Categories
Build4SocialGood General Mentorship Tech

Using Your Tech Skills for Social Good: The Role Of Mentoring

You’ve probably been advised to find a mentor in your chosen area, someone with whom you can speak and who can provide you with excellent advice and assistance as you embark on your chosen career path. But have you ever pondered over the benefits of having a mentor? And the reason to have one if you don’t already? 

This article discusses the importance of having a mentor and the benefits of having one.

Why You Should Have A Mentor?

A mentor is a person or friend who acts as an advisor or coach to a less experienced person and guides them through a learning process using their professional knowledge.
When it comes to breaking into the tech sector, having a mentor is crucial – whether you’re learning to code or looking for your first (or next) job.
Here are seven reasons why you should seek out a mentor:

  1. Learning from their experiences: Your mentor can help advise you or warn you if you’re going to make the same mistakes they did, saving you time, money, and other valuable resources.

    Think of them as your guide. 
  1. Shortcut to Best Practices: It’s fantastic when someone can tell you about their tried-and-true best practices. You will learn much more quickly and efficiently this way.

    So mentors help you apply methods that work straight away. 😎
  1. Source Inspiration: It’s awesome to have someone you look up to as your mentor because hearing their stories and experiences motivates and inspires you even more which makes you more ambitious and excited to be doing what you are doing

    This makes you more ambitious and excited to be doing what you are doing.
  1. Learning to ask the right questions: Good mentors ask probing questions to get you to reflect on the process you’re going through, whether it’s learning to code or advancing your career. But, surprise, surprise! Many times, you are the only one who can respond to these inquiries.

    And Learning how to ask yourself those types of questions is very important.
  1. Accountability: Mentors can be super helpful in your career journey by keeping you accountable and making sure you are sticking to your goals and, keeping up with the learning process.
  1. Objective Feedback: A mentor sees you as you are (without being biased) and, they can give you honest and objective feedback, which makes you better.
  1. Networking: A mentor can help you become better at networking and improve your professional and communication skills. They can also expand your horizons by introducing you to the right people in their network and, this is super valuable.

Why It’s A Win-Win for Both The Mentor and Mentee?

Yup! That’s correct. Mentors gain from sharing their expertise with mentees as well. Most of our attention is focused on people who are being mentored, but what are the benefits for mentors? Why should they devote their time to assisting others in honing their abilities? Let’s have a look at some of them:

  1. Builds soft skills: Mentoring allows you to expand your soft skills. It requires you to put yourself in your mentees’ shoes, which in turn, will help to build soft skills like empathy, leadership skills, effective communication, and collaboration skills.
  1. Continuous learning: Mentorship allows you to keep on learning and growing in your field. The more you share knowledge with your mentees, the more you reinforce that knowledge.
  1. Builds confidence: Consistently sharing your knowledge with someone else can improve your self-confidence. The more you teach your mentees and help them with the challenges they face, the more confident you’ll be.
  1. Establish strong connections: Mentoring is another opportunity for you to build great relationships with individuals from different backgrounds.

Three (3) Ways to Become A Great Mentor.

  1. Good listener: A great mentor should demonstrate active listening skills. Active listening helps you identify issues and find better solutions to the problems your mentee might be facing. Having good listening skills will help you to guide your mentee in the right direction.
  1. Constructive feedback: What better way to help your mentee than giving helpful feedback and actionable suggestions! But remember that there is always a way to deliver criticism without breaking your mentee’s confidence. Educate them, not tear them down. 🤝
  1. Willingness to share knowledge: Great mentors are always willing to share what they know. As a mentor, you understand what it felt like starting your career so this motivates you to pay it forward through mentorship.

Yes! You’ve made it all the way to the end of this article. I’m confident you now know what a mentor is and the advantages of having one!
If you want to be a part of a structured mentorship program designed to help you succeed in your chosen career path in the tech industry, Visit: Techrity Mentorship Program
Thanks for reading!

Categories
Best practices General How-Tos Tech

How to Conduct User Research as a Newbie Designer

Photo by Jason Goodman on Unsplash

As a new designer in the design field, it can be quite a daunting task when you want to conduct user research, be it for a personal project or a client’s work. 

