Top 5 Photos of 2015

Last year SHE improved the lives of hundreds of girls, women and their families with our game-changing business model. As we look forward to changing more lives in 2016, we invite you to take a look back at our Top 5 Pictures of 2015. Thanks for being a part of the work we do.

1. Our Ngoma production team celebrates our win of the Global Sourcing Council’s 3S Awards, a prize that recognized our efforts to empowering women that are part of our supply chain.

SHE Rwanda celebrated the second annual Menstrual Hygiene Day with 2.5 million people tuning into our live Q&A and 703 boys and girls leading local celebrations for the global day in the Rukara district.

2. SHE Rwanda celebrated the second annual Menstrual Hygiene Day with 2.5 million people tuning into our live Q&A and 703 boys and girls leading local celebrations for the global day in the Rukara District.

3. Our farmers earned a 33% increase in their co-op income as our fiber suppliers.

3. Our farmers earned a 33% increase in their co-op income as our fiber suppliers.

4. Our go! pads were a hit at the Eastern Province Expo. Over 8,600 packs of go! pads have been sold directly to girls, schools, and wholesale customers such as the Peace Corps in 2015.

4. Our go! pads were a hit at the Eastern Province Expo. Over 8,600 packs of go! pads were sold directly to girls, schools, and wholesale customers such as the Peace Corps.

Our Kilimanjaro #climbforSHE team achieved its audacious goals to supply 6,000 girls with the go! pads they need by raising over $53,000.

5. Our Kilimanjaro #climbforSHE team achieved its audacious goals to supply 6,000 girls with the go! pads they need by raising over $53,000.

Introducing go!

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By Connie Lewin, Strategic Partnerships and Marketing Director

Our branding process all started when I stood outside in front of 200+ girls and boys on the campus of a rural Rwandan school and we began discussing menstruation. I expected to only meet with 8-10 girls when I arrived at the school, but soon learned that it’s very common to receive a warm welcome from the entire school when you’re a new visitor.

After an awkward start when my colleague and I began introducing ourselves and what we do at SHE, the mood quickly shifted when one (brave) girl asked a question, “Can I play soccer when I am menstruating?” I’m sure a surprised look came across my face because she asked me the question again. I replied back “Of course, you can!” A sense of relief took over her body. Suddenly, more and more girls asked questions related to what they stopped doing when they had their period – laughing, dancing, riding a bike, doing chores, and going to school.

I soon began to realize that girls were missing out on more than having access to a pad; to those who even used menstrual products, they felt like they couldn’t move or do anything because if you’re “sick,” you should just stay at home.

Informed with this first-hand knowledge, the team and I began the branding process of our banana-fiber maxi-pad with these questions in mind:

 “How can we build a brand that will change the way girls think about menstruation?”

“How do we use our brand to work toward our larger goals of driving social and economic change?”

“How do we make sure our brand is used as a strategic asset, so girls can directly benefit?”

It took hundreds of conversations with girls, brainstorms and ideations within the team, and an on-street survey to develop a brand identity that we hope will change the way Rwandans think about menstruation.

go! is global. We decided to have it bi-lingual to show that will our brand is locally made, it has global aspirations to connect and serve girls in many communities. (P.S. Nshyashya means brand new)

gois bold.We’re rocking bold colors selected by the girls themselves; go! is for girls, by girls.

go! will be delivered to girls this year, and we can’t wait to see their reactions and learn more about their go! experiencesWe will be sharing more photos and testimonials about go! throughout the year, so stay tuned.

What do you think? Who do you feel we are? Let us know in the comments.