cover image: no title

20.500.12592/pczzz1

no title

24 Nov 2021

Consider adding a workshop module to the IWBN’s offerings, possibly in partnership with regional EDOs and Service Providers, that gives a step-by-step description of the processes required to set up a business in each region of Inuit Nunangat and in the cities of southern Canada where there are Inuit communities. [...] Workshops on the current project, helped inform the development of interview how to finance a business were shown to be the most popular guides for each of our target groups as described in the next financial workshops available to Inuit women entrepreneurs section, and contributed to the analytic framework within which while record keeping and bookkeeping has been found to be the results were ana. [...] While there was a slight tendency for women from Inuit Nunangat to agree with the statement (35.5%) than women in the south (18.2%), this makes sense given the nature of many of the businesses, and it is also aligned with responses to other questions and to open-ended comments about the importance of Inuit culture in how businesses are run, 28 Statements that explored concepts such as favouritism. [...] are the requirements for a business owner and how to market products...” EDOs and Service Providers were asked about the impacts of COVID-19 on businesses in the areas they service, and of the 12 who provided responses, there was a split between seeing the impacts as purely negative and seeing a combination of positive and negative impacts. [...] Inuit women in business are Inuit women are engaged in a wide generous and thoughtful variety of businesses One of the main takeaways for the We spoke with IWBOs in a wide variety research team was just how giving of industries, from artistry to retail to the women we interviewed were hospitality to the mining sector.
Pages
70
Published in
Canada

Tables