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Kabissa Connections will address trust concerns by providing a platform revealing the connections that organizations have with networks, international organizations, supporters and service providers. We will do this for organizations working in Africa while collaborating with others on open source tools, standards and approaches that can be replicated in other regions.
On Kabissa, it is currently possible for registered users to add and update their own organization profile containing vital organization contact data, mission statement and description. Profiles then appear on the Kabissa map and in database searches. Profiles are also directly reachable via their URL eg http://enoughisenough.kabissa.org or through links throughout the site and google searches. Profiles currently can be extended by adding more people to them (who can also be empowered to edit the profiles) as well as adding groups, each with a discussion email list and a range of content types including blogs, news, wikis and polls.

These functions are very useful; however, because they are disconnected from other business needs that organizations have (such as fundraising, publicity, networking, collaboration, etc), the profiles are not actively updated on a regular basis. Meanwhile, while searching for fundraising, publicity, networking, collaboration, etc, organizations are creating accounts and profiles at Software as a Service (SaaS) sites across the web. Well-meaning international organizations, donors and networks also create online directories with lists of organizations.
These accounts and directories, including the Kabissa directory, do not benefit the organizations as much as one would expect, because it becomes a challenge to maintain so many accounts (especially for those organizations at the grassroots with limited access to the Internet), and online directories quickly fall out of date. Meanwhile, the SaaS service providers, networks and international organizations trying to serve these organizations don't know how trustworthy and legitimate the organizations are and have to start at the beginning to verify organizations every time they come to sign up for an account or to get support. And as time passes, since the relationship remains bilateral, it doesn't matter how deep and effective the collaboration might be; it does little to strengthen the organization's reputation online.
Meanwhile there is the problem of trust. When it comes to activities like fundraising or volunteer placement, trust is incredibly important. In the United States, this trust can be achieved online on a bilateral basis by verifying nonprofit status by requesting 501(c)3 determination letters, for example, and financial transactions are made possible by credit cards (for collecting donations) and verification payments to bank accounts (for dispersing donations to beneficiary organizations).
In most African countries, on the other hand, verifying legitimacy and collecting/dispersing payments online are far more cumbersome and in some places well nigh impossible. Meanwhile there has been an increase in efforts by African organizations, even the many tiny organizations at the grassroots level that Kabissa works with, to reach out online to take advantage of the same types of SaaS sites, networks and international organizations that United States organizations are benefitting from already. Some sites, like Facebook, Twitter and nonprofit networking/blogging platforms like Kabissa and WiserEarth, are being usefully adopted. Other sites, however, despite best intentions, set the organizations up for failure, including giving platforms and even sites like Google Apps, PayPal and WordPress, which often block users from African countries.
Kabissa Connections will address trust concerns by providing a platform revealing the relationships (what we call Connections) that organizations have with networks, international organizations, supporters and service providers. We will do this for organizations working in Africa while collaborating with a range of partners on open source tools, standards and approaches that can be replicated in other regions and for other purposes.
Programmers will be able to build websites that query our database via API calls to find out if an organization is an active Kabissa member and to discover which other Service Providers the organization is connected to and in good standing with. Possible functionality they could build into their own services includes streamlining a signup process for an organization, adding widgets or badges related to their service to their Kabissa Organization Profile, or enabling organizations to display their contact details, logo and mission statement from Kabissa on their website.
Besides the API, people without programming knowledge will be able to log into Kabissa and create/manage a network or other service that organizations can opt to connect with. This functionality targets those service providers that already manage networks or coalitions in Africa, are running conferences, fund African organizations, or offer some other service around which they want to connect organizations. For these service providers, a back-end dashboard will be provided to invite people to connect, see and manage active connections, and download CSV spreadsheets of organization data. Tools will be provided to invite organizations by email, Facebook Connect, Twitter, etc, as well as while browsing the Kabissa directory.
Organizations themselves are provided with a dashboard for managing their organization profile data and connections.
Front-end dashboards will also be provided on the Kabissa website to enable people to browse the organizations through a range of different user-friendly channels, filtering by country, thematic area, network or other criteria, and always with attractive and easy-to-understand maps and visualisations. RSS Feeds will be provided displaying the new and recently updated organizations.
