Investment Opportunities: Medical Trials, Proteins, Phytotherapy, Therapeutics, Ethnopharmacology Industries—Jamaica & Barbados

 

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We never waste the topics we bring to our Conference or Trade Show so we bring you a discussion on investment opportunties in Jamaica.

Focus areas:

Clinical Trials (Medical Research Solutions)—UWI Mona

Investment Opportunities in the  Proteins, Phytotherapy, Therapeutics, Ethnopharmacology Industries

Jamaica & Barbados

We heard from Dr. Wendy Cukier, Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson on

“Innovation Commercialization and the Creation of Intellectual Property from the Perspective of university-based incubators and accelerators”.

Now we take you the Caribbean for another conversation.

Join us Tuesday, November 17, 2020  @ 7:00 PM EST

When leading academic experts

Dr. Sylvia Mitchell

Head of the Medicinal Plant Biotechnology Research (UWI, Mona)

&

Dr. Cohall

Deputy Dean Pre-Clinical Sciences and Senior Lecturer in Pharmacology (UWI, Cavehill)

Discuss investment opportunities, health and economic solutions in the Proteins, Phytotherapy, Therapeutics Industry—Jamaica

 

Keep your radio dials on WBCA FM 102.9 to hear

Loreen Walker

Attorney-at-LawUWI, deliver the BIDEM promise of a walk-through opportunities related to medical trials for researchers and businesses looking to support their disruption strategy in Jamaica.

Coming to you live on  Showcase, You and Your Biz

Brought to you by Magate Wildhorse Inc., New York,  Caribbean Diaspora Connect, The CoP, and WBCA FM 102.9.

Register to receive a link to participate in the Show.

Registration Form (Click the hyperlink)

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Not in Boston or won’t be available and can’t stand to miss a minute?

Register by clicking on the words registration form.

Got a question? Message us.

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Copyright © 2020 by Meegan Scott, Magate Wildhorse Ltd .(Toronto), Magate Wildhorse Inc.,(New York). All rights reserved.

Focus Group: Accelerating Caribbean Entrepreneurship at Home and in the Diaspora

Focus group accelerating entrepreneur

“Towards a Policy Framework for Accelerating Caribbean Entrepreneurship at Home and in the Diaspora”.

Join in the entrepreneurs and key stakeholder leg of this discussion — commenced at the premiere edition of the BIDEM International Caribbean Diaspora Entrepreneurs’ Conference and Trade Show, held in Toronto, October 13-15, 2020.

The Honourable Mary Ng, Minister of Small Business and Export, Canada and the Honourable Audley Shaw, Minister of Investment and Commerce, Jamaica made their contribution to the dialogue during the Minister’s panel.

Entrepreneurs, consultants, political entrepreneurs  and the media are now invited to make their contribution to articulating the change we want to see. Changes that will drive the delivery of the Sustainable Development Goals and local goals for host and home countries.

Diaspora entrepreneurs in Brooklyn, rest of the USA, all destinations where Caribbeans live outside of their home countries—  including other Caribbean Islands and Latin America—  are welcome to join us.

Date: Thursday, November 19, 2020  | Time:  7:30 – 9:00  PM EST

Prior registration to participate in this event is required.

Registration Form, click the words Registration Form to register for this and other GEW activities.

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Caribbean Diasporic Markets Compass

 

Radio Talk SHow: Showcase― You & Your Biz

TALK Show GEW

Join Magate Wildhorse Consulting, Caribbean Diaspora Connect, WBCA 102.9 FM,  and The Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs in celebrating and creating awareness around barriers to entrepreneurship and how to overcome them.

Join us during Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW), November 16-22, 2020 for Showcase You and Your Business.

Aired on: WBA 102.9A FM

Register your business for

  • A 2 min  Entrepreneur’s Interview  plus
  • 60 sec. give-away and sale for your solution of choice

If you’ve got Jamaica or Caribbean roots you are welcome to join us for the celebrations and interviews.

