Map Of Me (MoM) trains you to become a problem solver in a fun, impactful way

Entrepreneurs are intrinsically problem solvers. Sometimes the problem is discernible, but mostly it is the uncanny art  of perceiving  a problem that can be solved. But what if from a young age, your mind is trained to see a problem and help is rendered to get to its solution? Seems far-fetched, but totally true and in fact, happening right now.

 Former school teacher  Lisa  Heydlauff came from the UK two decades ago in a quest to know “how children go to school in India” – her expedition got her the answer but she also delivered a secret recipe to produce the next generation of Indian entrepreneurs.

 Lisa Heydlauff unleashed an initiative  amongst India’s school children and  youth  to help them cultivate their instincts to turn into problem solvers. Launched in Delhi some weeks ago and recently in Kolkata, the initiative called Map of Me is soon to address probable entrepreneurs in Bengaluru.

 For Lisa Heydlauff, MoM is a mobile/digital set of stories to enable young people everywhere to learn 21st Century Entrepreneurial Skills and explore new problem-solving enterprises they can start in the city, she says, “MOM is for young people, so it’s about skills and how to be an entrepreneur in the city, how to get people together around your idea, how to start something new that is for-profit, creates jobs and helps a lot of people. MOM has two audiences young people age 18-23 who have mobile phones and commute to work by public transport, and it’s for young people in Grade 11 and 12 to explore our 26 steps to make a new school to work life plan.”

 What Map of Me Does: If you are between the age group of 16-18 and what to explore your school to work life plan or if there is a problem you want to solve, you can go follow Map of Me's 26 steps and create a business/entrepreneurial online bullet journal for yourself. 26 steps is aeries of easy steps to guide young people through the process of thinking of a problem and finding a solution. At the end of the exercise, the path to the goal is magically unfurled in your own bullet journal. The information you found is saved, designed and logged for you to understand the plan you’re making. 

 Online to offline: While the initiative is currently online because of the lockdown, it will be reaching schools once they reopen, when BT volunteers and Going to School teams take the 26 steps online platform to young people in Government schools, bringing both the technology and mentoring aspect of being able to ask someone with a cool career how they did what they do.

 Highlighting Young Entrepreneurs: Map of Me covers what young people want to know about in the city from Street Food to Street Art and has a fierce commitment to digging deep and understanding how young entrepreneurs in the city are problem-solving for everyone. There are over 100 stories on the channel featuring young sustainable entrepreneurs, most of whom are young women.

 Lockdown blessing

Understandably young people are feeling low in lockdown, MOM hopes to cheer young people up with compelling stories to be able to learn skills and do new things. MOM is online, free, new content everyday and you can even win cool stuff if you answer the quizzes correctly - bicycles, helmets and backpacks to cycle to school or work? Yes! 

 Past & Current Success: As proof of success and her vision. Lisa has spent many years in India creating educational solutions for young people from low-income groups to develop entrepreneurial skills if it’s offline through graphic novels in 1,000 Government Secondary Schools in Bihar, or online through the newly launched Map of Me or on TV, The Children’s Scrappy News Service and School TV are compelling narratives about what young people can do to problem-solve for everyone using their design-thinking entrepreneurial skills tool box.

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