Service providers will be able to contact connected organizations via email newsletters, and gather organizations around Kabissa Groups with blogs, news and email discussion lists. The Kabissa Gong Gong monthly newsletter will "cross pollinate" information and learning across the networks.
The full Kabissa directory will be provided annually in a printed and bound book, showcasing the networks and organizations in an attractive, user-friendly layout. Networks will be able to download their directories for printing and distributing to their network members.
Leading online social networking platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn are important and can't be ignored, and African organizations serious about using the Internet to showcase their work and find partners and supporters must also be present on Facebook. It is also true that Facebook provide great tools for networking and sharing content, make an effort to be reachable across Africa also via mobile phones, and are increasingly the place where people are spending their time when they go online (especially in Africa).
However, these services are geared primarily to serving shareholders, not nonprofit organizations in Africa seeking to improve the lives of people in their communities. As such, the features being made available are driven by different priorities, such as increasing the number of users, getting them to spend more time on the site, and getting them to click on ads. The numbers themselves can be powerful for some types of campaigns, but we do not think they actually translate into increased trust or reputation for most organizations.
Facebook also has a demonstrated tendency to change privacy policies and settings on an ad hoc basis that can unwittingly encourage people to put themselves and others, especially human rights activists, in danger. This is why I feel remorse every time I use Facebook. The cartoon below from joyoftech.com is of course an exaggeration but not far from the truth.

Having an independent platform devoted to revealing the connections between organizations that is focussed on helping them to achieve their own organizational mission is a better approach. In Africa, Kabissa is the natural home for this given our long track record as a technology partner for African NGOs and our strategy to remain a self-sustaining volunteer-run network (see below).
Below is a list of concrete examples of how stakeholders will be able to use Kabissa Connections (KC) to reveal their connections and build their own reputation as well as those of the organizations they are working with.
Kabissa has a track record as a trusted partner working with the African civil society organizations in our network, and so we will most likely begin with offering KC to them. However, we also are interested in talking with foundations and service providers during the first round of development.
Kabissa is built using Drupal and CiviCRM open source software, using some custom modules but also core versions and contributed modules of both applications. This means that we can benefit from improvements as they are contributed back to Drupal and CiviCRM by others and contribute our own custom modules back to the community as well.
CiviCRM is one of many options available for managing databases. "Out of the box," it is very powerful for managing contacts on the backend and provides a remarkable range of nonprofit-oriented functionality that can be set up on the frontend as well. However, it does have its drawbacks as a platform, especially when developers need to go beyond what is available out of the box. This means that much of the functionality described in this project will involve coding custom modules -- which we would want to contribute back to the community for use by other organizations seeking to do similar things.
Currently, upgrades to the Kabissa platform are done on an ad hoc basis. We are planning to set up a quarterly release schedule, modeling Kabissa after aggressive open source software project development cycles. To manage this process, we will recruit a partner organization specializing in developing community websites, preferably in Africa. Projects will be proposed, funded, planned and implemented through a public issue tracker already online at http://roadmap.kabissa.org so that volunteers and members can contribute their skills and time. Some projects we will fund through Kabissa, but we also expect our members and partners to help prioritize, fund and implement projects that benefit them. As we have no employees, the bulk of the work will always be done by volunteers, members and partners.
Projects we are already working on that will add value to this project include:
Officially, Kabissa is a US-based charitable organization with 501(c)3 status. Founded in 1999 in Oxford, UK, we were formally organized in 2001 in Washington DC. The official headquarters are now on Bainbridge Island near Seattle, Washington, on the west coast of the United States. Our mission is to help African civil society organizations put ICT to work for the benefit of the communities they serve.
Since 2007, we have been shifting from a technology partner providing website hosting and training to a network supporting the tech capacity-building aspirations of African civil society using participatory technology. We are a lightweight organization with no employees, governed by board members from African civil society, and led by Tobias Eigen, Kabissa's founder and a longtime "Internet in Africa" practitioner. Our goal is to maintain Kabissa as a low-cost platform run by volunteers that African organizations can use to connect with others while contributing to its development as part of projects they carry out that are synergetic to Kabissa's own mission.
We have sought to explain Kabissa's background and status in detail on our website, which you are invited to join and explore.
The 1500+ organizations in the Kabissa network are active throughout Africa...