User Research is a broad topic, which cannot be covered in one article. In this article, I will walk you through what user research is, the purpose of user research, the processes to be followed when carrying out user research, and also the importance of user research.

What is User Research?

User Research can be plainly said to be trying to understand how a user would feel and what they might go through when using a product or service. This answers so many questions such as: 

  • What will be the first thing that comes to the user’s mind?
  • What will be the next step a user will take?
  • Will the user have trouble navigating the product?
  • Will the user be willing to pay for the service? 
  • What will make the user satisfied and not complain, or at least, have the barest complaints?

These and many more questions, depending on the type of product or service, are answered when carrying out user research.

What is the Purpose of Conducting User Research?

Simply put, the purpose of conducting user research is to help you understand the problem you’re trying to solve; telling you who your users are, how they will use your product or service, and most importantly, what they need from you. You are offering them a service so it is only wise you know what they want and how they want it or expect it to be.

What Processes Should be Followed?

When Conducting user research, a conventional process is followed. Although, most people would want to go the extra mile. Here are five (5) processes I follow: 

  1. Identify the problem 
  2. Create solutions
  3. Carry out feedback and surveys
  4. Evaluate the feedback and surveys
  5. Recreate

When you are carrying out user research, the processes above are meant to be followed. As a good user researcher, the identification of the problem you intend to solve should be the first thing. If you can’t identify any problem(s), then you can not proffer any solution. When you identify the problem(s), you create solutions. It could be a product you want to build, or a service to render or anything. Carrying surveys and getting feedback from people (users) about the solution you created is vital. Without people using your product or service, you wouldn’t know if you created a solution. Working on the feedback gotten is also very important because you don’t know the minds of everyone and you have to provide what they (users) are okay with. This is a repeated process, hence the need to always check the service you are offering or listen to the users using that service.

Importance of User Research

Many benefits come with conducting proper user research.

  • Customers Satisfaction: When you conduct proper user research for a product or service and build it according to the research findings, based on what the users want, you satisfy them in ways that you can’t fathom. You will gain their trust because the product/service is tailored to their needs.
  • Product/Service Usage: If a customer or user is satisfied with a service that you provided them, they are more likely to make more use of it. Hence, the product/service will not just be dormant but will be used for what it is created for.
  • Revenue Generation: When there is continuous use of your product, you get more profit, if it’s a paid service. The more people use it, the more money you generate.
  • Awareness: When a user makes use of your product/service and is satisfied with it, they go on to tell the next person. There’s this feeling of having tasted something good, you can’t keep it to yourself.

Conclusively, user research is just a way of knowing and understanding what your target users need to know the best possible way to create the best products with a great user experience and they are carried out using various methods.


Carrying out research makes you better!

As a User Researcher, you feel I have not covered the processes involved, please, do well to leave a comment. I appreciate your feedback and suggestions.


Visit: https://techrity.org and join the community to join other user researchers and designers.

Thank you.

Categories
News Tech Tech For Good Techrity Programmes

Tech for Good 2021

Showcasing Tech Innovations for Social Good in Africa.

What is Tech for Good?

The Tech for Good (T4G) is an annual conference that aims to showcase the impact of using Technology for Social Good in Africa.

It is the intentional use of technology to try and have a positive, measurable impact on the world. It’s about using technology to solve big social and environmental challenges.

Why Tech for Good?

There is a lot of negative information being spread out there concerning Tech and its use in Africa. We created Tech for Good to solve this problem.

First, the evolution of technology is beneficial to humans for several reasons. At the medical level, technology can help treat more sick people and consequently save many lives and combat very harmful viruses and bacteria. … Technology has also increased the productivity of almost every industry in the world.

Technology affects the way individuals communicate, learn, and think. It helps society and determines how people interact with each other on a daily basis. It’s made learning more interactive and collaborative, this helps people better engage with the material that they are learning and have trouble with. 

 In summary, it has become an intricate part of our being.

There is a lot of good being done in the Tech Space, startups, innovators, individuals, companies, NGOs are working tirelessly to ensure lives are improved. How much of those actions are being showcased especially in the international media?

T4G brings together students, communities, hubs, organizations, Non-profits, etc to explore veritable use cases for using technology for social good.

