Find links to Guides, Decision Trees, Training Materials, Toolkits, Information, Media, Analyses, Reports and Publications here
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INUKA Biashara tovuti ya kujifunza
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Kenya Bankers Association | Inuka Enterprise Program aims to empower micro enterprises to formalise, small enterprises to professionalise their management and medium enterprises to optimise operations and increase their economic productivity. This initiative is proudly sponsored by the Kenya Bankers Association with the objective of enhancing MSMEs ability to access finance from banks |
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ITC EComConnect
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International Trade Centre (ITC) | Find out which online payment solution is suitable for your business depending on your location and sales channel. |
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Jumla ya gharama za mikopo
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Kenya Bankers Association | This site provides you with information on the Total Cost of Credit (TCC) and features a simple Cost of Credit calculator, which you can use to estimate the total cost of a bank loan. |
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Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry
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Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry | The Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry is registered as a not-for-profit private company limited by guarantee under the Companies Act Chapter 486 of the laws of Kenya. |
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Kenya Private Sector Alliance
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Kenya Private Sector Alliance | KEPSA has a Business Hub which is a strategic business unit within the organization birthed from strategic partnerships that it has entered into around the world and in Kenya with the sole purpose of enhancing trade and investments both locally and internationally. |
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ITC SME Trade Academy
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International Trade Center ( ITC) | The International Trade Centre’s E-Learning and SME Trade Academy platforms offer practical, vocational training online for SMEs and trade advisors in the public and private sectors in many different languages |
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Kenya Association of Manufacturers
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Kenya Association of Manufacturers | We have been front and centre in driving fact-based policy advocacy towards the formation of industrial policies to strengthen and support the country’s economic development. Through fact-based advocacy, KAM partners with Government and its associated agencies to ensure a dynamic and flourishing manufacturing sector in Kenya, to realize a double-digit contribution to GDP. |
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Chapter 3: Business Implications of Different Forms of Financing
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International Trade Center | 3.1: Community financing providers of low-value financing. 3.2: Short-term equipment, pre-shipment, sales order or working capital financing. 3.3: Term loans through banks and non-bank financing providers. 3.4: Bank and non-bank short-term supply chain financing options. 3.5: Key enterprise loan regulatory considerations for banks. 3.6: What is “Collateral” and what are its implications for your business? 3.7: Asset valuation: enterprise and lender perspective. 3.8: What are “Covenants” and how do they affect your business? |
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Chapter 7: COVID Workplace Measures and Financing
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International Trade Center | ||
Document Requirements of Financing and Investment Providers
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International Trade Centre | All financing providers, financing transactions operators and investors are required to collect at a minimum the following set of basic information on applicants for, or beneficiaries of, financing of more than Euro/USD 2,500 in any one year. |
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Chapter 4: Managing Lender and Investor Relations
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International Trade Center | 4.1: Business communications and visibility. 4.2: Loan performance and reporting communication norms. 4.3: References and customer feedback. |
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Chapter 1: Introduction to the Guide
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International Trade Center | COVID workplace measures and financing. |
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Chapter 6: Working With Business Development Services
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International Trade Center | 6.1: What to prepare before contacting BDS service providers. 6.2: Types of business development services and business support organizations. |
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Chapter 5: Drafting An Application For Financing
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International Trade Center | 5.1: What to optimize before drafting your business plan. 5.2: Risk assessments: Supply chain vulnerabilities, sustainability and resilience. 5.3: Resilience and business continuity plans and measures. 5.4: Product and service authenticity, traceability, quality & labeling compliance. 5.5: Drafting a realistic business plan. 5.6: Market, business growth and revenue projections with references. 5.7: Typical errors and practices that result in application rejections. 5.8: Digitisation and the implications for financing options. |
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Chapter 2: Financing Options and Eligibility Requirements
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International Trade Center | Step 1: Establish what the money is needed for and how much you really need. Step 2: Find out what business and personal information is required. Step 3: Select two or three providers that could meet your needs. |
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Abbreviations and glossary
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International Trade Center | List of Abbreviations |
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The Art of Market Facilitation: Learning from the financial sector deepening network
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FSD Africa | Market facilitation (M4P) is an approach to promote systemic change—change that goes beyond individual players and that is relevant to the wider environment, affecting many. Market systems development requires that organisations play a facilitating role. Standing outside of the market system, facilitators work with different players within the system, to make it work more effectively. Their essential role is active and catalytic, to enable others to do rather than do themselves—stimulating changes in a market system without becoming part of it. |
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Assessment of cross-industry skills development initiatives in the East Africa Community and Zambia
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FSD Africa | By FSD Africa This project: Identifies the skills gap, training needs and existing cross-industry skill development initiatives among financial service providers in East Africa, Identifies existing cross-industry skills development initiatives in International markets, and, Develops potential solutions for cross-industry skills development for the East African financial service sector. |
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Climate Finance Innovation for Africa
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FSD Africa | By FSD Africa. The African continent presents a massive investment opportunity for investors to advance climate solutions in the coming decade, however, a set of barriers to finance have stifled requisite investment to date. In this new report, in collaboration with Climate Finance Innovation for Africa and Climate Policy Initiative, we provide a framework for how innovation in financing structures can leverage strategic deployment of public capital to ‘crowd-in’ private investment at levels not yet seen. |
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VENTURE BUILDING FOR GREEN INNOVATION IN AFRICA: PERSISTENT’S AMBITIOUS CLIMATE CHANGE INITIATIVE
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FSD Africa | In 2023, with FSD Africa Investments (FSDAi) support, Persistent Energy Capital kicked off fundraising for its US$100 million Africa Climate Venture Builder Fund. The fund will accelerate and amplify access to equity and venture-building support for visionary and green innovators across Sub-Saharan Africa. |
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Trade Finance Explained
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International Trade Center | Trade Finance is the financing of goods or services in a trade or transaction, from a supplier through to the end buyer. It accounts for 3% of global trade, worth some $3tn annually. |
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A Carbon Market Guidebook for Kenyan Enterprises
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KEPSA | Enterprises in Kenya encompass a diverse and dynamic landscape, representing a crucial driver of economic growth and employment opportunities in the country. Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), in particular, play a pivotal role, contributing significantly to the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) and accounting for 90 percent of the labor force. Enterprises must scale their climate action to meet Kenya’s climate mitigation and adaptation goals. However, the lack of funding has limited their contribution to the climate agenda. Debt constitutes most of enterprises’ funding, but the price of debt remains very high and loan tenors are short. The availability of patient capital, including private equity, is also low. |
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Trade Finance Explained
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International Trade Center | Trade Finance is the financing of goods or services in a trade or transaction, from a supplier through to the end buyer. It |
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How To Use This Guide
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International Trade Center | A quick reference guide and financing decision trees for MSMEs, developed by the International Trade Centre under the East African Community MARKUP project, funded by the European Union. |