Deadline for Registration:  Saturday, November 14, 2020.

Registration Form (click the preceding link)

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The show aims to let Caribbean diasporans put their fingers on on the problems that hold us back from growing mainstream sized businesses with that delightful ethnic flavour.

The barriers to be addressed are listed below.

The Barriers:

  1. Of foreignness
  2. Lack of trust and the image of Caribbean entrepreneurs
  3. Access to capital and more so are we ready? [Time for business, opportunities in diaspora corporate citizen generated data, research a business opportunity]
  4. Sparse networks ―including the missing social media superstars, the need and how to change that.
  5. The need for Patrons to overcome the lack of experience
  6. Collaboration and Civility ―self―inflicted business wounds.
  7. Enterprising versus entrepreneurial 2020 and beyond.
  8. Medical trials and biotechnology – Jamaica to diaspora opportunities

The programme will gather input to be including in the research  “Towards a Policy Framework for Accelerating Caribbean Entrepreneurship at Home and in the Diaspora”.

Caribbean entrepreneurs in diasporic and domestic market are invited to share in the online forum at the following link:

CoP-BIDEM Discussion Forum

Copyright © 2020 by Meegan Scott,  Magate Wildhorse Ltd .(Toronto), Magate Wildhorse Inc.,(New York). All rights reserved.

Share & Get Featured during Global Entrepreneurship Week

Mission Drift GEW

 

Here’s your entrepreneur’s steal of a deal for zero penny.

Publishing and publicity one action; two standout results for finishing 2020 strong!

Respond to the piece below to get featured during Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW 2020). This year GEW will be celebrated November 16-22.

Mission Drift, The Stormerpreneurs℠ and Finishing 2020 Strong

“Young bird nuh know storm” — unless of course they were born in 2020 among the turmoil of COVID-19. If the term stormerpreneur has a place in your unique story or journey then let us know by your response to the question below.

This has been a busy year with lots of pivots and virtual activities so it would not be surprising if many of our organizations experienced some form of mission drift. Mission drift can be positive though we mostly hear about the negative drift. Tell us about your experience below.  Thank you

  1. Tell us about the moment you decided to start your own business.
  2. Who was there with you when sat down to put the idea together ? Include the year you started.
  3. Would you say that you are a stormerpreneur? Tell us why you answered yes or no.
  4. What is the mission of your organization?
  5. What is the vision?
  6. How does the mission and vision fit or help you to fulfil your personal purpose and ambitions?
  7. What were the top 5-10 activities you completed in 2020?
  8. Which played the greatest role in advancing the delivery of your Mission?
  9. When you add it all up— would you say your drift was positive? Or was it mostly negative?
  10. Which product or service do you currently offer— that is a must have for readers of this publication or people who could use your solution?
  11. What can we expect from your business over the next two years?
  12. Where can they learn more or purchase your service? Web site or social media link, calendar or email link

#IAmAnEntrepreneur   #yes #toentrepreneurship #GEW2020

To participate submit one or both of the following:

Mandatory: 

Word length:  200- 400 words maximum

Deadline: Friday, November 14, 2020.

Register to participate in this and other events at the following link

Some lucky participants will have a chance to share in print as well as in video.

Click the link or text highligthed green to submit your written piece to Mission Drift.

Submit your pieces to: submit here.

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.You may submit a video version of your story in addition to the written piece (File format, MP4. MPEG-4, WMV).

Conditions:

The best six will be selected for publishing during GEW 2020.

The next 3 runners up will be featured in another publication in December.

Brought to you by Magate Wildhorse Consulting!

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Copyright © 2018 by Meegan Scott,  Magate Wildhorse Ltd .(Toronto), Magate Wildhorse Inc.,(New York). All rights reserved.