Northern Africa, Western Africa, Eastern Africa, Central Africa, Southern Africa, Indian Ocean Islands
... and are working in a range of crucial issue areas:
Advocacy and Policy, Arts and Culture, Conflict Resolution, Direct Social and Humanitarian Services, Economic Development and Poverty Reduction, Education, Environment, Gender, Governance, Health, Human Rights and Democracy, Media and Journalism, Microfinance, Technology, Training and Capacity Building, Youth
You can also find organizations via the interactive map and database search.
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Thanks to all Kabissa fans as
Thanks to all Kabissa fans as well as FACT Challenge judges for believing in Kabissa and supporting its mission. We are hopeful that Kabissa Connections will have a much greater impact! Merci!
- Ghislain
Dear Tobias, Thank you for
Dear Tobias,
Thank you for your post... We appreciate your comment and support about the Solar Powered Computer Project in Cameroun. Kabissa Connections looks very innovative. We're just getting back after a six weeks from Cameroon and we're going again for Terra Madre Global conference for small scale farmers in Turin. http://www.terramadre.info/pagine/organizzazione/
We would like to be in touch because we found interesting resources in your website.
Good job for the great work.
Good luck
Kind Regards.
Issa
Tobias, Créer une plate forme
Tobias, Créer une plate forme de visibilité pour les organisation africaines, est une excellente idée. Les organisations de jeunes partenaires de INSER Action Sociale, sont toutes emerveillées par cette opportunités qui leur est offerte.
Thank you Bonny! I am so
Thank you Bonny! I am so pleased to have your support for Kabissa Connections in Cameroon. It was also in part conversations with you about the work of INSER Action Sociale that inspired this idea in the first place.
Would you be able to recruit someone to translate the Kabissa Connections project idea (and perhaps more content on Kabissa) into French so we can spread it more widely in Cameroon and get people involved?
Warm regards,
Tobias
WE wholeheartedly support the
WE wholeheartedly support the Kabissa project. The WiserEarth team is already excited to be partnering already with Kabissa on the recent survey into how West African NGOs are using online collaboration and communication tools. We look forward to investigating other ways that our respective platforms can help NGOs in Africa through the sharing information and content. For example, through enabling the Kabissa platform to incorporate WiserEarth's API.
Thanks Camilla! I look
Thanks Camilla! I look forward to seeing how we will be able to incorporate WiserEarth's API in what we do and doing more to connect our two platforms in support of African NGOs.
Looks like we're about halfway through our joint WiserEarth/Kabissa survey of West African NGOs now - I look forward to seeing how it turns out, and to what extent respondents ask for help with connecting them with each other.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Tobias -- as a newcomer to
Tobias -- as a newcomer to Kabissa I must express my sincere thanks to you for envisioning such an innovative framework to bring together organizations across Africa and the west in one virtual place. I am well-acquainted with change agents and leaders in Kenya who have expressed a desire to connect with other organizations engaged in similar causes, but weren't aware of the resources at their disposal to be able to do this. I have been telling them about Kabissa, and as a result their universes have literally exploded tenfold.
Speaking on behalf of the Ndoto Project, I am looking forward to opening many doors in terms of our own objectives as well as connecting with others to create opportunities for the sharing of intellectual capital. In the spirit of "harambe," together we're always stronger. Thanks for making all this possible.
Thank you, Hannah! I'm so
Thank you, Hannah! I'm so glad to welcome you among Kabissa's newest volunteers and am looking forward to your help with Kabissa's Facebook activities. With this comment of yours I can see that you really understand what we're trying to achieve with Kabissa, and the problems we are trying to contribute to solving, which is gratifying!
I am impresed by the Ndoto Project you are doing in Kenya and very much share your mission to "open young doors to higher education in Kenya, using technology, social media, and human relationships to truly drive change." What a great dream indeed, that should be very much replicable across Africa. Let's make it happen!
Best wishes,
Tobias
Very Exciting to see Kabissa
Very Exciting to see Kabissa taking part in this challenge for the opportunity to grow more and increase its footprint as a dedicated non-profit for grassroots in Africa!
As the Kabissa's membership manager, I am privileged to read about new NGOs working in Africa that are interested in joining Kabissa. It's truly remarkable to see so many small and medium African NGOs working tirelessly to have a positive impact in their community, on their country or on the African continent as a whole! Those NGOs are not waiting for governments or big budgets/investments to shake things in their respective areas, but they all have a strong belief and burning desire to CONTRIBUTE their 2 cents and make things happen one way or the other, despites the multiple obstacles they certainly encounter.
