A University of Cape Town (UCT) PhD graduate’s technology solution is not only changing the lives of many skilled workers who could not find employment, it has also landed her a job with Google in Africa.
Shikoh Gitau has devised a simple approach to using mobile technology to connect skilled workers with prospective employers. Gitau, who hails from Nakuru, Kenya, graduated from UCT earlier this month.
The system, called Ummeli, already has 150 000 users, with the initial impact evaluation indicating that approximately 18% have found jobs and another 10% have secured interviews.
The relatively inexpensive application, which matches unemployed workers with employers in urgent need of their skills, has enormous implications for the labour force in regions where unemployment is high.
Ummeli has been rolled out in South Africa and will hopefully be made available in other African countries.
Gitau devised the technology solution in collaboration with staff at UCT’s Information and Communication Technologies for Development Centre (ICT4D).
“I had experienced and seen so much poverty, and I knew deep inside me that I wanted to do something about it. I looked at various institutions for a graduate programme that would offer me both the social and the technology angles,” she says.
She has since been appointed to Google’s User Experience Group in Africa.
“Although I was initially hired for a position based in London, and then Zurich, I requested to be sent back home because I believe this is where I could have the most impact,” she says.
Based in Nairobi, Kenya, her role is to explore the ICT needs of different groups throughout Africa and emerging markets, and design appropriate systems so that Google can meet those needs.
The Praekelt Foundation, established by South African IT millionaire Gustav Praekelt, has also learned about the new software and is in the process of up-scaling the system to make it available countrywide, free of charge.