Around a year ago, the future looked rather dull for Sharon Otieno, 23 years. She had moved back to the village in Siaya County with her parents and was surviving on casual jobs, making and selling chapatis or doing hired farm work like weeding for neighbors. Her chance came when she was offered to participate in a short-term agribusiness training course at Siaya Institute of Technology, funded by Agri-Jobs 4 Youth. Sharon got inspired: “The training gave me the idea that farming can be a business, that working along
an agriculture value chain can turn my farming outcomes into money.”