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Training and technical assistance are areas in which microenterprise programs invest substantial budget resources and clients invest a great deal of time. In fact, these services are provided by more than 90 percent of all microenterprise development organizations. FIELD has engaged in two projects aimed at assisting practitioners to improve the quality of their microenterprise training and technical assistance services: its Best Practices Guides series, and its grant cluster on the Effectiveness of Training and Technical Assistance. Best Practices Guides FIELD's past research indicates that despite the importance of training and technical assistance services within the U.S. microenteprise field, there are few resources available to help implementers improve their services and/or assess their efforts against best practice standards. Using grants from the Small Business Administration and the Mott Foundation, FIELD has created a series of "best practice" training modules designed to help practitioners deliver more effective training and technical assistance to low-income clients. Staying Connected: Building Entrepreneurial Networks establishes a rationale for a conscious approach to networking by presenting several examples of successful networks and detailing the ways microenterprise organizations have fostered their clients' development of these networks. FIELD Best Practice Guide: Volume 5 Business First: Using Technology to Advance Microenterprise Development introduces a framework for selecting and planning technology that supports business objectives, and offers insights into how programs can assist microentrepreneurs with business automation, on-line learning and Web-based marketing. FIELD Best Practice Guide: Volume 4 Keeping It Personalized: Consulting, Coaching & Mentoring for Microentrepreneurs provides a summary of findings from research in business consulting, coaching and mentoring with case-study examples of best practices in all three types of technical assistance targeted to low-income clients. FIELD Best Practice Guide: Volume 3 Training for Microenterprise Development: A Guide to Curricula identifies the characteristics of an effective business-planning curriculum for low-income clients and reviews a set of products currently being marketed to practitioners. FIELD Best Practice Guide: Volume 2 Building Skills for Self-Employment: Basic Training for Microentrepreneurs offers best practices in core training and their implications for improving training services. FIELD Best Practice Guide: Volume 1 Entering the Relationship: Finding and Assessing Microenterprise Training Clients explores how program practitioners can conduct market research, develop effective marketing strategies, and appropriately screen and assess incoming clients. Entrepreneur Profiles: A Mushrooming Business & Mother of Invention To read about small businesses that benefited from a range of training and technical assistance services, please visit our entrepreneur profiles. Effectiveness of Training and Technical Assistance Understanding the role of business development training and technical assistance as a centerpiece of U.S. microenterprise development organizations, one of FIELD’s earliest grant clusters was designed to understand the relationship between these training and technical assistance services and the business outcomes experienced by clients. Most specifically, its intent was to identify those program components, or elements of program design or delivery, that are most related to client success. Toward that end, in June 1999 field awarded two-year grants to five organizations to conduct research aimed at better understanding what constitutes effective training and technical assistance services. In brief, the research projects supported under the cluster identified a set of client characteristics associated with training completion and business success including:
The research also identified the following program components that are associated with client success:
Publications
Learning Cluster Members The learning evaluation for this cluster had three major components, which are described here in detail. |
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