How Homeless Entrepreneur Has Made an Impact on its Members

Written by Jillian Salaway

Popular media discourse surrounding the issue of homelessness and the individuals that find themselves in this position often depict the classic stereotype of people who beg for money on the streets, addicts, and people who just refuse to work. At Homeless Entrepreneur, we want to not only move away from these harmful and inaccurate stereotypes, but to also provide a gateway of opportunities to those facing housing insecurity, who are motivated to become active citizens again through various employment programs and housing initiatives. 

Within our four locations in Spain, the United States, Nigeria, and England, we have created 36 success stories and approximately four hundred homeless lives improved. Homeless Entrepreneur founder Andrew Funk has presented our social policy proposals to the EU Parliament’s PETI commission in 2020, and introduced a 16.9 million euro investment to end homelessness for 10% of Spain’s homeless population to the Spanish senate board in 2021.

The EU cannot let homeless people fall through the cracks of the COVID crisis

By the end of 2022, our organization has even bigger goals of reaching one hundred success stories of our Homeless Entrepreneurs achieving security and stability in their housing and employment status. The impact our organization has had on the members involved within our community speaks for itself, but I decided to ask some of our team and members how their involvement with Homeless Entrepreneur has impacted their life and their community.

I first reached out to one of our most involved members in charge of professional development, Mayte Miro. As an MBA graduate, psychologist, and with 20 years of experience in international project management and business development, she has been a valued member of Homeless Entrepreneur since the beginning. When I asked Mayte how Homeless Entrepreneur has affected her and the community, she believes our organization is changing the conversation about how we talk about and address homelessness.

We are in a world which tends to hide homelessness and the habitual actions make this issue endemic. . . our volunteers and team understand that people experiencing homelessness are valid people and they can and want to fight for a better and independent life.
— Mayte Miro, HELP Program & Quality Manager

During my conversation with Mayte, she acknowledged societies’ misinterpretation of the houseless community, but has hope that our mission and other organizations alike can shift our perceptions and create systemic change.

I wanted to speak to other members of our team about their experience with Homeless Entrepreneur, so I reached out to one of our interns, Anna Mayer, and a volunteer, Regis Badia. In my conversation with Regis he acknowledged his own misconceptions about the homeless community before his involvement with Homeless Entrepreneur, and how his direct experience with our Homeless Entrepreneurs has changed his belief system about homelessness.

Thanks to knowing several Homeless Entrepreneurs, we have understood that it can happen to any person to find themselves in a situation of homelessness.
— Régis Badia, Social Responsability Consultant at nae,

Additionally, I spoke to a newer member of our team, Finance Intern Anna Mayer. In my conversation with her, Anna emphasized the contrast of language in standard discourse about homelessness opposed to how our organization approaches language of the homeless community.

Homeless Entrepreneur emphasizes that people without homes are people. . . They are deserving of empowerment and a second chance. I think this narrative is missing in the popular discussion.
— Anna Mayer, Finance Intern at Homeless Entrepreneur

In order to address the issue of homelessness in society, we must first change the discourse involving this community, which was an important concept mentioned by our interviewees.

Lastly and most importantly, I spoke to a previous Homeless Entrepreneur involved with our year long HELP employment program in which he successfully graduated. Before entering our program, Vincent was without a job or anywhere to live. Vincent desperately wanted to become an active member of society again, but needed the resources to find that motivation. When he discovered Homeless Entrepreneur, he states that he regained a newfound sense of motivation, confidence, and courage to pursue his goals.

At a very challenging time of great uncertainty and doubt in my life’s journey, Homeless Entrepreneur made an important impact on my life by providing support and rising certainty that moving from where I was in my homeless and jobless state living on the streets could be seen as a new beginning instead of a definite end.
— Vincent Helvig, Graduated Homeless Entrepreneur

Vincent Helvig during his TedX Talk at ESADE Business School.

Vincent goes on to say that our organizations’ support and guidance has allowed him to take control of his life in a secure and positive way, and now works remotely while traveling the world. His experience reflects not only how our organization can permanently change the lives of its members, but also showcases how houseless individuals can become positive members of society if provided the right resources and tools to do so.

