Why is the last borrower of the day always the most interesting?

25 March 2010 at 14:23 9 comments

By Meg Gray, KF10 Costa Rica

Yorlene showing off her organic lettuce starts

Well obviously that’s not always true, but it feels like it sometimes. In this case, I have a particular day and a particular borrower- Yorlene Solano Rodríguez – in mind. At the end of a very long day last week, I met Yorlene at her house. It was getting dark and the FUDECOSUR loan officer I was with was anxious to get home. And of course, she had the most interesting story I had heard all day. All borrowers have interesting stories, but Yorlene was eager to tell me hers, which often makes all the difference.

Not surprisingly, Yorlene’s business is much more complicated than it appears in her profile on Kiva. As her profile says, she used her Kiva loan to buy 3 calves. She is planning to keep the calves for a year or year and a half  until they are fattened up and big enough to sell. Though her borrower profile stops there, her business initiatives certainly don’t.

While she is raising the calves, she is collecting the cow poop and, in collaboration with 4 friends, composting it into organic fertilizer. They are selling the fertilizer to a local store in the nearby city of San Isidro and making a nice profit. And she doesn’t stop there. She is also using a small covered area behing her house to grow organic vegetables using the fertilizer. She sells the vegetables from her house. Right now her biggest money makers are cilantro and lettuce, but she is currently working 2 days a week for a farmer down the road who grows peppers. She is trying to learn as much as she can about peppers, so she can start growing them too. This is where I will be able to earn the most with vegetables in the future she said.

Worms turning her cow poop into compost!

At this point, all sorts of light bulbs and questions were going off in my head. And there are 4 main reasons I was getting so excited by her story.

1) This was exactly what I was talking about when I wrote a blog about green loans several months ago. Though this loan doesn’t fit into the green loan category (it was filled under “Cattle) at first glance, it clearly belongs there. And I love thinking about all the other Kiva loans that probably belong there just like this one and others I’ve seen.

2) I grew up on an organic farm that uses almost the exact same fertility model. At my parent’s farm, cows poop, they turn it into compost, and use it to grow veggies in rural Oregon. Having this background added a whole extra level of questions and shared interests that I wanted to talk to her about.

3) Yorlene was talkative and excited. Not all clients open up so quickly. And she also understood the concept of Kiva quickly and was excited by it. Read Maia’s blog about trying to explain Kiva to clients for more insight on this. When a client understands and is interested in Kiva immediately, it is always really exciting.

4) Perhaps most importantly, she is a clear success story! For Yorlene, one loan for $925 has turned itself into not one but three businesses. She is looking for other places to sell her fertilizer and is hoping to pay back this loan ahead of schedule, so she can get another to expand her fertilizer business.

So many more questions were on the tip of my tongue. What is your profit on each bag of fertilizer? What markets do you want to expand into? When do you hope to add peppers to your repertoire? How do you divide the work (and the profits) of the fertilizer business between you and your partners? What gave you the idea to get into these various businesses?

But it had been a really long day. I could only ask the loan officer to stay for so long. So instead of talking to Yorlene for hours, which would have been easy, I settled for 30 minutes with a quick tour. I didn’t even see the cows because it was dark, starting to rain, and they are kept away from the house.

As a Kiva Fellow, it definitely wasn’t the first time I wished the day was longer.

Meg Gray is currently working as a Kiva Fellow with Fundación Mujer in San Jose, Costa Rica. Though as evidenced by this blog, she spent a week working with FUDECOSUR (another field partner in Costa Rica) earlier this month doing borrower verification. Make a loan to another entrepreneur like Yorlene today!

Entry filed under: Costa Rica, FUDECOSUR, Fundacion Mujer, KF10 (Kiva Fellows 10th Class). Tags: , , , , , , .

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9 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Louis Flores  |  20 May 2010 at 23:52

    Help me now and I will help you when we ramp up to 20,000 units per month. It may take a year plus of waiting but then $100,000. per month for one year is $1,200,000.00 for KIVA. Thanks, lou

    Reply
  • 2. Louis Flores  |  20 May 2010 at 23:50

    We are looking to get a loan and some grants for 1. research 2nd. for invention manually makes electricity 3,rd is a foundation to help seniors to get grants. I need to borrow enough to get the businesses going and get the invention packaged, patented, patent search, prototyped and licensed to a manufacturer so they make it and distribute it and I get a royalty. Once we ramp up to 5000+ units per month, I will be able to be a lender to the KIVA, Org. My goal is for them to ramp up to 20,000 units per month and I will be able to invest $100,000./mo or $1,200,000./ a year. You help me know I will help you as soon as I am into production. Thanks,

    Reply
  • 3. Fehmeen  |  27 March 2010 at 10:57

    I could feel your enthusiasm when reading your post :) I think Yorlene provides us an example of success because she’s thinking like a manager, i.e. optimizing output by making sure every single opportunity is taken up and nothing is wasted. It’s an important business lesson that commercial firms often forget. But Yorlene doesn’t!

    Reply
  • 4. Agnes  |  27 March 2010 at 07:26

    What a great ending! Being in the city (Houston) with average soil, my mom used to save the table scraps, such as orange peels, egg shells, anything used to prepare dinner, and compost them as well. Definitely not as rich as cow poo, but I wonder if this also a common practice for people in pueblos or farms.

    Reply
  • 5. charmaine  |  26 March 2010 at 12:37

    This is a wonderful story. I hope that eventually some more of the “green” aspects will make it to the kiva site. I know they would be eagerly lent to.

    Reply
  • 6. Cameron Morris  |  26 March 2010 at 10:17

    Meg,

    Great blog post! One question: did you sample any of her organic veggies?I actually had a decently similar experience in Mozambique except I met an organic farmer in the blazing mid day sun and had to sweat out the visit because I was so eager to stay and talk to him.

    Keep up the great work.

    CTM

    Reply
    • 7. Meg  |  26 March 2010 at 13:25

      No, sadly I didn’t get to try any. She tried to find me a cucumber, but is was dark and raining, thus no luck.

  • 8. Thomas Gold  |  26 March 2010 at 05:00

    Very interesting post Meg, as always!

    It’s great to highlight the most compelling borrowers’ stories on this blog (as you say Kiva profiles can’t relate everything, and the Fellows’ first mission is to echo borrowers voices, especially those eager to talk)

    Bad luck you couldn’t interview her longer. It would have been awesome to know how she got the idea of creating these subsidiary activities from her main business (something I alwas found hard to figure out) and to have an insight on how this “smart business ideas” could be scalable to other micro-entrepreneurs

    Be well !

    Reply
  • 9. Raf Manji  |  25 March 2010 at 17:01

    Great story Meg!!

    Many thanlks.

    Raf

    Reply

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