Global Entrepreneurship Week 2020 – Magate Wildhorse Has Much in Store for Business Leaders

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This year Magate Wildhorse Consulting [Magate Wildhorse Ltd, Toronto and Magate Wildhorse Inc., New York] and The Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs will deliver #BIDEM 2020 GEW Brawta.

  • The programme will involve a mix of discussions―some for advancing the policy framework for accelerating Caribbean diaspora and domestic entrepreneurship commenced at BIDEM 2020 International Caribbean Diaspora Entrepreneurs’ Conference and Trade Show,
  • network building,
  • medical trials and biotechnology – Jamaica to diaspora opportunities
  • virtual expo,
  • vox populi,
  • entrepreneurs business showcase and media interviews
  • publishing and workshops.

We will carry forward the BIDEM Conference and Trade Show theme:

“Connecting the Roots, Building Networks Together for Profit and Purpose”.

 Our GEW celebrations will serve to accelerate the kick off of BIDEM, the entrepreneur and market development process which commenced on October 13, 2020.

BIDEM [pronounced BID-EM], means bridged, high impact diaspora entrepreneurs to efficient diasporic markets! It also aims to drive the growth of high impact mainstream businesses with that delightful ethnic flavor. It is grounded in local, national, regional and international sustainable development. Profit and purpose and draws in risk intelligence, evaluation, monitoring and improvement for delivering profit, purpose, the Global Goals, improvement and BIDEM.

The programme will advance progress for reducing the big 6 barriers to Caribbean Entrepreneurship in diasporic markets and with some being applicable to domestic markets.  The #Eval4Action Campaign and evaluation for driving the SDGs will receive a boost as well as the GEW 2020 themes.

#GEW2020 #Education  #Ecosystems  #Inclusion  #Policy 

We primary focus is not  startups though we include startups; we focus on not so seasoned and seasoned businesses, strong, weak and ambitious and the average.

Registration form                                                                            

https://forms.gle/Qzc1uWrowbos5zwC8

We are official GEN/GEW Partners Canada, USA and Caribbean Diasporic Markets.

About BIDEM

https://bidem.org/welcome-to-bidem/

About Magate Wildhorse

https://www.linkedin.com/company/magate-wildhorse-consulting

About The CoP

https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-community-of-practice-for-caribbean-immigrant-entrepreneurs

Magate Wildhorse was the main sponsors of BIDEM 2020 while The WEKH sponsored the Conference app.  SchoolToonz an animation company based in Jamaica sponsored the BIDEM logo.

Discussion Forum for Accelerating Caribbean Entrepreneurship (Virtual Hub)

Gew 2020 Collages

Strategy Planning and Evaluation for Disability Programming — Workshop

Strategy and EVALUATION GEW PT 1

Saturday, November 21, 2020   Time: 10:00 AM EST | Toronto

Join us for Parts  I & II in this workshop series.

Part I maybe taken as a stand-alone capacity building session.

It is a pre-requisite for taking Part II, which focuses on practical application of learnings from Part I.

The dialogue and workshop series is grounded in risk intelligence, robust strategy planning, influential evaluations and experiential learning.

  • Because evidence matters.
  • Because relevance matters.
  • Because local context and community issues matters.

About Meegan Scott , workshop facilitator.

A Global Entrepreneurship Week Special!

Strategy and Evaluation Workshop GEW PT II

Sunday, November 22, 2020  Time: 5:00-6:20 PM  EST  | Toronto

#unmissable  #limitedspaces

Register at: https://forms.gle/Qzc1uWrowbos5zwC8click words colour hand

A limited number of  scholarships will be available to developing country participations.

Selection will be based on assessment in registration form.

 

How to Deliver a Killer Pitch by Precious L. Williams ― #KillerPitchMaster

Working at perfecting your elevator pitch or your business pitch?

Search no more, listen and learn from our GEW event partner and CoP member Precious L. Williams.