At Homeless Entrepreneur, we believe that everyone is deserving of the right resources and opportunities to be successful. Security and stability is an essential element to be an active citizen, and we strongly believe that every individual is worthy of that stability no matter their employment or housing status.

Connect with the author, Jillian Salaway, via LinkedIn!

 
 

The Human Trait of Mobility

By Barbara Fluegge on behalf of Mobility Moves Minds – build and grow again

The Claim of Mobility

When it comes to mobility, we all again and again experience now what it means to be mobile, not mobile, resilient, withstanding in all 3 dimensions: physical, digital and mental mobility.

The threat that Ukrainian people are facing is a brutal slam in the face of children, women, men, anyone, them, their families, friends, businesses, projects, houses, gardens, homes they built and maintained, communities they nurtured, believes they expressed, ideas and greatness they contributed to the world  ...

Your mobility, our mobility is stressed - we cannot put it in better words 

Physically: facing the burden that is put on the people in Ukraine and everywhere else where you are not allowed to move freely, yet forced to leave, forced to move under the utmost dangerous circumstances

Digitally: do you experience the digital mobility freedom - we see what fake news, troll factories are aiming for - we also see and experience that many support centers have been located in Ukraine and that colleagues and the teams of our business partners experience the immobility of digital accessibility and have to give up their digital business and digital homebase

Mentally: this is heart aching and heart breaking, eating up your nerves and putting so much stress on your shoulders, minds, and hearts - how to cope with the uncertainty, with the danger of moving, with the danger of expressing fear, unbelievable thoughts and concerns and worries about family members, friends, and the ones that aim to help and put themselves into the danger zones…

Yet this is the moment of being faithful and hopeful.

The Claim of Hope

Let me reflect on what we covered in Mobility Moves Minds about HOPE.

Hope is the willpower and the waypower people have toward a goal […] and when necessary, redirecting paths to goals in order to succeed.
— Luthans, F., Vogelgesang, G., & Lester, P. :
  • Willpower: having positive expectancies and specific goals

  • Waypower: having in place alternative pathways to cope with those expectancies not proceeding in the way they were supposed to proceed

The willpower and the waypower, this is how the psychologists Luthans, F., Vogelgesang, G., & Lester, P. described it in their article, issued in 2006 about Developing the Psychological Capital of Resiliency. published in the Management Department Faculty Publications. P. 8, Nebraska.

And yet in these times, we release the so called CURIOSITY Edition of Mobility Moves Minds. You find the Curiosity Chapter added in the excerpt for free download below.

Our grandparents and parents and the generations before taught us what it means to stand up again, fight, continue and stand up again.

Let me reflect on Curiosity and what Rafael Recort Badia, a homeless entrepreneur we talked to in the making of our book, stated in our interview. Rafael says about Curiosity being a human trait:

To live out human curiosity is what makes us human.
— Rafael Recort Badia, Part A.14, The Only Sky

And we continue in our elaboration of resilience and fighting the worst moves that can happen to us, that happen to you right now - fighting by acting:

We create opportunities for ourselves in the midst of life. We use our energy and curiosity as best as we can.
— see Part B.1 Transformational Lines

We hereby share with you the unique Curiosity Edition of Mobility Moves Minds

  • exploring curiosity.

  • helping each other in standing up against the darkness of giving in and worrying so much

  • identifying chances - even we cannot think of right now

Supporting Others to Build The Trait of Mobility

The Curiosity Edition right now is available in English - we are working on the German edition - it is available as eBook in PDF Format

>> we donate part of the purchase revenue to #HomelessEntrepreneur - as homelessness is a fight we are up against every day

>> #HomelessEntrepreneur is helping in Europe and elsewhere anyone who faces the loss of the home - we are proud to be the social corporate partner of Andrew Funk's organization and his efforts 

>> the eBook costs 7.99 € - for orders you find attached the QR code page and direct access

>> purchase directly here

Any purchase will help and give back. 

>> we will report on the purchase results as it is our good manner - we issue the donation on a monthly basis to #HomelessEntrepreneur with our donation statement - as we did for the Christmas season and in the months before. 

Your purchase will help Homeless Entrepreneur provide greater Mobility for Good to end homelessness through their programs..