Aims and Objectives

  • Showcase innovations in Technology across African Continent
  • Foster Collaboration
  • Provide mechanisms for people to access or use technologies in an open, cost-efficient, and sustainable way.
  • Promote Diversity and Inclusion in Tech. Tech for Good welcomes everyone who has made an impact using Technology in Africa.

Event Recap

The Tech for Good Conference was held on the 2nd October 2021 at TechCreek, Rivers State ICT. Port Harcourt.

The event featured; 

  • Talks
  • Kickstart Award Presentation
  • Inaugural Ceremony

Event Stats

No of Attendees: over 250 attendees

Social Impact Orgs: 10

Social Impact Projects: 2

Speakers: 5

Partners/Sponsors: 2

Present at the Conference was;

Mr Ibifuro Asawo (SA to Rivers State Govt.) was represented by Ella Blaise. She spoke on the topic Driving Social Good Innovations and Youth Development using Technology  

  1. Daniel Don (Founder, Frontend Mentorship) spoke on Using your Tech Skills for Social Good 
  1. Goodnews (CEO, Dantown Multiservices) spoke on Using Blockchain for Social Good
  1. Stephen Okonkwo (Product Lead, Voyance) spoke on his Journey in Tech

Social Impact Organizations

Accelerate Hub was represented by the Women in Tech Accelerate Lead.

Fairexx Solutions was represented by Godfrey Ayaosi, Product Manager.

HerTechTrail was represented by Alex Chibueyim, Design Director at HerTechTrail.

CodeAmbassadors representative speaking at the Tech for Good Conf.

OlotuSquare was represented by Bruce Lucas, CEO OlotuSquare.

FemCode Africa was represented by Shullamite, Founder of FemCode.

TechnovilleNG was represented by the Founder, Technoville – Richard Sodienye Pepple

Kickstart Award Presentation

The award was presented to the recipients of the Kickstart Award Scholarship which consists;

  • Personal Laptop
  • Data support
  • 6months Training.

The recipients of the scholarship were;

  • Prince Onuzulike from Inama International College
  • Chijioke Egbomuche from Hybrid College
Prince Onuzulike receiving his scholarship
Prince Onuzulike receiving his T4G swag from our partner company Dantown
Prince Onuzulike and his mother and siblings with a representative from the Inama International College – Mavis Ejiofor (right)
Chijioke Egbomuche receiving his scholarship from the CEO, Dantown Mr Goodnews Igwe
Chijioke Egbomuche and his Father (Left)

Read more about the TechingTheYoung Outreach 2021.

A Look at Our Partners and Sponsors

Dantown is a fintech company that solves on-ramp and off-ramp payment problems by providing a secure environment through its mobile application, where users can trade cryptocurrency and gift cards.

Our services are geared with customers’ needs in mind. This is the reason we focus on securing the funds of customers, provide a 24/7 helpdesk service, and also offer great digital asset-to-fiat rates.

The company’s goal is to provide more services within the coming months that will further make financial settlements safer, easier and more accessible for the unbanked. 

Founder, Techrity in a group photo with the Dantown Team

Productsio is a learning hub for product builders. we train product makers to build products that are intuitive, that deliver real, usable and commercially valuable innovation through research and understanding in-depth the different cultural keys that go into making a product attractive to local markets.

Productsio representative, Iyerefa speaking
Productsio, sponsors of Tech for Good represented by the Productsio Team

Inaugural Ceremony

Techrity is a tech non-profit that began its operations in December 2020, incorporated in April 2021 and officially launched on 2nd October, 2021 focused on talent development and building innovative solutions using technology for social good in Africa.

We aim to bridge the gap in unemployment, gender inclusion and poverty by providing the vital resources needed to kickstart young talents into tech and build solutions for social good in Africa. 

We envision an Africa where everyone has equal access to opportunities. Has a motivation to pay it forward. We’re engineering the spirit of social good in Africans. We believe if we solve the problem of the digital divide, gender inclusion gap, unemployment and target more social innovations with technology we can inspire social good actions in others.

Tech for Good Team, Speakers, Special Guests cutting the inaugural cake
Tech for Good Team

You can follow the updates from the Tech for Good conference on Social Media using the hashtag:

  • #T4G
  • #techrity
  • #sdg9

Important Links

For enquiries. Send a message to: hello@techrity.org

Tech for Good Livestream is available on Youtube.

