CLAIMING A WOMAN'S REAL PLACE... BEHIND THE KEYBOARD TOO!

By Frederick Noronha
fred at bytesforall dot org

FROM KITCHENS to the keyboards. That's the transition that women in the
home are finding it possible to make, thanks to the help they're getting
from the new world of information and communication technologies (ICTs).
ICTs are giving a leg-up to hard-pressed women home-based workers, as an
interesting experiment from Malaysia shows.

"We're working to show women how it's possible to do income-generating
work from their home (using computers and modern technology). We're
telling them that if they have two hands are are able-bodied, they can
bring in incomes for themselves and their families," says Ms. Chong
Sheau Ching, founder of the Mothers For Mothers network.

Called Mom4Mom (www.mom4mom.com) for short, this experiment believes
that one of the most important lesson for women is the "value of
self-reliance". By showing home-makers and women working from home that
it's possible to generate a cash income for their families, this makes a
huge difference to their psyche.

Work that can be generated ranges from making and selling cookies (using
the Net to finding markets), to editing work, accounting, and taking
care of somebody's children. Work generated can be freelance, piece-work
or running home-based businesses.

'CAPITAL'... AT HOME
--------------------

"If women have their home furniture and a telephone, that's their own
capital to start with. Their children, who can help out, are another
major resource," says she. The strategy is also to build "alliances"
between, say able-bodied persons who can market home-made goods and the
disabled, who produce them from their homes. Or between the literate and
the illiterate.

"Lot of women are in low-paid jobs. So they may end up having to take
second jobs. People who need this the most are disabled women, single
moms, those chronically ill with say cancer in remission or kidney
patients," says this determined and articulate woman.

It was started in 1998, even as the economic crisis was hitting East
Asian countries like Malaysia. Women were being thrown out of jobs, or
their husbands were losing their salaries, turning the heat onto them
either way.

"Today there are very interesting and viable options for women. We have
volunteers all over Malaysia, but mostly in (the national capital) Kuala
Lumpur," says Chong Sheau Ching, a former World Health Organisation
information planner who came back home.

She points out that women have worked "for centuries" from home. But, of
course, they've seldom been paid for it.  Women have also been good at
earning incomes from home. So, a cyber-platform could increase their
reach.

"Teleworking is still very new in Malaysia. We hope to convince
companies, and will be demonstrating a home-based tele-office ourselves.
We are against women going into multi-level marketing operations, which
can end up in them getting conned. We want to encourage women to work
from their own skills," says she.

Of course there are many different types of women, each coming in with
their own attitudes and aspirations. For instance, the 'mother gorilla'
is eager to know how she can earn money when her priority is her family.
Another type, the 'hungry wolf' dreams of getting rich as soon as
possible -- of course, this remains only a dream. On the other hand, the
'tired guard dog' wants an answer for how much she can earn in just
three hours of time she has to spare between rushing around taking care
of her family.

It's the 'rabbit sleeping under the tree' who asks how much time she
would need to work for. The 'scared turtle' simply lacks in
self-confidence and has a 'help-me' sign writ large on her forehead.
'Running deer' is trying out too many different options, often ending up
running helter-skelter, without really achieving much. But it's the
'cunning fox' that is trying to take advantage by giving-less and
taking-more from a work partner.

BIG DIFFERENCE
--------------

But leveraging the wonders of ICTs, or information and communication
technologies, does make a big difference. For almost anyone.

"Because of IT, we can work from home and achieve a lot of things. From
proposals to invoices, we can send these across as an attachment,
without even meeting clients," says she. Once competently used, IT helps
generate the "kind of enthusiasm that money cannot buy".

The Malaysian government's pro-IT policy really helps play a big part in
taking the campaign forward. For instance, there are songs tele-cast,
promoting the needs of harnessing IT. "Everybody seems to know the word
IT here," she says.

Going back in time, rewind to 1999, when mom4mom.com launched its
website.

"At the beginning, we were just laughed at, because people thought
homemakers couldn't go into IT. They thought IT was just for companies.
Or that IT is for men and the young," adds Chong Sheau Ching.

