The ladder out of poverty already exists. We make it work .
In every rural Kenyan town there are skilled tradespeople who could train the next generation — and young people desperate to learn. STAN distributes a randomised-trial-backed apprenticeship model that pairs them, pays the trainer to teach deliberately, sustains the learner with a stipend, and ends in a verifiable path into work.
Kenya doesn’t lack teachers, learners, or proven methods. It lacks the bridge between them.
The informal economy carries most of Kenya’s workforce, and informal apprenticeship is already the single most important way young people learn a trade. But it functions poorly — and predictably so. As of early 2021, 16.9% of Kenyans aged 15–34 were not in employment, education, or training, a status that deepens into a poverty trap the longer it lasts.
Matching is by chance
Apprentices find a practitioner through family connection, not fit or aptitude. Talented youth with no connection are simply locked out.
Trainers aren’t paid to teach
With no incentive to instruct, many practitioners use apprentices as free labour and slow-walk skill transfer to keep them longer.
There is no stipend
Without income during training, the poorest learners — the ones who’d benefit most — drop out to chase casual day labour.
There is no record
A graduate leaves with no credential to prove to an employer or customer what they trained in, with whom, or to what standard.
This isn’t a concept. Each half of the model is already proven.
STAN assembles two independently validated components into one delivery system. We are not testing whether the intervention works — we are distributing one that already has.
Read together, the trials point to one conclusion: trainer incentives plus active placement is what produces durable income gains — exactly what STAN delivers.
Five things the informal system lacks — supplied as one network.
We recruit 30 skilled practitioners across one county and onboard them as paid training partners. Each takes two to four apprentices. Because every practitioner already owns their tools and workspace, the budget carries zero equipment cost.
Match
Learners complete a short aptitude-and-interest assessment and are placed by fit and locality — not connection.
Incentivise
Trainers receive ~KES 6,500/month to instruct deliberately rather than merely supervise. This is the Pillar-1 mechanism.
Sustain
Apprentices receive a ~KES 3,000/month stipend so the poorest can stay in training instead of leaving for casual work.
Round out
A structured curriculum adds communication, pricing, and business basics — the components evidence flags as the barrier to earning.
Certify & place
Graduates earn a verifiable skills record and an active referral into work — applying the Pillar-2 lesson.
The mechanism already works. The founder has run it.
It already functions at the smallest scale.
The founder identified a recent secondary-school graduate in his rural neighbourhood, trained him deliberately, and the apprentice now completes real, paid subcontracted work. He earns income; the founder gained capacity. The core mechanism functions today.
What it lacks — and what this programme systematically builds — is the recruitment pipeline, practitioner onboarding, stipend mechanism, structured curriculum, placement brokerage, and impact measurement to replicate it across 100 apprentices and beyond.
A builder who knows the sector and the ground.
The founder is a Kenyan software developer and social entrepreneur who built and runs tuiFUND.com — a platform matching Kenyan nonprofits to funding and building their capacity to apply. That work brings working knowledge of the social-sector ecosystem and a ready partnership base for trusted recruitment.
Mentorship-focused organisations already active across rural Kenya are reachable through the tuiFUND network:
Kenya’s own government has named this a priority.
The 2025 Mombasa Declaration , from the 2nd Regional Conference on Quality Skills and Apprenticeships in Africa — convened by SASASNET and Kenya’s Ministry of Labour and Skills Development — called to advance the transition of skills development and apprenticeships from the informal to the formal economy, within the framework of ILO Recommendation No. 208 (2023). STAN is the on-the-ground distribution vehicle that framework calls for but does not itself provide.
Help us turn a proven model into a national pathway out of poverty.
We are seeking funding and delivery partners to run the first county pilot. The evidence is in; the gap is the distribution.