Thank you for reading!

Categories
Kickstart Tech Techrity Programmes

TECHing The Young: Techrity IWD2021 Educational Outreach Program

The impact of educational outreach programs in schools can be felt on the academic, physiological, and psychological traits of the students.

Various barriers prevent many young ones, even the young female, from starting a career in tech at an early age. One of such barriers is the lack of sensitization of an early career start in tech, even as a secondary school student, limited availability of resources and materials for learning, as well as a Mentor, to guide and track progress. 

Techrity’s talent development scheme called the Kickstart program is aimed at solving these problems. We embarked on an outreach program tagged: TECHing the Young in various secondary schools in a bid to educate the young ones on the need to start a career in tech at a young age to boycott the unemployment problem faced in Nigeria. The outreach program was embarked on to commemorate the International Women’s Day held on 8th March 2021, and also to sensitize the female gender and educate them on the opportunities for females in technology, this was done as part of our commitment to the UN SDGs 5: Bridging the gap in gender disparity in the tech industry.

The outreach program featured talks centered on careers in tech, the need to start their careers early, as well as showcasing successful young talents in the tech industry such as Opemipo Disu, the 15-year-old developer and IBM champion from Nigeria.

Opemipo Disu aka the 15y.o developer and IBM Champion

Two students who showed great enthusiasm were awarded scholarships to enable them to kickstart their tech journey. Techrity’s Kickstart program includes a laptop, a personal mentor and data support for each child to aid their learning journey.

These students are Prince Onuzulike of Inama International Secondary School, and Chijioke Egbuomuche, a student of the Hybrid International Academy. 

Prince Onuzulike is in class 1 in the Junior Secondary category of Inama International Secondary School. Prince is a young lad who almost had a deformed hand from an accident, which is quite noticeable.

From left: Miss Owanate (Founder, Techrity), Mrs. Onuzulike, Prince Onuzulike, and Mr. Adagboyi Joseph (Principal, Inama Intl Sec. Sch.)

Chijioke Egbuomuche is a student of Hybrid International Academy Senior Secondary. He has a flair for creating things which can be seen in the picture below.

Chijioke created a Fan, a Car, and a Dispenser. These things were all made from cartons, D.C motors and batteries. For the fan, he used something like a blade to act as the propeller so an amount of air touches you when it is turned on. The car moves with help of the D.C motor connected to the back tyre under the car. The Dispenser is a manual one, so it had no use for the D.C motor. Chijioke’s creativity and innovation are what earned him the scholarship to further enhance his creative flair and help him digitally.

Chijioke – Winner of Techrity Kickstart Scholarship Award and Owanate

The recipients of Techrity’s Kickstart Program will be given a laptop, a mentor as well as data support, to help guide these young minds to early career exploits in technology. The mentors assigned to these young ones are responsible for their growth and progress in technology. 

Few students were also awarded cash prizes for their great performances. These students are David Bob, Emmanuel Ekeh, Prince Onuzulike, all of Inama International Secondary School and Miracle Eboseh of Hybrid International Academy. Some of the students were awarded cash prizes for their ability to answer technical questions, performance in examinations and their quest for knowledge.

A student receiving a maths set and books for his outstanding performance
A student receiving a maths set and books for her outstanding performance

Techrity is all about Helping New Talents and building solutions for social good, we also believe in Paying it Forward.

Watch this explainer video on Youtube.

Students of Inama International Secondary School 
Students from Hybrid International Academy 
Techrity Outreach Team

Important Links

Visit the Techrity Website

Watch the Women in Leadership and Technology Virtual Event on Youtube

Follow us on Twitter

Follow us on Instagram

Like us on Facebook

Follow us on LinkedIn

Thanks for reading!

Categories
Best practices General Tech

5 Practical Ways of Overcoming Procrastination as a Techie

Do the phrases “I’ll do it tomorrow,” “This project can wait,” “I still have enough time,” “Just one more episode!” sound familiar to you?   Most likely. Truth be told, we all have been victims of procrastination at one point or another, and I believe that your resolve to overcome this habit is why you’re on this page. 

