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VALUE CHAIN DEVELOPMENTTTrraaaiiinniinng activitieess & Tools
VALUE CHAIN DEVELOPMENT
Overview“The question is thus not if, but how to integrate in value chains in a way that allows for incorporation of a growing number of the workforce and increasing levels of productivity and incomes.”
(Altenburg, 2007)
Value Chains describe how value is created from the conception of a product to its fi nal consumption, concluding the different stages of input supply, design, production, distribution, retailing and support services. Value Chain Development (VCD) focuses on analysing these chains, identifying key weaknesses and bottlenecks and contributing to their further development and improvement.
Value chain development is an increasingly popular approach to develop inclusive markets. By improving the access of the poor to markets, facilitating a better functioning of markets and by promoting the fl ow of knowledge and resources along value chains to small
What is a value chain?A value chain “describes the full range of activities that are required to bring a product or service from conception, through the intermediary phases of production [...], delivery to fi nal consumers, and fi nal disposal after use.” This includes design, production, marketing, distribution and support services leading up to consumption (and often beyond, when recycling processes are considered).
These activities can be contained within a single fi rm or divided among different fi rms, as well as within a single geographical location or spread over wider areas. The term ‘value chain’ refers to the fact that value is added to preliminary products through combination with other resources (for example tools, manpower, knowledge and skills, other raw materials or preliminary products) .As the product passes through the stages of the value chain, its value increases.
Source: ILO: Value Chain Development for Decent Work: A Guide for Practitioners, Government and Private Sector Initiatives (Geneva: 2009)
enterprises and poor producers, value chain interventions can enable the working poor to benefi t more from market development and take advantage of some of the opportunities offered by domestic and global markets. Through value chain development programs, practitioners empower small businesses to sell to more stable, higher volume or higher value markets. This occurs by linking sustainable enterprises with the range of businesses in the value chain and with support service providers and other stakeholders to increase the competitiveness of the industry and increase the benefi ts for low-income sustainable enterprises.
Facts and fi guresValue chains can be local, national or global, linking rural producers with traders and consumers worldwide. They can, for instance, link rural areas with big retailers or supermarket chains in major cities as well as export markets.
Power relations in value chains play a crucial role. Markets dominated by very powerful players can be detrimental to small producers and decrease the income they receive for their produce.
The improvement of value chain competitiveness is recognized as a powerful approach for generating growth and reducing poverty in developing countries, where 75 percent of the population live in rural areas.
Global market trends and niche value chains in, for instance, organic agriculture and fair trade, can offer additional opportunities to rural producers.
Women often face disadvantages in terms of mobility, access to inputs, productive resources, and market information and are thus particularly challenged to access and maintain profi table market niches and economic gains in value chains.
The International Labour Organization (ILO) aims at addressing systems and institutions that can drive competitiveness and job creation in specifi c sectors by using a market development approach. ILO’s interventions build on private sector development strategies that seek to strengthen enterprises, business relationships & services, market structures, and the business environment so that they channel more benefi ts to the poor and create more and better jobs effectively.
The International Training Centre of the ILO has developed a solid capacity building and training program on designing and executing Value Chain Development projects and interventions for international and national organizations. The Centre’s Value Chain Development methodologies are state of the art tools for job creation
A Market development approach to pro-poor growthThe course is highly relevant for professionals developing and implementing Value Chain and enterprise development projects in rural and urban areas.
It offers a unique on-the-job learning opportunity using practical tools and lessons from enterprise development programs that have reached thousands of small enterprises in rural and urban areas.
Participants select a work challenge as an assignment during the course and get support from international experts that act as on-line tutors.
The fi nal output of the course is a Market Development Implementation Project designed by the participant.
A mid-course optional one or two weeks face-to-face workshop enable participants to meet and strengthen networks among them and the international trainers, better adapt the learning to their target group and get an update on latest developments.
Title: Enterprise Development through Value Chains and Business Service Markets
Modality: Distance + optional 2 weeks Face - to - Face
Target: The course is highly relevant for professionals conducting small enterprise development through value chains and business development service markets. It is targeted to professionals working in the following fi elds of practice: Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise development; Inclusive Markets development; Private Sector Development; Agricultural development; Local Economic Development; Livelihood security; Employment and Microfi nance.
Length: 8 month distance learning (March to November). Designed to be combined with the professional job
Assistance: On line tutors
Output: a Market Development Implementation Project designed by the participant based on the project he/she is currently working on in real life.
Contacts: [email protected]
www.itcilo.org/marketdev
ENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENT THROUGH VALUE CHAINS AND BUSINESS SERVICE MARKETS
The four distance learning modules are interrelated as follows:
• MODULE 1 - Introduction to Value Chain and Business Service Market development.
