WHAT I DO

Facilitating MBTI at the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) in Nairobi

Half of my class could fit on the picture 🙂

It was such a great pleasure to facilitate a workshop about the personality test “Myers-Briggs Type Indicator” (MBTI) at the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI) in Nairobi. YALI was launched by former President of the United States Barack Obama as a signature effort to invest in the next generation of African leaders.

About 25 students from all over Africa joined the class and my job was to raise self-awareness to make them understand themselves and others better as future leaders. 

MBTI is a personality test identifying 16 different personality types that explain how you prefer to perceive and judge the world on 8 different categories. Teaching and explaining the MBTI has a specific challenge: The dimensions give you insights about your preferences and NOT skills! It is very important to highlight this issue over and over again.

My personal MBTI profile is: ENFJ

If you are curious about your own profile, you can take the test here: MBTI

Facilitating for Vizazi & My Mentor Wendy

Wendy De Macker is the founder of Vizazi, an organisation in the Mathare slum in Nairobi, which offers the high-quality training- and counselling program called ‘Social Upgrading Program’ for challenging youth. I did an apprenticeship at Vizazi and Wendy was the person who taught me everything about the dynamics in this environment. What impressed me the, was the fact that she has a deep understanding of how to deal with challenging youth and the whole system they are in. She gave me the real insights about vulnerable youth from slums and without her advice Nai Nami wouldn’t be so successful today.

Wendy has become a close friend of mine and it was a great honour to facilitate twice a design thinking and vision workshop for the trainers of Vizazi. In these workshops, we developed ideas together with the community-based organisations and their leaders on how to make the ‘Social Upgrading Program’ sustainable and income generating. To achieve this, it’s very important that the trainers of the program understand themselves in relation to the work they do. It was very inspiring to see how the simple question “Why are you committing yourself to Vizazi and its youth?” can trigger new reflections and how the resulting answers improved the self-confidence of the trainers.