Please read to the end of this article to know how to overcome procrastination!

  • Plan your tasks – Having a clear picture of what you need to do goes a long way in determining the success of the task. You need to have a proper vision of the day’s tasks. I personally have a way of planning out my tasks effectively with the aid of an app – The Todoist App.

Todoist is a to-do list app that helps you organize, prioritize and manage your personal and professional tasks. Using this app will help you keep track of the tasks you’ve set to achieve.

You can download the Todoist app using this link .

  • Break down goals – Often times, procrastination sets in when we focus on the size of a project at hand. So in order to minimize that overwhelming feeling, break down your tasks into smaller units. For example, as a designer, your next personal project might be to design the homepage of an e-commerce website. This would require a lot of thought process as there are many things to take into consideration. So break down your task into smaller units as this will make them more manageable and easy to achieve. 
  • Get rid of distractions – There are various sources of distractions. It could be from your phone, tv, or something else. As long as you do not need these things to achieve your goal, put them away or turn them off. When you get rid of these distractions, you’ve made it harder to procrastinate!
  • Have an accountability partner – This is another important step in overcoming procrastination. Find someone you can trust to keep you accountable. It could be a family member, your friend, colleague, mentor or even the online tech community you belong to! When you let others in on what you hope to achieve, it becomes harder to procrastinate.
  • Reward yourself – One way to motivate yourself to finish a task is to create a reward that you will give yourself once you’ve accomplished that task. This is very important but easily overlooked by many. Were you able to complete that project you vowed to? Give yourself a pat on the back. Were you able to accomplish the tasks scheduled for the day? Give yourself a treat. No matter how small you think your accomplishments are, never forget to reward yourself.

Remember that you are not perfect so pat yourself on the back for the times you overcame procrastination but also make a firm resolve to take the above steps when next procrastination comes knocking. 

You can do this! 💪

Categories
Build4SocialGood General News Tech

Showcasing The Winners for the Techrity #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020 Prize For Social Good Innovation!

On 1st December, 2020, The Techrity #Build4SocialGood Hackathon Programme team announced the #Buil4InformalSector Virtual Hackathon.

We welcomed Software Developers, Designers and subject matter experts to ideate and build solutions for solving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal for the African Continent.

Participants ideated and built solutions addressing UN’s Sustainable Development Goals 9, that is, promoting the industry, innovation, and infrastructure (SDG9), in the following areas.

1. Identity Management 
2. On-lending facility and access to credit through non-traditional financial channels
3. Credit Score and Reputation-based rating

For more info, see Announcing The #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020

We received a total of three project submissions for the On-lending facility and access to credit through non-traditional financial channels category.

The following teams submitted their solutions;

Team FundMyFarm

FundMyFarm is aimed at making smallholder farmers have access to informal credit facilities without any hassle whatsoever. We also make it possible for anyone who loves farming but does not have time to do it, to grow together with the smallholder farmers as they put smiles in the face of downtrodden while at the same time, their resources are working for them.


Team Trix

QuikMoni addresses the problem of SME access to credit without collateral.


Team Dorti

Dorti provides a system where users can assist or take care of garbage and get rewarded for it.

A total of 30 participants, 9 teams, and 3 projects were recorded for the #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020.

These projects were compiled and submitted to our panel of judges, and we are excited to announce that a winning team emerged.

Participating teams also got a chance to demo their projects in an online event on the 8 January 2021 in front of a live audience and received feedback from our highly esteemed judges.

View the Demo Day Event Recording.

Team Trix: QuikMoni emerged as the overall Winners of the Maiden #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020 Prize for Social Good Innovation.

The winning team has access to;

  1. A hub support 
  2. $250 cash prize.
  3. The Techrity #Build4SocialGood Incubation program.

Congratulations to Team Trix: QuikMoni for emerging winners of the #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020 and all of the participating teams who helped turn innovative ideas into practical solutions for Africa.

Visit the URL to the QuikMoni solution.

All teams’ prototypes and code can be found on the website and on the #Build4SocialGood Repository on Github.

We sincerely appreciate all participating teams, judges, mentors, speakers and partners who have been with us throughout the beginning of this hackathon. The time and effort invested towards building for social good and addressing the UN #sdgs challenges in Africa cannot go unnoticed.

