Oct 3, 2018
While Craig and I were lost in a social innovation lab a young
an amazing women helped us find our way and very very soon we knew
she needed to be a guest at The Social Change Career Podcast.
Recently graduated from the Wagner’s School in NYC, she
returns to her native Colombia to develop Kalpatta, her social
entrepreneurship bringing opportunities to underserved women
through a gourmet restaurant experience. Listen to Episode
2 of Season 3 to learn what it takes to address economic
inequality for women through social entrepreneurship.
In this episode we discuss:
- Paulina’s early years, privileged background and education and
how it shaped her
- How she was bullied her fancy school
- Growing up witnessing the contrast of wealth while witnessing
the struggle of her care taker, Rosalba, as she struggled in life
and how Paulina chose a career to bring about solutions to address
inequality
- Paulina’s law school experience was her initial way of figuring
our how to bring about social and systemic change.
- What law school gave her and why she doesn’t recommend it
anymore
- Why Paulina argues on the importance of hard skills e.g. how to
do a budget, etc
- Figure out what you need to get there (what you lack, what you
need)
- How Paulina found her why: understand the root causes and how
to address them and why law was not her preferred set of tools to
solve her why
- Paulina shares her super successful tips to how she
successfully secured scholarships for Graduate School
- Is grad school in the U.S. worth it? This is Paulina’s
perspective on Grad school from the perspective of an international
student considering a U.S. degree
- How Paulina sees her return of investment (ROI) of her grad
school experience
- Paulina’s return to her native Colombia after completing her
Masters
- How Paulina learned about social entrepreneurship in NYC and
doing grad school
- The struggles of non-profits with financial sustainability and
how Paulina learned about new forms of creating impact with social
innovation
- Paulina tells the story of Kalpatta, her social enterprise
- Kalpatta means “empowered women” in Quechua (Andean Region
Native) a social enterprise that empowers underserved women while
providing a unique gastronomy experience
- Women that work in Kalpatta are non or under-employed Kalpatta
is also a school that is training the women (in economic
empowerment around the food industry)
- How Kalpatta works based on a fellowship model for a year
long
- A % of the restaurant revenue goes to the fellowships
- A % of the alumni profits from their business is reinvested in
Kalpatta
- Kalpatta will launch in Medellin but the plans are to go
national
- What scares Paulina as she builds Kalpatta?
- There is a demand of the socially conscious, gourmet,
nutritious food and Paulina is feeling that gap with Kalpatta
- What motivates Paulina
- Best career advice Paulina has received and why
- How has failure shaped Paulina’s career?
- How Paulina looked for 1 year for a job and how this propelled
her to get her MA and become an entrepreneur
- Three things needed to pursue a career in social impact
according to Paulina
- What to do with families, friends that don’t believe or are too
afraid of you failing
Links
Wagner School
Ruta N
Social Innovation
Related topics
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This episode was brought thanks to the Rotary Peace Center:
Are you an existing or emerging peace leader looking to take
your career to the next level? You might be eligible to receive
full funding to pursue a MA or professional certificate in peace &
conflict studies. Learn more about Rotary Peace Fellowships at
www.rotary.org/peace-fellowships