Digital Divide Data: Difference between revisions

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'''Digital Divide Data''' is a [[social enterprise]] that provides disadvantaged youth in Cambodia and Laos with the education and training they need to deliver world-class, competitively priced IT services to global clients and break the cycle of poverty. Featured in [[Thomas L. Friedman]]'s ''[[The World is Flat]]'' as an example of [[socially responsible outsourcing]], the not-for-profit provides data entry, digitization and other IT outsourcing services to clients worldwide, including [[Reader's Digest]], [[Harvard Business School]], [[New York Daily News]], [[Kaplan Test Prep]] and others.
'''Digital Divide Data''' is a [[social enterprise]] that provides disadvantaged youth in Cambodia and Laos with the education and training they need to deliver world-class, competitively priced IT services to global clients and break the cycle of poverty. Featured in [[Thomas L. Friedman]]'s ''[[The World is Flat]]'' as an example of [[socially responsible outsourcing]], the not-for-profit provides data entry, digitization and other IT outsourcing services to clients worldwide, including [[Reader's Digest]], [[Harvard Business School]], [[New York Daily News]], [[Kaplan Test Prep]] and others.


==History==
==History1==
In February 2001, Jeremy Hockenstein travelled to Angkor Wat and was struck by the mix of poverty and progress in Cambodia. Though there were computer schools offering training to young people, there were still no jobs for the students once they graduated. Recognizing the opportunity to make a difference, Jeremy assembled a group of friends, who all saw an opportunity for growth: applying India's IT outsourcing model to Southeast Asia could provide jobs and contribute to the region's development. The group returned to Cambodia during the summer and founded Digital Divide Data, with a plan to start a data entry operation in Phnom Penh.<ref>Thomas L. Friedman ''The World is Flat'' (New York, 2006), 450</ref>
In February 2001, Jeremy Hockenstein travelled to Angkor Wat and was struck by the mix of poverty and progress in Cambodia. Though there were computer schools offering training to young people, there were still no jobs for the students once they graduated. Recognizing the opportunity to make a difference, Jeremy assembled a group of friends, who all saw an opportunity for growth: applying India's IT outsourcing model to Southeast Asia could provide jobs and contribute to the region's development. The group returned to Cambodia during the summer and founded Digital Divide Data, with a plan to start a data entry operation in Phnom Penh.<ref>Thomas L. Friedman ''The World is Flat'' (New York, 2006), 450</ref>



Revision as of 08:36, 18 April 2011

Digital Divide Data is a social enterprise that provides disadvantaged youth in Cambodia and Laos with the education and training they need to deliver world-class, competitively priced IT services to global clients and break the cycle of poverty. Featured in Thomas L. Friedman's The World is Flat as an example of socially responsible outsourcing, the not-for-profit provides data entry, digitization and other IT outsourcing services to clients worldwide, including Reader's Digest, Harvard Business School, New York Daily News, Kaplan Test Prep and others.

History1

In February 2001, Jeremy Hockenstein travelled to Angkor Wat and was struck by the mix of poverty and progress in Cambodia. Though there were computer schools offering training to young people, there were still no jobs for the students once they graduated. Recognizing the opportunity to make a difference, Jeremy assembled a group of friends, who all saw an opportunity for growth: applying India's IT outsourcing model to Southeast Asia could provide jobs and contribute to the region's development. The group returned to Cambodia during the summer and founded Digital Divide Data, with a plan to start a data entry operation in Phnom Penh.[1]

Digital Divide Data opened for business in July 2001.[2] The enterprise began as a single small office in Phnom Penh, digitizing the Harvard Crimson.[3] In 2003, Digital Divide Data opened an office in Vientiane, Laos, which in early 2004 was followed by a third office in Battambang, Cambodia.

Digital Divide Data can now claim to have delivered hundreds of projects to prestigious international clients. The organization currently operates three offices with over 600 staff.[4] It is currently the largest technology employer in Cambodia and Laos.[5]

Social Model

DDD recruits disadvantaged and disabled youth in Cambodia and Laos lacking educational and employment opportunities, focusing on young, ambitious individuals from the poorest and most under-served segments of the population - orphans, rural migrants, and the disabled. Trainees join the DDD program for 3–8 months to develop basic computer and English skills. Upon completion of the training period, students who meet DDD's standards are hired to join the organization as entry-level employees.

These employees split their days between on-site training and further education. They work six hours a day on actual client projects, closely mentored by experienced managers. They then spend the rest of their days at school, earning their college degrees in three to four years. Their education is funded by matching scholarships from DDD. After 3–4 years, most entry-level staff graduate onto internal management positions at DDD, or good jobs in the local economy. [6]

Since the beginning, DDD has trained more than 1800 people, employed more than 1000, and graduated more than 400 to better paying jobs. Graduates of DDD earn more than four times the average annual income in Cambodia and Laos. [7]

Services

Digital Divide Data powers the data entry, XML conversion and digital preservation needs of publishers, libraries, content hosts, academic researchers and businesses world-wide. The services provided unlock and extend the value of data, documents, publications and archives, making them searchable and accessible online, on mobile devices, or in any information system.

  • Data entry and conversion services include: academic data entry, survey digitization, records management, and direct marketing support.
  • Digital publishing services include: XML enhancement/conversion, eBook conversion, magazine conversion, journal digitization, and newspaper conversion.
  • Digital liberaries services include: digitization of archives, newspaper digitization, EAD conversion, and OCR assessment.[8]

Awards and Recognition

Notes and references