An MBET experience in India

Thursday, February 13, 2014
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In January I had the opportunity to travel to the region ofÌýKerala, in South-west India to participate in an International Conference on Entrepreneurship and Women: The Role of Business Incubation & Social Business Development. The conference was primarily based out of Assumption College, a women’s college that is affiliated with Mahatma Gandhi University.

An audience of Indian women at the conference

An audience at the International Conference on Entrepreneurship & Women.

At the conference, I had the chance to talk to and build relationships with a number of students and faculty at Assumption College. These students are keen, well spoken and many are driven to start their own business. It is encouraging to see support from government, the community and private institutions to promote and encourage women in entrepreneurship in the state of Kerala. They have all the pieces of the puzzle necessary for women to have the opportunity to take a dream and make it a reality, especially with the newfound support of an international network.

Female students of Assumption College

Some of the students of Assumption College.


The college is pushing to continueÌýthe development of business incubators. A strong team of experts at the conference were able to advise on development and implementation, including Conrad's Entrepreneur-in-Residence,ÌýDr. Doug Beynon,Ìýwho was at the conference to talk about À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµâ€™s ecosystem and share his expertise on business incubation development.

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TaraÌýScanlanÌýand Dr. DougÌýBeynonÌýat the conference in India.


Currently, Assumption College has started a fashion incubator in conjunction with their undergraduate fashion program. Students have great creativity, and in a country like India, high quality fabrics are readily available; as a result, the center has great growth opportunities.

Indian women working with fabrics

Students working in Assumption College's fashion incubator.

This is where I came in, to share my experience inÌýstarting a social fashion enterprise,ÌýULLO, an ethical knitwear company that promotes social and economic development in the Global South. I shared my story with hopes to ignite a fraction of the inspiration the students gave to me, to create an enterprise that would encourage social change in their communities.

Certificate for Tara Scanlan for delivering a lecture at the conference

Tara received a certificate for delivering an invited lecture at the conference.

India’s culture, history and melting pot of religions and ethnicity enthuses the designer in me while their fabrics and capacity for production encourages the businesswomen in me. India has ample market opportunity for businesses and ample room for social and economic development work.ÌýULLO’sÌýnext step is to foster the relationships I made at this conference, and gain access to silk and cotton farmers in the country so thatÌýULLOÌýcan work directly with raw material producers and ensure that they have ethical and fair production processes. International support will help female entrepreneurs and encourage economic and social development in the community.

India has so much opportunity to foster an ecosystem of entrepreneurship, particularly with women, but not without challenges. Women in India and South Asia as a whole have so many obstacles to overcome in terms of culture and collective social pressure, but with an encouraging and supportive environment, I'm encouraged that their tenacity will triumph.

About Tara

Tara heat shot
Tara ScanlanÌýis a social entrepreneur and currentÌýMaster of Business, Entrepreneurship and TechnologyÌý(MBET)Ìýstudent at theÌýConrad Centre.ÌýHer main interests lie in social entrepreneurship, fashion, and culture. ÌýTara has an undergraduate degree in International Business from Carleton University. She was also a finalist in the Velocity Fund Finals competition where she pitched ULLO.