Enabling women and girl children to gain skills, join the workforce, and build independent, dignified lives across India.
In India, millions of women remain outside the formal workforce โ not due to lack of ability, but due to lack of access: to education, skills, safe opportunities, and financial tools. We are working to change that, one community at a time.
Our Integrated Skill Development Programme (ISDP) addresses real barriers โ language, confidence, digital literacy, and employability โ through structured, community-based training designed for women from Class 12 upwards.
We work with colleges, corporates, and community centres in Lucknow, Dehradun and Bangalore to deliver programmes that lead directly to employment, entrepreneurship, or further education.
We aim to create self-reliant, empowered communities across India through sustained on-ground action.
6-week intensive programmes teaching MS Office, email, internet use, and government e-services โ skills that directly improve employability.
Structured curriculum delivered within college programmes for BA, BCom, and BSc students across all three years โ addressing skills, career readiness, and financial literacy.
Partnerships with local businesses and corporates to create entry-level placement opportunities for programme graduates, particularly in retail, administration, and data entry.
Workshops on bank accounts, savings, insurance, government welfare schemes, and micro-entrepreneurship โ helping women become financially independent.
Expert-led sessions by industry professionals helping young women identify career paths aligned with their skills and interests โ from teaching to tech.
Supporting the formation and strengthening of women's self-help groups (SHGs) in underserved communities for collective savings, lending, and advocacy.
Rekha attended our 6-month computer literacy programme in Dehradun. Today she works full-time at a textile exporter, earning โน9,000 per month โ her first independent income in 18 years.
After completing our vocational training in Lucknow, Sunita started a tailoring unit from home. Within a year, she had trained and employed 4 other women from her neighbourhood.
At 19, Priya didn't know what to study after Class 12. After our career counselling camp, she chose a B.Ed and secured a government teaching post โ the first in her family to do so.
โน1,500 funds one woman's complete 6-week computer literacy programme.
Helping underprivileged children stay in school and break the cycle of poverty.
Learn more โVocational training, computer literacy, and career guidance for India's youth.
Learn more โMedical camps, clean water access, and hygiene awareness for underserved communities.
Learn more โ