Thank you

Dr. Barbara Flügge

Founder, Chief Resilience & Services Officer -digital value creators (DVC)

 

Best Ways to Help the Homeless Financially

We have all had the experience of walking around a city and seeing people struggling with homelessness. Our initial reaction may be one of discomfort because seeing someone struggling with homelessness is hard for most people. A lot of people want to help, but there are so many spoken and unspoken rules when it comes to helping social causes. There is not a one size fits all to helping people, especially with a cause so complex and worldwide like homelessness.

In recent years the amount of people without homes has increased, with more than 10,000 more people in California experiencing homelessness from 2019 to 2020, and the numbers worldwide reflect them. This is a worldwide issue with different socioeconomic causes that can vary depending on the region they originated in. The US Department of Housing and Urban Development estimates that it costs about $40,000 a year for a homeless person to live on the streets. The BKRHC estimated that for 2016 to 2017, the total combined budget for services locally was around $25 million. This came out to about $5,551 per person.

Please answer this survey question to help us improve the financial health of people experiencing homelessness. Thanks!

There are quantifiable measures and goals set out to hit, but what can we do to hit them? I spoke to one of the team members at Homeless Entrepreneur, Mayte Miro, and she had some recommendations.

It is important to remember that governments and people have the same goal: to end homelessness. Their intentions are there, but the methods may vary.
— Mayte Miró, Quality Manager at Homeless Entrepreneur

When it comes to what the average person can do to help, your money and time donations can really impact these people who are struggling with homelessness. When asking another professional working in the homeless nonprofit sphere, Lana Dalton, the Homeless Programs Division Manager at City of Aurora, she said something similar. When donating whether that be time, money, or physical items, it is best to go through a reputable nonprofit.

Direct financial donations to individuals who are unhoused are not preferred.
— Lana Dalton, Homeless Programs Division Manager at City of Aurora (Colorado)

Noting this consensus, that donation to a nonprofit is ideal when wanting to help the unhoused, the next question is what kind of nonprofit should I donate to? I think a good rule of thumb is chosing a nonprofit that is transparent about their use of donations. The nonprofit you donate to should align their mission and its business endeavors. When asking Sergi, who works at BBVA in Madrid, he commented on exactly this.

While a nonprofit needs to focus on to be sustainable, transparency of use of funds is key.
— Sergi, Financial Specialist at BBVA

To do the most help, you are best off donating whatever resources you have available to a reputable, transparent nonprofit. Donating to a nonprofit usually ensures that your dollar will go further and help those who need it.

Housing Help

Housing help usually consists of shelters, drop-in centers, or transitional housing. Shelters provide just that, shelter; they offer you a place to rest your head for the night, but don’t traditionally offer necessary supplies. Drop-in centers kind of do the opposite of a shelter and offer supplies but not a place to stay overnight. Transitional housing is a more involved approach to helping people get back on their feet, it tends to offer a place to stay, and resources to help get you out of homelessness. Although transitional housing is a broader term, and the specifics of the housing can vary greatly.

At Homeless Entrepreneur, we have our Launchpad Housing Program which houses homeless people and gives them resources to focus on ending their state of homelessness. This program utilizes local hostels to house people experiencing homelessness, it partners with local businesses to identify those who may need help, and it prioritizes partnering with local NGOs and government to create the most opportunities for the unhoused.

 

Other Homeless Support Services

This is the broadest area of help, and some churches, public charities, NGOs operate in this sphere. This might consist of clothing drives, job networks, and affordable clinics depending on the source. These are community specific and vary greatly depending on the needs of the community.

Here at Homeless Entrepreneur our solution to help people experiencing is a more holistic approach.

  1. Our Homeless Helpline collects real-time data from and about homeless people or those about to become homeless and connects them to available resources, and aims to prevent and reduce homelessness.

  2. Homeless Voices provides insight into the lives of homeless individuals to connect them with their community along with housing and employment opportunities, so they can grow their income and build their assets.

  3. Our Help Program provides a support pathway to independence through incentivizing employment opportunities and fostering entrepreneurial activities. It is a holistic one-year program that targets poverty, works in conjunction with the Homeless Hostels Work program or already existing housing programs in order to create sustainable change via active citizenship, community and life purpose.

Connect with the author, Anna Mayer, via LinkedIn!