Well, that's where Kabissa comes into the picture: We are one of the largest online platform/community used today by 1500+ NGOs as their forum of reference to raise awareness about their cause, share their experiences, or just to have some presence on the global village! Advocacy, Capacity building, economic development, environment, technology, education, microfinance, health, humanitarian services, culture, governance are few domains of expertise of NGOs featured on Kabissa. I couldn't be more delighted to be part of such a wonderful organization!
- Ghislain
Thanks Ghislain! I deeply
Thanks Ghislain! I deeply appreciate your dedication to Kabissa and the valuable time you spend keeping the wheels turning. It wouldn't be possible without you, and I can't tell you how great it is to have you as a a bilingual Cameroonian responding to mail to the community mailbox! :)
I look forward to collaborating with you and the rest of the team and wider Kabissa community on implementing KABISSA CONNECTIONS.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Kabissa is doing important
Kabissa is doing important work in Africa. It's amazing how they've come this far on volunteer power!... I hope they will win this challenge, as how they are going to put the prize to good use is even more exciting (my comment after >>):
- Build reputation and trust of African Organizations, thereby opening doors for them to new opportunities for partnership and funding >> Definitely needed as I've came across several organizations from Africa asking for donation but does not have enough credential to inspire trust.- Empower grassroots organizations in Africa to take control over their own Internet presence and strategy >> need no explanation. It's simply a must!- Contribute to new open source software and standards for improved information sharing that serves grassroots organizations>> yes. Sometimes it surprises me still how important information ended up in silos due to technological or licensing constraints. Let's help Kabissa open up things on this front.
Thanks bowo! I particularly
Thanks bowo! I particularly value your endorsement given your experience developing the wiserearth.org platform and API, and that we will definitely want to partner with you first to connect our two platforms as we have talked about in the past. Can we bring the dream alive? :)
Thanks for your support! We
Thanks for your support! We have include your project in our blog as a project for which to vote. Good Luck!
Thanks Hassanatu and
Thanks Hassanatu and Hussainatu!
I appreciate your support. I also really like the Focal Point Global project and have voted for it and added it to my favorites on Netsquared. I also included it in the list of projects that I am recommending that Kabissa stakeholders vote for along with Kabissa.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Hi Toby, Its just a
Hi Toby,
Its just a coincidence since I was about to vote for your project.
My NGO is part of that inititiative (Kabissa)!
We are already feeling the impact locally.
Thanks for the initiative and the vote for our projects:
TESTIMONIES OF HISTORY
http://netsquared.org/projects/testimonies-history
and
Using the ICT to advocate for government to rake measures against the widespread of cholera in Cameroon
Thanks Excel! So glad to see
Thanks Excel! So glad to see you also actively participating in this challenge, and deeply appreciate your support of the Kabissa Connections project.
Do you have any ideas for how you might use Kabissa Connections to advance your organization's mission, or feedback for me on ways to improve the project?
I have added both of your projects to a list of African projects I am maintaining on the netsquared blog - let me know if you have more additions/suggestions for that blog post:
Another way for us to support each other is to add projects to our "favorites" on Netsquared - see link at bottom of project pages. I have done this for all of the projects on the list. Warm regards, Tobias
Hi Tambe - thanks for this. I
Hi Tambe - thanks for this. I will reply by way of comment on your project.
Cheers, Tobias
Tobias, I really like
Tobias,
I really like Kabissa Connections. It addressed to main concerns:
Transparency:
With more and more groups being created and working on the ground, making the basic organisational information from annual reports, board members to whom they work with more and more relevant. As you say, the question of trust becomes fundamental for reaching out to donors around the world.
Memberships/Connections with the organisation:
Second, this feature can allow to build up and manage the memberships of the organization (with CiviCRM you are already using a powerful tool) on the one hand, but also, related to the first point, increasingly managing external stakeholders. Kabissa Connection, including listserves, blogging functionalities and RSS feeds, can really become the communication centre point around which organisations can engage in new media communication through reliable platform without falling back to controversial tools such as Facebook. I very much like the idea of integrating listserves (this project is very successful in using them: http://forums.e-democracy.org/).
