What Most Faith Driven Founders Get Wrong About Doing Good
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Most faith-driven founders inherit a quiet lie: that business and ministry are separate streams. Grace Mbugua, founder and CEO of JEILO Collections in Kenya, takes the opposite view. In this conversation with Matthew Rohrs, she explains why she closed her own non-profit, why she insists on a one-year cap before any employee moves from entry-level into skilled labor, and how Monday morning worship became the most important meeting on her team's calendar.
KEY TAKEAWAYS:
➡️ Why a sustainable for-profit can do more good than a struggling NGO
➡️ The one-year rule Grace uses to move people from cleaning into skilled production
➡️ How Monday morning discipleship became the cultural anchor of the entire business
CONNECT:
Website: https://www.sinapis.org/
Matthew's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matthew-rohrs-1692715/
Sinapis' LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/school/sinapis-group/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sinapisgroup/
If this conversation challenged how you think about faith and business, take a second to like, subscribe, and share it with a founder who needs to hear it.
#FaithDrivenEntrepreneurship #KingdomBusiness #Sinapis #ScalingWhatMatters