She adds that during the dot-com boom this venture felt very "left out".
There were reasons for this. "We tried to get (IT) volunteers to help
us, but they were paid so high that nobody wanted to help out. Not even
women," she adds. So, they simply did it themselves. After making many
mistakes, it managed to find their way through.

"We found we were actually doing the right thing". Because, after the
dotcom bust, it became clear that money has to be spent very, very
carefully. Mom4mom, for instance, spent no money on advertising. It
built its growth-strategy on a word-of-mouth promotion by those who had
benefitted.

Women have additional handicaps. It takes time for them to learn
keyboarding skills. Often, at home, the husband and children get the
'right' to access the keyboard before women. In this rain-swept country,
many modems got struck by lightening. Windows-virii attacks set the work
of many back.

Often women find they can't locate the information they need on the Net.
"There was no suitable portal for us. Much of the 'women' sites deal
with fashion and cosmetics or movie stars. We want to know what kind of
options are available to provide economic self-reliance," says Chong
Sheau Ching.

There are other problems too. Often, connections to the Net gets
"disconnected all the time", and in the meanwhile, they have to go off
and take care of their children.

Efforts are on to change the situation, in how so ever small a way.

MY FAIR LADY
------------

Under the My Fair Lady Project, disadvantaged women will be trained and
helped to try and get tele-commuting jobs. Recently, the Mom4Mom came
out with their book for home-workers. For this book, they themselves did
research via e-mail, and working concentratedly for two years.

One of the goals of Mom4Mom is to teach women simple networking skills.
"Using the Net you can reach out to many others. Often, you don't even
have to spend money for an advert in the papers," says Chang Sheau
Ching. "Once people learn this is something they can use, and that there
are models to follow, they can help themselves."

"What is very important is that women might be very poor, but they can
use ICTs as a means. Lot of policy makers use it as an ends, and set up
fancy portals, costing millions of dollars, which have little use for
the average woman in the street," Ching told this correspondent during a
recent conference on ICT for development, organised in Kuala Lumpur by
the UNDP/ Asia Pacific Development Information Programme.

Home-based IT-dependent work by women is basically of two kinds. Some
provided goods from home -- like hand-painted tee-shirts or cookies --
even a couple of years before e-commerce became a buzz word. Others
offered services -- consultancy, translation, and those from writers or
editors.

Women producing goods have a harder time. It's not just a question of
finding buyers, but the product too should reach safely. "E-commerce is
not just about putting up goods on a website. It has to reach the buyer
in good shape, be of good quality, and get across in time," notes Ching.

"Being able to market services is still a big problem. It's difficult to
convince a company that a woman's work is better than that done by
another company's. They don't believe it just due to the prejudice. But
if that same woman's work is re-sold through another company, it is seen
as high quality work," she smiles.

"Our message is that it's right for women to make their own choice. Most
of the time, it's their father or husband who decides. Fathers and
husbands are more skeptical than the women themselves that they can work
out of home," she adds.

CONTENT, CLOSE TO A WOMAN'S HEART
---------------------------------

Why should ICTs and IT discriminate against women, she asks. "ICT is
seen as very hardware based. But we don't talk about the content
involved. Content is language, and women have been good at this for
generations," says she.

On first getting noticed publicly, people asked them whom they were. "If
we said home-makers, they thought it was funny, and called us
housewives. Actually our core group is made up of professionals working
out of home," says Chong Sheau Ching. She told this writer that the
website currently has some 2000 members, while the core-group is made up
of 25.

It's not just hardware and software that's important in such work. "In
an ICT project (using new information and communication technologies)
what is important is convincing women to build up on their own inner
resources, and motivating people," says Ms Ching.

Over the years, the demand has grown. With its volunteer base, it could
not meet the demand for assistance. Ching concludes: "Hardware or
software alone do not solve women's problems, unless their confidence
levels are changed."


--
Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa * India 832.409490 / 409783
BYTESFORALL www.bytesforall.org  * GNU-LINUX http://linuxinindia.pitas.com
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED] * SMS [EMAIL PROTECTED] * Saligao Goa India
Writing with a difference... on what makes *the* difference



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