Maybe for the next iteration: Many of these organisations lack a proper internal network or intranet that could be used to store files, and share discussions. This may be an additional driver to use the platform. On the other hand, sometimes the leaner and more specific the solution, the better.
Hope this helps!
Hi Georg, I really
Hi Georg,
I really appreciate your support of the Kabissa Connections project. It means alot to me, especially given your role as social media guru for Transparency International.
I like your suggestions, too - I'd be glad to brainstorm on various ways we could take the Kabissa platform. However, I don't think Kabissa should try to be all things to all organizations working in Africa. I want us to focus on the things that fill in gaps in what is already available out there and also the things that fit in best with our mission, which remains to help African organizations put ICT to work for the benefit of their communities.
Perhaps you'd like to join the Kabissa Volunteers group, a private discussion space where a group of volunteers are discussing how to make volunteering work on Kabissa - and the types of projects we want to prioritize. See "Volunteering" link on Kabissa.org for details.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Good point. You are right in
Good point. You are right in focussing on the key aspects of Kabissa in this case.
In your proposal you write that people will be able to discover if organizations are connected and if they are in good standing with each other. I think this could be very exciting, but can't figure how this would look like. The value of partners and thus good connections is indeed often crucial to be able to effectively implement projects, also on a local level. Maybe there could be an internal/external tool as part of the dashboard you propose that allows to classify the strength and responsiveness of the connection? This could be done easily by creating a scale (from “we work together on a regular basis”, to “we have done a project together”) or something alike.
Just thinking about managing different organisations (and following them), there might be a little gadget within KC to create a twitter list of a network and embed this.
Finally, it might be helpful to read a user case of how an interested donor could use Kabissa, especially as you mention organisations such as Global Giving as partners.
All best, Georg
Hi Georg, Thanks for
Hi Georg,
Thanks for continuing the conversation here, and providing these interesting ideas. I can't update the proposal anymore, but am very happy to gather ideas in the comments.
I describe the use case for foundations briefly in the proposal. In the first instance I envision this to look fairly simple, though it would be possible to do custom work for specific foundations - or allow them to do something more customized via the API. The simple offering would include a dashboard for Connections owners to manage the organizations in the Connection, perhaps providing CSV upload and download capabilities to speed up the process for Connections with lots of organizations, but with an opt-in feature for participating orgs. Foundations would then return every year to update this list - either by creating a new Connection for grantees every year or by updating the list of active grantees. These Connections would be displayed as clickable icons on the participating organization profile pages, which link to a Connection dashboard containing a description of the Connection and a list (and perhaps a map) of participating organizations.
But I recognize that more may be needed and possible to try to measure and display the strength of a Connection, for example to indicate which organizations are most effective (and give them higher visibility) and to show which Connections are active and high impact. I'd love ideas here as we move along on how to implement this.
I love the idea of creating a twitter list for following organizations in a Connection - I'm not sure about twitter's api with lists but can imagine it would be wicked cool to enable Kabissa member organizations to automatically manage twitter lists of organizations via KC. I don't think this is how twitter intended lists to be used, though. But perhaps we could create a twitter feed on each Connection dashboard to show latest tweets from participating organizations.
Cheers,
Tobias
Firstly, I wish to
Firstly, I wish to acknowledge how Kabissa, in its' name, has identified with Africa.
Secondly, I wish to say that this is a great idea to implement especially in Africa. Through Kabissa like minded organisations can now link with each other and share innovative ideas on how to counter and prevent the myriad challenges that face us.
We in Seanet therefore whole heartedly support Kabissa and also feel privileged to be able to join this African-oriented development initiative.
Thanks.
Thank you Macheru! I
Thank you Macheru! I appreciate your support. Of course you probably realize that the Kabissa name is derived from the kiswahili word kabisa meaning completely. I love the word which you hear almost constantly in Kenya, where I lived as a youth, and other countries where kiswahili is spoken. I completely identify the name Kabissa with Africa, though I also have lived and worked in other African countries too. Kabissa in many ways actually has its roots in Nigeria, which you can read about on the "About Kabissa" page at http://www.kabissa.org/about
Let me know if you have any feedback or specific ideas for how you would use Kabissa Connections in support of your own work and to strengthen organizations in your community.