Precious L. Williams is a world-class master communicator who works with successful women entrepreneurs and helps them take their professional speaking skills to the next level. With over 23 years of experience conceptualizing unique branding and marketing techniques, Williams seeks to train individuals and companies how to remain authentic while marketing concepts and visions to distinctive audiences.

As a 13-time local and national business elevator pitch champion and former lawyer, Williams has been featured on top television shows and publications for her pitching and branding skills. She was featured in ABC’s “Shark Tank,” CNN, MSNBC, Wall Street Journal as well as several others.
The philosophy of her “killer” pitch is evident in the strategic and personalized creative communications and presentations solutions Williams puts forth. As a serial entrepreneur, international professional speaker, and coach, Williams is equipped to bring life, authenticity, strategy, and boldness to all your oral and written communication needs.
Williams is a graduate of Spelman College and Rutgers School of Law. She is a current member of Phi Beta Kappa and lives in New York.

We are delighted to have Precious as a member of the Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs (CoP).

Thank you Precious for making our GEW 2018 Celebrations that much better.


All partner including Telly

The Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs (CoP), is Not a STARTUP COMMUNITY

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By Meegan Scott

The CoP is not a startup community!

It is that safe place where trust is built, collaborations, cooperation, friendships, and partnerships are forged― in a market place and research hub for delivering dynamic and inclusive entrepreneurship for and by Caribbeans.  It is where Caribbean entrepreneurs and their businesses will draw on connections, knowledge, opportunities, and support to help them thrive and grow.

The same is true for members of the African community, immigrant entrepreneurs who are not native speakers of the English language, African-Americans, and Canadian entrepreneurs with no history of entrepreneurship in their families.

The CoP is that space were tacit and formal knowledge blends, and is transferred within the community among retired entrepreneurs, more seasoned, not so seasoned entrepreneurs, youth entrepreneurs (over 18 years old), young entrepreneurs (those over forty who are embarking on their first business), individuals who have or are approaching retirement and are starting their retirement business, as well as startup entrepreneurs over the age of eighteen years old.

Many who still do not quite understand technology as a method, tools, or equipment for executing strategy and tactics during operations, view the CoP as another Facebook group.

Let us take our governance related responsibilities seriously, and engage in needed research when steering organizations or seeking to influence public opinion. Let us make it a habit to step outside of the domain of our core areas of expertise and engage in research that will enable us to understand and to twin both risk intelligence and risk management for delivering real and lasting solutions. Leaders and entrepreneurs must engage in research that will inform decision making and put them and the organizations they serve in the position of innovators and first movers.

With its day-to-day work, connection, research, and market place housed on the Facebook social media platform the CoP is positioned to deliver relevant solutions that are inclusive in terms of access to information, markets, and networks as well as financial accessibility.

It is where families, friends, fellow alumni, social workers, politicians, members of the diaspora in different continents and others can stumble upon the CoP opportunity and bring it to the attention of one of our entrepreneurs, or a community member sitting on the fence of becoming an entrepreneur. It is where the real entrepreneur who constantly seek out knowledge will come across its existence and seize the opportunity to give and to receive.

The CoP is therefore in a perfect space as a solution that is relevant, effective, and inclusive as it relates to access, as well as for facilitating formal and informal learning on how-to do business for entrepreneurs at all stages of their journey ―from the retired to the startup.

Moreover, where social media and the CoP hub intersects is fertile ground for the kind of shared knowledge that is equivalent to social capital―a concept advanced by Harold Jarche’s framework for Personal Knowledge Mastery (PKM). The planned and desired unintended results of the CoP cannot be delivered by a regular Facebook Group (The ties of a regular Facebook group are too weak to deliver the objectives of the CoP.).

In keeping with the PKM model (And its’ seek, sense, and share approach), we say with confidence that the CoP provides a safe environment for testing innovative ideas, market research, and building trust (a challenge in our community, and a barrier to doing business).

