phnom Penh has been the
             national capital since the French colonized Cambodia and is
             home for over 2 million of Cambodia’s population. It once
             was known as the  “Pearl of Asia”, and then considered as one
             of the loveliest French-built cities in Indochina in the 1920s.  
Norodom Sihamoni is the by Cambodia's Royal Throne Council chosen monarch
5.  The kingdom of Cambodia is a constitutional monarchy
      with Norodom Sihamoni, a monarch chosen by the Royal
      Throne Council, as head of state. The head of government is
      Hen Sen, who is currently the longest serving leader in South
      East Asia
and has ruled Cambodia for over 25 years. 



Source: www.en.wikipedia.org

18 June 2012

Econocom’s cooperation with Passerelles numériques

During the last 10 years I've worked for the Group, I've noticed an increasing awareness on Corporate Social Responsibility, not only within the market in general, but also within Econocom as an organization.

Econocom; Europe’s leading, manufacturer-independent ICT and ‘Smart Objects’ leasing and infrastructure management provider, employing 3.700 people,
Econocom is aware of the impact its business has:
  • in terms of society and the environment, as a service provider and via the products leased,   distributed and maintained,
  • in terms of the ethics of our business practices, the resources used and the carbon footprint produced in the course of our day-to-day activity.
Econocom joins the United Nations Global Impact
    Therefor Econocom joins the United Nations Global Compact, a voluntary initiative that is the mark of a responsible company, and which promotes corporate social responsibility and finding solutions to the inevitable consequences of global growth.

The cooperation between Econocom and Passerelles numériques follows Econocom’s corporate value “Proud to be responsible”. This value implicates that we take our individual, collective and social responsibility in all activities that we flourish. It’s important to us that Econocom and her employees participate in collective charitable actions, that provides the less fortunate of our world a better future.

Econocom became involved with Passerelles numériques in 2006 and:
-       provided tuition for 6 classes of 25 students for 2 years,
-       provided on-site training with hands-on involvement from Econocom staff volunteers,
-       supplied IT equipment.

Yin Leakhena is one of Passerelles numériques Cambodian students
Interview with one of the Cambodian graduated students:“My name is Yin Leakhena. My family is very poor and couldn’t afford to send me to university. I was lucky enough to meet Passerelles numériques, and have greatly improved my skills. I’m now working as an intern IT Support at Hyundai Amco (car manufacturer). This partnership has given me the opportunity to put my skills into practice and build my self-confidence. At the end of the internship, I’ll be able to find a job, help my family and continue to study.”

12 June 2012

About Passerelles numériques

Passerelles numériques
History
Throughout the world, far too many underprivileged yet capable young people cannot access higher education and therefore remain trapped in poverty. In Cambodia, out of 300.000 young people born every year, 20 000 reach University level and only 2.000 attain qualified professional employment.

With the vision of a world where through access to education and employment, the most underprivileged can use their talent to reach a better future, Passerelles numériques strives to enable the largest number of young people in a precarious situation to access training leading to a qualified job in the Information Technologies sector. Since 2005, with the support of major actors in the IT field, such as Accenture, Microsoft, HP and Econocom, we have developed in Phnom Penh an IT training center matching market needs for underprivileged young Cambodians.

Achievements
Built on five principles; Fair and rigorous selection, Solid technical and practical training, General training in business skills and values, Social and educational development and Guidance to employment, this project has reached large successes;
  •     261 students (out of 280) completed a 2-year IT technician training, and 100% of graduates have found a qualified job with 3-5 times the national average salary, enabling them to support a whole family and filling 20 – 30% of the IT technicians positions needed in the country each year.
  •     175 students (out  of 175) completed the 6-month “Data management operator” training and were  hired in the work-study program of the social business Digital Divide Data.
Passerelles numériques students
Based on this flexible and reproducible social integration model developed in Cambodia, similar projects have been launched in Cebu (Philippines) in 2009 and in Da Nang (Vietnam) in 2010. 350 students are currently being trained by Passereles numériques in these three countries. These projects help fill the digital gap, empowering large numbers of new IT users and fostering a more balanced development inclusive of remote areas.

8 June 2012

Give a man a fish, and you have fed him once. Teach him how to fish, and you have fed him for a lifetime.

Cambodian fisherman
This proverbial saying which suggests that the ability to work is of greater benefit than a one-off handout, is a well known way to say in short the goal of charity organizations aiming for sustainable development. Less obvious is the fact that this saying has to apply also for the organization itself...


The first time I came in contact with the French charity organization 'Passereles numériques was in 2007. I was working then for the ECS group, one of the sponsors of the organization by donations and by providing its employees the possibility to go for missions  in the field, more precisely in Cambodia.
Passerelles numériques enables the most underprivileged to access employment in a promising  sector and to break with their families the circle of poverty. The mission is to enable the largest number of youths, in a precarious situation, access to training and skilled employment in the Information Technology sector. The ambition is to help at least 90% of the students directly enrolled in the programs to find a qualified job and ultimately end the cycle of poverty for themselves as well as their families.


I have seen colleagues and team members going on missions for the organization and their feedback has always been fascinating to me. The idea of doing it myself often came to me but both professional and personal involvement, especially with young kids,  have always kept me away from dedicating time and focus to those missions.
When the Econocom group took over the ECS group in 2010, I was pleasantly surprised to hear during a managers meeting that Econocom sponsored Passerelles numériques as well. Being in touch again with this organization, I have then been triggered by their new arising challenge : Learn how to fish !
Sponsors are very kin in helping charity organizations to kick off a project by providing funds. But sponsors are also more and more expecting those projects to be locally self-sufficient, to reach autonomy in raising their own funds, not depending 100 % from donations on the long run. This is the challenge the organization is facing now, learn how to fish, find a sustainable way of being self-sufficient by raising funds locally !
It is at that moment that the decision became obvious to me, after 5 years of maturation, that my involvement in this charity organization should be more than supporting colleagues. I foresee added value in providing support to this business model switch, and that time to go on the field for a mission had arrived.
Yann Toutant volunteers for Cambodia
A steering committee has been set up within the Econocom group to assist the organization in this change, and as a part of this project, I will be leaving for Cambodia for two weeks to volunteer with the main objective to bring value in the fund raising business model of Passerelles numériques. During these two weeks I will coach local managers on their commercial skills and strategy and will also hopefully help the sales team to increase efficiency in their local fund raising activity.
My responsibility and involvement is not going to stop after these two weeks. I will continue to support this unique and challenging project for much longer. I would like to share my experiences with you, via this blog and the use of Social Media (LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter).
And of course, feel free to follow the developments, provide support, inspiration, feedback, guidance, and why not use them as an inspiration for yourself.