We look forward to hosting our next #Build4SocialGood Hackathon coming up in the following months in 2021.

Thank you!

Categories
Build4SocialGood General Tech

Announcing Techrity’s #Build4InformalSector Hackathon 2020

Techrity’s #Build4SocialGood presents;

Build For The Informal Sector (sdg9) 

Prize

$250

Timeline of Activities

  1. Registration begins 1st December 2020 via Hackathon Registration
  2. Join the Slack Workspace
  3. Hackathon Starts: 7 December 2020
  4. Project Submission Deadline: 21-23rd December 2020 
  5. Judging starts: 28th December – 2nd January 2021
  6. Demo Day/Award Ceremony: 16th January 2021

Why #Build4Informal Sector?

Nigeria’s informal economy has grown considerably over the last decade.

These are the individuals and micro-enterprises whose economic well-being is birthed and buoyed on the fringes of the formal economy; business activities that remain unregulated, and oftentimes, completely unknown.

Initially, much of the rhetoric centred on the need to ‘manage’ this ever-expanding behemoth that the informal sector was becoming. This narrative has since evolved into one that seeks to formalise these businesses, by catering to their needs and providing them with much-needed support.

Like other parts of the economy, the informal sector has taken a hit from the COVID-19 crisis. Governments have mandated workers to take costly protective measures, such as the regular purchase of masks, the reduction in the number of passengers for motorcycle taxis, or the observance of curfews. Farmers have seen falling demand for their produce as restaurants have reduced their purchases in the face of dwindling traffic.

Key Areas Of Focus

We leave it to you to design the new conditions for the informal economy, and offer the following provocations as a place to get started for your MVPs, prototypes, etc;

  1. On-lending facility and access to credit through non-traditional financial channels
    1. For example, how might we build custom financial solutions for entrepreneurs to access credit outside the regular financial system, other methods of crowdfunding exist such as cooperative funding with little to no default on loan acquisition.
  2. Identity management
    1. Beyond the use of identity cards, bank verification numbers, etc., how can we design an economy where individuals can build a solid identity with other means of identification they can provide such as their telephone number, Social security numbers, school certificates, etc.
  3. Credit-score/reputation based rating
    1. Using purchasing behavior, community validation, etc. How can we design an economy that takes into cognizance an individual behavior as a form of credit score acquisition, for e.g, the ability to use an individual’s reputation overtime on social media as a means to build their credit and reputation score for use in accessing credit and lending facilities outside non-traditional financial systems.

For more info, see the Issues Board.

How to Join

  1. Register your team to hack: Hackathon Registration
  2. Join the slack channel: Techrity Slack Workspace
  3. Read the hackathon guide

How To Submit Hackathon Project

Follow the steps outlined on the #Build4SocialGood Repository readme instructions to submit your project.

Official Hashtags

Please promote this hackathon so it can reach a wider audience on Social Media using the following hastags.

#techrityB4SGHack2020
#techrity
#SDG9
#Build4InformalSector

We can’t wait to see what you have built!

Happy Hacking!!

Categories
News Social Tech Volunteers Writers

Call for Volunteer Writers on Techrity’s Blog!

Techrity, is a non-profit social enterprise, a community of people contributing to advance humanity through their time, money and skills. We believe in the power of using technology for sustainable human capital advancement. We’re all about inspiring the youth to take up careers in tech, through our Mentorship and Kickstart programs, we are also committed to solving social good problems using tech through our Build4SocialGood program.

Techrity is calling for Volunteer Writers!

We publish at the intersection between technology and writing and support sharing knowledge.  Techrity connects you with our community of mentors, techies, writers, software developers, editors and provides the capacity for high impact publishing.

Take a look at this short explainer video explaining what Techrity is all about!

Techrity’s Explainer Video

Benefits

  1. Writers get access to our community of mentors, writers, etc.
  2. All blog posts are credited to the author
  3. Enhance your writing career
  4. Gain visibility

How To Get Started

Want to volunteer to write for us?

Fill out this Application form, and you will be contacted.

To Find out more, Visit the Techrity Official Website.

Thank you!

