
Where innovation laboratories extend from boardrooms to villages
In the communities where Ready4Life works, business isn’t abstract—it’s survival, empowerment, and resilience. You’ll meet street vendors, young entrepreneurs building side hustles, cooperatives reinventing supply chains, and schools trying to teach financial literacy without reliable resources. These are more than case studies—they’re your collaborators and colleagues.
Within Ready4Life, we also run ongoing management and entrepreneurial projects that directly support the communities we work with. As an intern, you’ll assist with these projects, gaining hands-on experience while contributing to initiatives that have real social and economic impact. Please ask for the latest available projects, as the outline of your internship requires preparation and universities need a clear project pitch for approval.
Our work is strengthened through partnerships with business networks in the UK, Italy, and Canada, giving you exposure to international best practices, cross-border collaboration, and the chance to see how global and local business strategies intersect.
This internship isn’t just about learning business theory—it’s about applying your skills where they matter most, helping communities grow, and understanding how entrepreneurship can drive resilience and transformation in real-world contexts.
We won’t sugarcoat it—this environment can be challenging.
But time and again, we’ve seen interns make a real difference. You’ll sit in moments with no easy fixes, listen to stories that aren’t in any textbook, and learn to see strength where others only see need.
Knowing Dutch or Flemish can open unexpected doors in South Africa, Belgium, and beyond. In South Africa, Afrikaans evolved from Dutch, and while they’re not identical, Dutch speakers often find they can understand much of the language — especially in written form. While this does not solve all language barrier challenges, it can create unique openings in community work, local colleagues, or social development contexts where Afrikaans is spoken; it can be a bridge to trust, nuance, and deeper collaboration. Interdisciplinary insights that matter here:
Using your mind to stretch resources
with or without the spreadsheet
Supporting local ideas and initiatives without taking over. Sensing when to lead and when to follow
using business can solve problems — not just make money. Markets, education, and infrastructure intersect, and where they don’t (as yet), you will innovate.
You might help a small business launch its first product. Or support a community cooperative to streamline operations. Or give an entrepreneur the extra hands they need to turn an idea into impact. Either way, the experience is real—and mutual.