Furthermore, the CoP is supported by a backbone for conducting virtual face-to-face meetings, market connections, team work, and conversations. This was demonstrated in the form of training events, its virtual launch, and the panel discussion “Born Global & Born-Again Global Businesses: Pathways to Internationalization (Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs & Peer Entrepreneurs), held during Global Entrepreneurship Week 2018. Additionally, the CoP will be supported by face-to-face meetups in various cities in OECD countries and wherever members of the diaspora reside. We invite community members who share the vision of the CoP to put themselves forward to lead a hub in their city.

At the next level the rich ecosystem of the CoP―intersects with work teams in individual businesses, core working committees of the CoP, supporting entities and partners such as JAMPRO, Jamaica National, The Centre for Entrepreneurship Thinking and Practice (UWI), and prospective host cities for delivering innovation and co-creation of value. It is at that intersection that knowledge is translated and put to work by individual businesses, partners, and the CoP.  At that intersection we will also see solutions to social problems, scaling-up of Caribbean businesses to mainstream businesses with that ethnic or local Caribbean flavor, job, intellectual property, and wealth creation. It is also where the job of Caribbean and host country trade and business support agencies will become easier and can focus resources at a higher level on the value chain, and on the results chain.

That intersection is also where shared practice and reputation flows back from work teams, individual businesses, and entrepreneurs into the Community of Practice for the benefit of all. The CoP and its stakeholders will be able to assess how well shared practice is working and delivering impact, or to make suggestions for improvement by interrogating the CoP’s theory of change and performance results, in addition to member and partner testimony over time.

Even in its early days the CoP is backed by decades of experience in corporate strategy, organizational performance management and measurement, marketing, research, education, social and economic development, entrepreneur and private sector development, business incubation, ethnic media, finance, FDI and trade promotion. The core actors and shapers of the CoP are themselves serial entrepreneurs with experience establishing businesses in the diaspora. The door is open for others to join and contribute to leading the CoP.

The CoP aims to deliver shared visions, acts from a position of inclusiveness, efficiency, effectiveness, transparency, and accountability.  It values and is grounded in the principles and practices applied by performance driven, learning organizations, that are designed to facilitate improvement, and acting together. Our work will be informed by rigorous research, and evidence. We are entrepreneurial in thinking, and we value and collect dissenting perspectives for driving the delivery of innovative solutions, innovation, and for putting forward a best solution that continuously gets better.

It is therefore clear that we are equipped with a rich talent pool, tools, different perspectives, and mindsets for growing a CoP that will manipulate the “foreign” or “local but unsuitable” entrepreneurial ecosystem to deliver our objectives (that of member businesses, entrepreneurs, partners, and the CoP) while adding value to society and customers. It is where we will develop greater mastery of entrepreneurship.

(Meegan Scott, B.Sc. Hons, MBA, ATM-B, CL, PMP., is a Jamaican-born Strategic Management Consultant, at Magate Wildhorse Ltd in Toronto, and the CoP Secretariat).

Born Global & Born-Again Global Businesses:Pathways to Internationalization, Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs & Peer Entrepreneurs

Panel Title: Born Global & Born-Again Global Businesses: Pathways to Internationalization: Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs & Peer Entrepreneurs

Organizer: Meegan Scott & Magate Wildhorse Ltd on behalf of The Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs
Moderator: Meegan Scott, Magate Wildhorse Ltd
Panelists:
• Loretta Green-Williams, Caribeme Magazine
• Marguerite Orane, Free & Laughing
• Marva Hewitt, Food Hygiene Bureau
• Tamu Petra Browne, Innovative Education and Training Solutions
• Lester de Souza, Impact Galaxy


A Global Entrepreneurships Week (GEW 2018) Event!

Held: November 13, 2018

Findings from Panel Discussions

Born Global Panel Report Final

This the first public event hosted by The Community of Practice for Caribbean Immigrant Entrepreneurs.

All partner including South Florida