Thursday, April 09, 2009

Free snorkel with every visit!

I posted this on my fam blog awhile back, but I forgot not everyone checks that one. So here's my biggest update. It's such an intricate story of networking webbery, I just had to include all of it.

Everyone knows I've been on the prowl for an internship for the summer. And everyone knows the market is ridiculous right now, and the odds of me finding one are pretty slim. And forget about any kind of paycheck! My whole class is all just trying to find people that will let us do a bunch of their work for free. (So far, 4 of 70 have secured summer employment.) It begs the question: what do I like doing enough that I would do it for free, just to have the opportunity to do it?

School has helped me to focus my mind and find the answer to this question. I am passionate about microfinance. It is the kind of work that I could be proud to stand behind, a cause that would get me out of bed every morning so I could help it to move forward. Whether or not I actually need an advanced degree to work in this field, my MBA already feels worthwhile because it's helped me to figure this out.

So. AU has a search engine called CareerBeam to help us in our quest. One feature I discovered is that you can look up a company, then connect to LinkedIn (Think Facebook, except for working professionals) and it will tell you the degrees of separation between you and someone who is affiliated with that company. I looked up the microfinance org FINCA International, and learned that I knew someone directly who had worked there before. I hadn't seen him in over a year, but at least I knew someone!

Two days later, I bumped into him at a party. (This guy is married, and this was a singles ward party, which makes the fact that we crossed paths even more amazing.) He was very willing to help me out, and suggested that I talk to a guy named Otso, because he also used to work with a different microfinance bank. Interestingly enough, I had met Otso at Institute earlier that week.

I sought out Otso the next week, only to learn that he used to be the CEO of Yehu Microfinance, an organization based in Kenya. Not only that, but he was still on the advisory board and still conducted interviews for internships. We talked some more, and through his questions ("Have you ever been to a third world country?" "What were the conditions like - did you stay in nice hotels?") I realized that this wasn't a DC-based office job where I'd be doing good from afar. It would be in Mombasa, Kenya, on the frontlines. There would be some office work, but I would also get to actually be in the bush where everything is happening, to meet the people I'd be helping. This is the exact setup I hoped for the chance to try (knowing that this summer would probably be my last window of opportunity) but I did not expect to find it.

Otso asked me to send him my resume, and we'd get together and talk. Even this aspect seems divinely guided, because my resume had just come out of a major overhaul that same morning, where everything my resume said was now intentionally geared toward attracting microfinance-related employment.

Needless to say, after our conversation, I was starry-eyed. This option just made so much sense, and the way everything had fallen into place was just too perfect to be coincidence. I felt so compelled to follow this to the end, and so sure that it was already a done deal - to the point that all other internship pursuits dropped off my radar. I figured, why bother? I already found it. Even the way I talked about it was always "when" I go to Kenya, not "if." I haven't even considered being concerned about the location because clearly I'm supposed to go there, so I'll be taken care of. And as mom pointed out, I'll be going through the temple just a little over a month before I leave, so I'll be extra-protected.

As you may expect after a sequence of events like that, it worked out. I'm going to Kenya!



I love when the Lord uses timing to remind us He's aware of us, and to make sure we know we're moving in the right direction. In this case, He seemed to want to make it painstakingly clear. (He probably figured I'd be a little averse to the extra debt and would need the push.)

So now you know the whole story.

2 comments:

Emily said...

Hey, where's the gun and prom dress? Also, I'm totally excited about your Kenya adventure...but I'm even more exctied about seeing you in a month! Yahoo! Yahoo!! Yahoo!!! Also, you're cool. Also, did you find someone to sublet? I have a friend in law school who's looking for a place around that time. Also, you're great. Also, prehensile. The End.

abby said...

Wow that's an awesome story. Otso is in my ward but we've never formally met. Microfinance is one of my interests too. Have you talked to Liz Quist? Her organization seems to run on the same ideas as microfinance. It's fascinating stuff and you'll be in Kenya and that's cool.