I look forward to welcoming your organization on Kabissa, and very wholeheartedly hope your project along with Kabissa will win this Netsquared Challenge! I have asked Kabissa members to vote for your project as well as Kabissa Connections.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Wow!!! Tobias, through the
Wow!!!
Tobias, through the Kabissa platform you are directly addressing the MAJOR problem that funders and donors have with most Organisations created and based in Africa. The Kabissa initiative is cool and worth every effort you and your team are putting into it.
The only organization in Europe that I know to be addressing addressing similar issues of trust and hoping to expand its reach from their Malmo office in Sweden is the Global Trust Centre.
I am confident that creating Kabissa and targeting it to deal with trust issues in Africa shall contribute to resolve many problems and save funders the ache of finding out albeit too late that they have been funding ghost or inexistent projects. I think it is time to let the many organizations that crop up know that their stealth game is over.
Kabissa is going to be a booster for AMIS-CAMEROON as well because once we register with Kabissa we can be searched and located.
One issue I would like you to think about though is this: How do you translate TRUST into action in real time when organizations can simply add themselves from the comfort of their ghost existence without a tangible proof that they exist? How do you at Kabissa intend to assure funders and donors that Kabissa is not going to be used as a launch pad for these nefarious groups? Are there any protocols (especially documented evidence) that you are able to collect from the source countries to cross check the existence and hence say with certainty that the organizations registered on your site Really do exist?
I will be glad if these concerns have already been tackled by your team.
All the Best...
Tambe,CEO Founder, AMIS-CAMEROON
Dear Tambe, Thank you for
Dear Tambe,
Thank you for your thoughtful reply, and for your support of Kabissa.
I have also asked Kabissa members to vote for your project, along with Seanet in Kenya, and very much hope we all three win the challenge!
As regards your point about translating trust into action, the idea is to partner with other organizations whose core business is verifying organizations. Global Giving, for example, has a very rigorous process for joining - which they have to have because they are asking people to trust them to donate their valuable money to support them.
We will have done African organizations a huge service if Kabissa Connections succeeds in enabling organizations to explicitly reveal their active relationship with organizations like Global Giving along with reputable foundations and international agencies that have supported them over the years plus national or regional NGO networks.
I look forward to welcoming AMIS-CAMEROON to Kabissa and very much welcome your ideas and thoughts on how you think you can use Kabissa - and Kabissa Connections - to support your work.
Warm regards,
Tobias
Regarding my Facebook
Regarding my Facebook concerns, Geert Lovink just mentioned just this issue in his keynote speech at the Free Culture Research Conference taking place now in Berlin. Quote from conference blog below:
Tobias, Thanks for the
Tobias,
Thanks for the gracious comments about AMISPROJECT and the valuable advice you offered.
Actually our Team is very conscious of the dangers of running a very complex set up. By spinning off several services that make up the AMIS-CAMEROON brand and selling them off to , we are able to disambiguate the complexities within AMIS.
We have done this through our AMIS-BUSINESS CREATION & DEVELOPMENT( ABC & D) unit. This unit is the brain trust of AMIS . What we do here is that we break up a complex operation into smaller units , just like you suggested. Then each unit works independently towards meeting the goals of AMIS. An example is the AMIS CASH VENDORS, a spin-off of the main AMIS network sold out to an entrepreneur who sets up cash points in villages to cater for the banking needs of farmers. Our design pattern and business logic simplifies the number of operations carried out by individual service units and allows for scalability.
We at AMIS of course maintain oversight and make sure that individual departments throughout the service chain, from harvesting, to the logistics and the cash flows are well monitored to ensure satisfaction at all levels.
Goodluck with your project
Tobias -- as a newcomer to
Tobias -- as a newcomer to Kabissa I must express my sincere thanks to you for envisioning such an innovative framework to bring together organizations across Africa and the west in one virtual place. I am well-acquainted with change agents and leaders in Kenya who have expressed a desire to connect with other organizations engaged in similar causes, but weren't aware of the resources at their disposal to be able to do this. I have been telling them about Kabissa, and as a result their universes have literally exploded tenfold.
Speaking on behalf of the Ndoto Project, I am looking forward to opening many doors in terms of our own objectives as well as connecting with others to create opportunities for the sharing of intellectual capital. In the spirit of "harambe," together we're always stronger. Thanks for making all this possible.