OVERVIEW
Why EnableME2 Exists
The Context: More Than a Job Crisis
The Unemployment Reality
South Africa’s youth unemployment rate is 62.4%. Four out of five unemployed young people have been without work for over a year. Many have simply given up looking.
The Skills Mismatch
Most graduates leave school without practical survival skills:
- No confidence to spot or seize opportunities
- No understanding of how to generate income
- No experience managing even small amounts of money
The Household Impact
When young people can’t earn, families struggle longer. Parents delay retirement. Siblings delay education. The cycle of dependency stretches across generations.

The Honest Question
“Financial literacy when there’s no money to manage?”
We’ve heard it before. Telling an impoverished household to “budget” or “save” without addressing income scarcity can even feel insulting.
Financial literacy alone is incomplete.
That’s why EnableME2 pairs financial skills with practical, local entrepreneurship – not abstract theory, but small-scale enterprises that work in tough environments.
What Entrepeneurship Looks Like Here
Tuck shop / Spaza support
How It Works
Help family run a small shop – stock control, pricing, customer service
Why It’s Accessible
Builds on existing family activity
Vegetable garden
How It Works
Small plot, sells surplus to neighbours
Why It’s Accessible
Low start-up cost; immediate need
Baking / Cooking
How It Works
Sells goods to learners or the community
Why It’s Accessible
Minimal equipment; daily demand
Cellphone charging
How It Works
Charges phones for a small fee using car battery or solar
Why It’s Accessible
Low skill; high demand
Hair braiding / Grooming
How It Works
A learner with skills offers service locally
Why It’s Accessible
Skill-based; no capital needed
Homework / Tutoring
How It Works
Older learner helps younger for a small fee
Why It’s Accessible
Uses existing ability
Recycling collection
How It Works
Collects and sells recyclable materials
Why It’s Accessible
No cost to start; environmental benefit
Event assistance
How It Works
Helps at local functions (cleaning, setup) for payment
Why It’s Accessible
Labour-based; community need
These aren’t fantasies. They’re micro-enterprises already happening in townships and rural areas.
The Deeper Point: Dignity and Self-Reliance
The harshest reality of poverty isn’t just material – it’s the feeling of powerlessness. The belief that your circumstances are fixed and you have no control.
Financial literacy + entrepreneurship together say:
“You may not have much now. But you can learn to spot opportunities. You can make small decisions that improve your position. You aren’t trapped.”
That message matters as much as the skills themselves.
The Solution: How EnableME2 Creates Change
What we teach
- Spotting opportunities in their own communities
- Managing the small income they generate
- Separating business money from personal money
- Building something, step by step
It’s not about getting rich quickly. It’s about self-reliance.
Our new positioning:
“We give young people in tough environments the tools to spot opportunities, manage scarce resources, and build self-reliance – so they can create their own pathways out of poverty.”

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
They don’t see themselves as capable of earning. They wait for a job that may never come. They’ve never been taught to spot small opportunities – vegetable gardens, phone charging, baking – right in their own communities.
Most say they “want to work” – but they can’t describe a single skill they could use to generate income today. After EnableME2, they can list three.
“They don’t believe they can change their situation.” EnableME2 exists to replace that belief with action.
Formal jobs are not coming back fast enough. For millions of young South Africans, the only path to income is creating it themselves – starting small, starting now.
We pair financial literacy with practical, local entrepreneurship – not business plans, but actual income-generating activities that work in townships and rural areas.
A Grade 11 learner in Limpopo started charging phones using a borrowed car battery. Within a month, she was covering her own transport costs. She said, “I didn’t know I could earn money without waiting for someone to hire me.”
We track micro-enterprise starts, income generated, and learner confidence – not just savings rates.
Another year of young people graduating without knowing how to earn, save, or grow. Another year of dependency. Another year of missed opportunities.
Those in Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and the Eastern Cape, where economic opportunities are scarcest. Learners are most motivated to apply what they’ve learned.
They say it feels like permission. Like someone believes they can do it. That’s the point.
