Interned with Leadership Initiatives to improve a business in the developing world.
Consulted with CEOs and marketing experts to develop viable solutions for a business in Bauchi State, Nigeria.
Received a grant reviewed by leaders from Exxon, The United Nations, and the Nigerian Embassy to implement solutions for my business partner.
Read more about Eloise here.
Eloise Wyatt
Glen Ridge High School
Class of 2022
Eloise Wyatt is the Nigerian Partnership Chair for the Glen Ridge High School International Business Internship Program. She desires to make a difference in the lives of the business partner, their family, and their community. In order to accomplish these goals, she will continue to utilize her communication and teamwork skills, as well as her persistent determination.
In addition to Eloise’s work with Leadership Initiatives, she is on her high school’s field hockey, indoor track, and outdoor track teams. Eloise is also the president of her high school’s chapter of Girls Learn International and a Peer Leader mentor. Moreover, she is the vice president of her high school’s French Club, secretary of the Girls Club of Glen Ridge, and the historian of Model United Nations. Eloise is also a member of the French Honors Society, National Honors Society, and the newly established CAFE (Cultural Awareness For Everyone) club. She is also proud of her independent research capstone project on correlations between demographic factors and perceptions of the Pledge of Allegiance, which is pending CollegeBoard review.
Eloise is currently a senior at Glen Ridge High School in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. She plans on continuing to her involvement and commitment to academics during her last year of high school and later challenge herself in college and post-graduate education.
Read more about Eloise's achievements here.
Collaborated With A Business In The Developing World
Earned a Development Grant to Enact Solutions
Collaborated With Business Development Experts
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Our team reviewed the economic, social, political, and environmental factors that impact our partner business to design a launch plan and identify how to bridge the gap between our business partner’s current and desired conditions.
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In order to fund the proposed business, our team composed a detailed plan and pitched our proposal to request seed funding from the Leadership Initiatives Grant Committee.
After researching the socio-economic conditions facing our business partners, our team worked with the Nigerian development staff to create effective solutions to the challenges our business partner was facing.
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My Business Consultant Training
Aisha Hamidu Sa'idu
Business Statistics
Business Statistics
About Aisha
Community Impact
Our Partnership
Ms. Sa’idu does not currently have a permanent store front. In the future, she would like her business to be located along Federal Low-Cost Housing Estate Road in Bauchi State, Nigeria.
Ms. Sa’idu is a proud cobbler and bag-maker and enjoys cobbling female shoes the most.
The other services that Ms. Sa’idu can provide include cobbling male shoes, cobbling children’s shoes, and creating handbags.
Ms. Sa’idu tries to work as efficiently as possible with her services ranging from one to three hours from start to finish.
About Aisha
Aisha Hamidu Sa’idu is a 28 year old and is currently living with her uncle in Federal Low-Cost Housing Estate in Bauchi State, Nigeria.
Ms. Sa’idu is a single mother to her son Nana Khadija and daughter Abubakar Sadiq. Her ex-husband does not help support Ms. Sa’idu or her children in any way.
Due to this unfortunate reality, Ms. Sa’idu was determined to find something to do in order to sustain her family.
She made her first bag when she found that she did not have enough money to purchase one. Instead, Ms. Sa’idu purchased the materials to make her own bag.
Community Impact
Through this business venture, Ms. Sa’idu hopes to finance her family’s living expenses, purchase materials to sustain her craft, and save for the future.
Her children, Abubakar and Nana, are both five years old and attending nursery school. In addition to paying for their school fees, Ms. Sa’idu also pays her own tuition at the Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University where she is a fourth year student studying information technology.
Ms. Sa’idu’s greatest desire is for her business to grow large enough to employ other young women experiencing poverty.
She also hopes to diversify her business beyond shoes and bags through making wallets and belts with high-quality materials.
Our Partnership
Ms. Sa’idu is very excited and honored to collaborate with Leadership Initiatives’ International Leadership & Business Interns.
Before partnering with Leadership Initiatives, Ms. Sa’idu would often struggle to feed herself and her children with her limited income.
Ms. Sa’idu hoped to transform her skills and ideas into a self-sufficient business that will allow her to pursue a debt-free education.
She hopes to empower young women from his community and assist them in breaking the cycle of poverty and disenfranchisement.