Categories
General News Software Tech Techrity Programmes

The Build4SocialGood Hackathon Programme

techrity build for social images
techrity build for social good image

Inspire. Coach. Build

The Build4SocialGood Hackhaton brings together developers and techies yearly from all over Africa to develop ideas and build targeted software products for solving sustainable development goals.

Social good is an action that defines some sort of benefit to the general public. Our continent; Africa is laden with a myriad of social good problem which Technology can help to mitigate. We’re looking at building these software which would be managed by the community. Techrity encourages you to #Build4SocialGood and for the #Community. These projects will be managed and open sourced by the community and Winners of the challenge will go ahead to enhance their MVP and solutions in the incubation programme.

Are you passionate about applying your skills for social good, but no funds to kickstart it? Participate in our #Build4SocialGood Hackathon and get a chance to fund your ideas/startup. Hackathon winners will have access to hub support to assist them in their unique innovations. 

#Build4SocialGood Hackathon identify specific challenges for teams to build and provide solutions for social good problems. 

Hackathon participants also get access to mentors to support and direct them during the hackathon phase. 

Come join us, learn new skills, and build functioning prototypes to solve those challenges.

How to join our hackathon challenge

Call for team applications will be announced on the Techrity Build4SocialGood website. Teams will be selected based on merit and inclusivity.

Winners will go ahead to win the prize money and qualify for the incubation program.

Steps

Follow the steps below to register your team.

Step 1: Submit an Application

Visit https://techrity.org/register/hackathon to register your team.

Step 2: Receive a confirmation mail

The #Build4SocialGood team would send a mail outlining next steps.

Step 3: Join the Slack Channel

Prizes

Prizes will be announced in due course.

About Us

Techrity Logo

Techrity, is a non-profit social enterprise, a community of people contributing to advance humanity through their time, money and skills. We believe in the power of using technology for sustainable human capital advancement. We’re all about inspiring the youth to take up careers in tech, through our Mentorship and Kickstart programs, we are also committed to solving social good problems using tech through our Build4SocialGood program.

At Techrity, we believe your donates open doors of opportunities for everyone including the donor, receiver, this creates a circle of givers paying it forward for technology.

Your donation plants seeds of kindness in others, and this promotes a world of revolving kind-hearted people. Help learners get laptops and data to kickstart and make their journey in tech a success.

We encourage you to donate to fund any of our programmes as mentioned. Visit the Techrity Donation page to help someone kickstart their tech career today!.

Organizations, startups etc, can fund a hackhaton programmes and get their ideas tested and developed by our community.


To find out more about what we have in store for our partners, please fill the contact form and we will get back to you in no time.

Thanks.


Categories
General Partners Social Techrity Programmes

Introducing Techrity Partners and Sponsors

Techrity Partners

Want to partner with Techrity to advance the common goal? Find out more in this short article.

Our partners program provides partners willing to fund/donate to any of the Kickstart, Mentorship or Build4SocialGood programmes organized by Techrity with an array of benefits.

Techrity encourages Startups, Organization, Companies and the Government to join in advancing the common goal of “Helping New Talents and Building Tech Solutions“.

Techrity, is a non-profit social enterprise, a community of people contributing to advance humanity through their time, money and skills. We believe in the power of using technology for sustainable human capital advancement. We’re all about inspiring the youth to take up careers in tech, through our Mentorship and Kickstart programs, we are also committed to solving social good problems using tech through our Build4SocialGood program.

At Techrity, we believe your donates open doors of opportunities for everyone including the donor, receiver, this creates a circle of givers paying it forward for technology.

We encourage you to donate to fund any of our programmes as mentioned. Visit the Techrity Donation page to help someone kickstart their tech career today!.

To find out more about what we have in store for our partners, please fill the contact form and we will get back to you in no time.

Our Awesome Partners

HerTechTrail

HerTechTrail is a non-profit raising African Women to build sustainable careers in Tech, by equipping them with relevant Tech skills and providing them access to opportunities.

Follow @hertechtrail on Twitter.

Accelerate Hub

Accelerate hub, facilitates student development in the area of information technology and tech-entrepreneurship.

Visit the Accelerate Hub Website to find out more or follow @acceleratehubng on Twitter.

This list will be updated regularly.

Thanks.