First In-Person Training in Japan for Young Entrepreneurs from Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon

 

This programme has three phases and combines both online and in-person learning. It was launched in September 2022 with 189 participants from Egypt, Iraq and Lebanon. 

 

During the first phase, participants learned about the fundamentals of entrepreneurship, innovation and public health. 122 participants who completed the first phase continued to the second phase, in which they built leadership skills and learned about challenges and opportunities in digital health and healthcare innovations.

 

The first two phases were run virtually through the microlearning platform and interactive portals, where participants engaged with their peers and coaches

 

Phase 3: In-person training in Japan

 

For the third and last phase of the programme, “Great Ideas Space 2022: VentureLab”, 20 entrepreneurs (10 from Egypt, six from Iraq and four from Lebanon) will undergo online mentoring sessions and join in-person study tours and workshops in Japan. In this final phase, the participants will further develop practical skills and attitudes so they can validate and operationalize the business models for their start-ups.

 

To be invited to Japan, top performers from the online training were also assessed based on the submitted video pitches to show business models to operationalize their startups.

 

The 10-day trip to Japan will start with a study tour at Shibuya QWS, an entrepreneurship and innovation hub. It will be followed by a courtesy visit to the Embassy of Iraq in Tokyo. The training programme will also include cultural immersion through study tours around Tokyo and Hiroshima. Participants will learn about Hiroshima’s post-war reconstruction – a story of resilience and prosperity, hear from a hibakusha (atomic bombing survivor), and explore Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park.

 

In-depth workshops: Innovation and Collaboration

 

In the workshop, to be held mostly in Higashi-Hiroshima, the entrepreneurs will take part in extensive mentoring and training on the following:

 

Appraisal of personal leadership style, personal motivations, reflections on leading enterprises, a profile of successful entrepreneurs
Product-solution fit, iteration, exercises in running high fidelity/MVP experiments, metrics and unit economics
Market strategies: outbound and inbound marketing, communications strategy, marketing tools and techniques for the health care and public health sector
Japan’s economic development, public health, and innovation
Investor readiness: start-up valuation, financial modelling, how investors assess start-ups, the venture team

In the end, participants will pitch the business models and plans they developed over the programme and get feedback from their peers and a panel of mentors and coaches.

 

UNITAR, with financial backing from the Government and the People of Japan, supports young entrepreneurs and founders of MSMEs through social innovation and entrepreneurship training. The training helps young entrepreneurs find opportunities, create jobs and improve the healthcare system in their own countries.

 

For more information, please contact:

 

Yoko Morita, UNITAR Division for Prosperity

prosperity_communications@unitar.org

 

About UNITAR, Division for Prosperity

 

The United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) provides innovative learning solutions to individuals, organizations and institutions to enhance global and country-level action for a better future. Located in Hiroshima, the Division for Prosperity trains present and future change-makers from developing countries, particularly youth and women, so they may shape a more inclusive, sustainable and prosperous world. https://www.unitar.org/sustainable-development-goals/prosperity

 

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