• MODULE 2 - Market Assessment, Monitoring and Evaluation: The course addresses the latest Donor Committee for Enterprise Development (DCED) results measurement framework.
• MODULE 3 - The Program Design Cycle: A Guide to (Re-) Designing Market Development Initiatives.
• MODULE 4 - Implementing Market Development Programs.
This course is an introduction to VCD and offers a balance of fundamental frameworks and principles, as well as some practical skills for the design and implementation of VCD initiatives mainstreaming gender. The course is organized using a modular approach meaning it can be customized to cater participant’s needs.
Some typical adaptations we can provide are:
• Adaptation to the local environment, the economic sector and participant’s profi le.
• Selection of training methodologies: analysis of case studies, role plays, space for experiences exchanges; learner centred dynamic activities and study visits.
• Focus in enhancing the projects and programmes the participants are working on in real life
• Analysis of best practises on employment intensive case studies promoting decent work and improved working conditions.
Electives can be chosen among:
• ICT - Information Communication and Technology • Communication in VCD
COURSE CONTENT
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
Session 1: Opening
Session 5:Market Opportunity & VCD Strategy
Session 8: Intervention Selection & Design
Elective Elective
Coffee break
Session 2:Introduction to Value Chain Development
Session 6: Value Chain Analysis – Strengths and Constraints
Session 9: Planning and Managing VCD Programs
Elective Action Planning
Lunch Break
Session 3:VCD Process
Session 6, Continued: Value Chain Analysis – Strengths and Constraints
Session 10: Market Entry & Pilots
Elective
Coffee Break
Session 4: Value Chain Selection
Session 7: Sustainable Solutions
Session 11:Market Up-take & Exit
Elective
VALUE CHAIN DEVELOPMENTReaching scale, fostering sustainability and promoting equity
TAILOR MADE COURSE ON
• Gender in VCD • Partnerships and Business Linkages • Market Assessment • Results Measurements with DCED Standards • Value Chain Finance
By the end of the course, participants will:
• be able to understand the principles of Value Chain Development for decent work reaching scale and inclusiveness;
• be able to share knowledge with partners and stakeholders about Value Chain Development principles and applications;
• have had the opportunity to exchange experiences with Value Chain Development practitioners and will be part of a peer network;
• be able to contribute to the design and implementation of market driven value chain development projects using a participatory approach.
ILO ITC course on VCD distinguishes from other courses by:
• Promoting enterprise development and competitiveness not as a goal in itself but as a mean to create decent work and equal opportunities for women and men.
• Seeking to understand local, national and international value chains that have the biggest chances of either increasing employment and/or improving working conditions.
• Promoting decent work through fundamental principles and rights at work, employment promotion, social protection and social dialogue.
• Focusing on job creation and job quality improvement• Bringing together the core public and private
stakeholders in Value Chains. The tools seek to strengthen - enterprises, business relationships, market structures, and the business environment.
Title: Tailor Made Course on Value Chain Development
Modality: face - to -face
Target: The course is highly relevant for professionals conducting small enterprise development through value chains and business development service markets. It is targeted to professionals working in the following fi elds of practice: Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise development; Value Chain Finance; Inclusive Markets development; Private Sector Development; Agricultural development; Local Economic Development; Livelihood security; Employment and Microfi nance.
Length: One week
Options: The organizers can choose electives (Gender in VCD, Communication in VCD, Partnerships and Business Linkages, ICT, Market Assessment, Results Measurements with DCED Standards or Value Chain Finance)
Contacts: [email protected]
This training aims to enhance understanding, drive, and skills of practitioners to offer value chain fi nance (VCF) methodologies effectives enough in helping fi nancial institutions and value chain markets to expand in ways they generate improved income and employment opportunities for people living near or under the poverty line.
By the end of the course, participants will::
• Understand and be able to explain to others how value chain fi nance can represent an important business opportunity for different actors in the value chain and
specifi cally for Banks and MFIs, and how it can have a signifi cant impact on economic development, poverty and gender equity
• Be able to identify common opportunities and risks to VCF, including opportunities to increase inclusion of women and other currently excluded groups.
• Be familiar with tools to analyse fi nancial fl ows in a value chain to better understand unmet demand for fi nance in a particular value chain
• Use diagramming tools to understand viable value chain fi nancial service packages and business models.
Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5
Overview to enterprise development through Value Chains and BDS
Introduction to Value Chain Finance
The Value Chain Development Process
Value Chain selection
Competitiveness and Upgrading Strategies
Value Chain Analysis: Strengths & Constraints / Mapping
Analyzing the Market for Value Chain Finance
Sustainable Solutions
Value Chain Finance Solutions
Intervention Selection & Design, Planning & Management – Market Facilitation
Market Entry & Piloting
Market Up-Take and Exit
Scale-up and Sustainability
Optional Modules
Study Visits
Action plans
TAILOR MADE COURSE ONVALUE CHAIN FINANCE
METHODOLOGY
An action-oriented, participative approach will be adopted throughout the workshop. Emphasis will be placed on sharing experiences and best practices - in the search for innovative and practical solutions to problems and challenges, and how the value chain fi nance approach can contribute to problem solving.
Title: Tailor Made Course on Value Chain Finance
Modality: face - to - face
Target: The course is highly relevant for professionals conducting small enterprise development through value chains and business development service markets. It is targeted to professionals working in the following fi elds of practice: Micro, Small and Medium Enterprise development; Value Chain Finance; Inclusive Markets development; Private Sector Development; Agricultural development; Local Economic Development; Livelihood security; Employment and Microfi nance.
Length: One week
Contacts: [email protected]
OUR EXPERIENCE In the last years, the ITC-ILO has implemented more than 20 courses either at the Turin Centre, Italy and in the fi eld (Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe) in partnership with ILO HQ and Regional Offi ces. Training more than 750 practitioners from the private sector, development agencies, UN agencies, researchers and training institutes, microfi nance and commercial banks, chambers of commerce and government offi cials.
The Value Chain Development Guide addresses the underlying causes of failures in the performance of market systems, rather than looking at symptoms in individual chains. It has a unique focus on how to achieve Decent Work. The essential question it addresses is:
how can we achieve competitiveness while creating new jobs and income opportunities for men and women and promoting better working standards in value chains?
The guide is intended for Value Chain Analysis and Development practitioners that need to understand the
nature of relationships between businesses and other actors in the chain; that need to understand the role of specifi c market functions and (formal and informal) rules that govern the value chain; and be able to identify incentives and capacities of market players in order to facilitate Value Chain Development.
It takes an action research approach, whereby value chain mapping and research can already contribute to mobilizing stakeholders and seeking solutions on a participatory basis.
The guide takes the reader through Value Chain selection, initial research, VC mapping and into analysis, interventions design and M&E questions. It builds on project experiences of the ILO in Sri Lanka, Madagascar and Zambia and is currently being used by practitioners for project design in Africa, Latin America and Asia.
TOOLSVALUE CHAIN DEVELOPMENT FOR DECENT WORK – GUIDE
MAKING THE STRONGEST LINKSA practical guide to mainstream gender analysis in value Chain development
Most current value chain development has failed to integrate gender analysis – despite gender mainstreaming policies of donor agencies and the commitments of the governments involved. This guide provides:
• A framework and methodology for Gender
Equitable Value Chain Action Learning and builds sustainable capacity and networks for Value Chain Development.
• Practical examples gender ‘Good Practice’ in different types of VCD processes from private sector development processes to more participatory processes focusing on women’s empowerment.
A core checklist for gender analysis for VCD, based on internationally accepted gender mainstreaming principles.
Diagram tools which can be used in VCDs of all types and at all levels (policy makers to women who cannot read and write) for planning, complex analysis and research and monitoring and evaluation.
This is not a ‘how to’ Guide to value chain analysis and development but it shows how gender concerns should be incorporated into value chain development.
The guide is intended for VCA and/or gender consultants, researchers and policy-makers involved in VCD who wish (i) to make their work more inclusive, (ii) to ensure that their recommendations empower women, maximising the contribution to employment creation, economic growth and poverty reduction, and (iii) to acquire the tools for promoting gender awareness.
International Training Centre of the ILOEnterprise, Microfi nance and Local Development Programme (EMLD)
Viale Maestri del Lavoro, 10. 10127 Turin - Italy
e-mail: [email protected]
www.itcilo.org/emld
Located in an attractive park on the banks of the River Po, the Centre’s campus provides a congenial environment in which to live and study.
• It contains 21 pavilions with fully equipped modern classrooms, conference halls and meeting rooms fi tted out for multilingual simultaneous interpretation, and a computerized documentation centre linked to various data banks.
The campus has 287 study/bedrooms, all with private bathroom, telephone, free access to internet and cable television.
It also has:
• a reception desk open 24 hours a day• a restaurant, a self-service
• canteen and a coffee lounge, all catering for international dietary needs
• a bank• a travel agency• a laundry service• a post offi ce• two gyms• facilities for outdoor sports (football and tennis)• a medical service
Social events are regularly held both on and off campus, so that participants from different cultural backgrounds can make the most of a stimulating international environment.
For further information, please contact
Design: Luca FIore - Printed by the International Training Centre of the ILO, Turin, Italy Made of paper awarded the European Union Eco-label, reg.nr FR/011/002, supplied by International Paper.
The ILO Turin Centre’s facilities