Leadership Initiatives is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is dedicated to creating future leaders across the globe through experiential learning. In the International Leadership and Business Internship, I worked directly with some of the world’s leading developmental experts in order to build my partners business and brand.
At the conclusion of the internship, I presented my research proposal to a panel of judges including Ahmed Muhammed, Auwal Yakbu, and Marshall Bailly. Respectively, these judges are Harvard Medical School Director of Talent Acquisition, Leadership Initiatives Nigerian Program Manager, and Leadership Initiatives Founder & Executive Director.
In order to account for the growing potential of my business partner Aisha Hamidu Sa’idu and her cobbling business, I presented this proposal to the distinguished panel of judges. I proposed funding a new storefront to maximize the businesses accessibility along with new products and machinery. These purchases would come together to increase the efficiency of the business and maximize the customer opportunities.
Read my proposal here.
My Business Proposal
I devised a plan that would allow Ms. Aisha Hamidu Sa’idu to increase her production possibilities and account for a larger demand of her cobbling business. In order to do this, I proposed funding for new equipment and new financial tracking systems to increase the efficiency of Ms. Hamidu Sa’idu’s cobbling business.
In order to implement this plan, I proposed a strategic investment plan that would allow Ms. Hamidu Sa’idu to build a modernized cobbling station and account for more customers. I recommended purchasing new equipment such as sewing machines, cutting tables, and stamping machines, along with some bulk materials such as leather, and a year’s worth of rent. These purchases would help to make Ms. Hamidu Sa’idu a more developed business that accounts for more customers.
The funding suggested would allow Ms. Hamidu Sa’idu to provide her cobbling service to more customers. Increasing the speed and quality of her service will help to develop a stronger reputation for Ms. Hamidu Sa’idu, especially as she persists as one of the only females in the industry.
See my research proposal presentation here.
Our team began the business development process by having a one-on-one Zoom call directly with our business partner, Ms. Aisha Sa'idu, and Nigerian project coordinator to ensure productive collaboration.
We learned more about her life, family, and desires for the proposed business venture, as well as the challenges she was facing.
By discussing first-hand the challenges our partner faced, our team successfully and efficiently began to brainstorm solutions to launch her business.
The on-staff project coordinators and business development experts helped facilitate the ideation process and ensured our team asked the right questions to produce fruitful results.
Each morning we held constructive discussions about our ideas, the advice we received the day before, and the timeline necessary to begin implementing our ideas in real-time.
Meeting Our Business Partner
Expert Assistance Workshop
Communication & Pitch Coaching
Development Experts
Internship Highlights
Meeting the Business Partner
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Our team met with leading experts in the field of business and economic development from the State Department, Exxon, Harvard University, Georgetown University, Johns Hopkins University, and top US companies and nonprofits.
These leaders included Dr. Sarah Stiles, Professor and Provost at Georgetown University, and Tiffany Norwood, serial entrepreneur with seven startups and nearly a billion dollars in funding under her belt.
With their guidance, we streamlined our initial ideas to further our efforts in launching the venture our business partner envisioned.
Our team advanced our communication, teamwork, and problem-solving skills through hands-on project management and development.
By the end of the week, we had incorporated the advice of leading experts from across the globe for our business proposal to empower and transform the life of our business partner.
Top Executives & Experts
Our team then worked directly with Professor Heather Aranyi, leading communication coach and faculty in Northwestern University’s Farley Center for Entrepreneurship.
Professor Aranyi supported our team in developing the story behind our pitch, properly framing our business venture, and honing our pitching and communication skills.
Professor Aranyi’s coaching prepared my team for the pitch at the end of the internship and helped us build our entrepreneurial toolkit.
With her collaboration, we consolidated our proposal into a targeted and effective plan that embodied the vision of our business partner.
Throughout the internship, we polished our communication and presentation skills while preparing ourselves to sell the story of our business partner and her business.
Communication & Pitch Coaching
Our team pitched the final proposal to a panel of expert judges from Harvard University, the Leadership Initiatives Nigerian Development Team, and the Leadership Initiatives Grant Committee.
This formal pitch allowed our team to practice our skills and utilize our entrepreneurial toolkit, all while showcasing our efforts to transform the business we partnered with.
At the end of the pitch, we were able to receive feedback on our proposal for our business partner.
Over the next year, our business partner’s venture will be made into reality and monitored for sustained success and growth.
Pitch To Development Experts