Κεντρική σελίδα WhatsAppΚεντρική σελίδα WhatsAppGreen People
WHATSAPP WEB
ΛΕΙΤΟΥΡΓΙΕΣ
ΛΗΨΗ
ΑΣΦΑΛΕΙΑ
ΚΕΝΤΡΟ ΒΟΗΘΕΙΑΣ

Επιλέξτε τη γλώσσα σας

  • azərbaycan

  • Afrikaans

  • Bahasa Indonesia

  • Melayu

  • català

  • čeština

  • dansk

  • Deutsch

  • eesti

  • English

  • español

  • français

  • Gaeilge

  • hrvatski

  • italiano

  • Kiswahili

  • latviešu

  • lietuvių

  • magyar

  • Nederlands

  • norsk bokmål

  • o‘zbek

  • Filipino

  • polski

  • Português (Brasil)

  • Português (Portugal)

  • română

  • shqip

  • slovenčina

  • slovenščina

  • suomi

  • svenska

  • Tiếng Việt

  • Türkçe

  • Ελληνικά

  • български

  • қазақ тілі

  • македонски

  • русский

  • српски

  • українська

  • עברית

  • العربية

  • فارسی

  • اردو

  • বাংলা

  • हिन्दी

  • ગુજરાતી

  • ಕನ್ನಡ

  • मराठी

  • ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

  • தமிழ்

  • తెలుగు

  • മലയാളം

  • ไทย

  • 简体中文

  • 繁體中文(台灣)

  • 繁體中文(香港)

  • 日本語

  • 한국어

  • Λήψη

  • Χαρακτηριστικά

  • Ασφάλεια

  • Κέντρο βοήθειας

  • Έλατε σε επαφή

  • Ιστορίες WhatsApp

  • Ιστορίες μικρών επιχειρήσεων

  • Ιστορίες μικρών επιχειρήσεων από την Ινδία


Green People


While most Indians know about the devastating Uttarakhand floods in 2013, the state also witnessed another lesser-known tragedy in the aftermath. Large-scale migration turned nearly 1,000 villages into ghost villages.

Believing that making villages self-sustainable could help reduce the migration, former hotel management professional Roopesh Rai teamed up with Bandana Rai, Mani Mahesh and Pradeep Pawar and partnered with an army officer (Retd.) Col Ajay Kothiyal to start Green People in 2015.

Today, Green People runs two key initiatives — The Goat Village and Bakri Chhap. The former is a homestay venture that works towards reviving abandoned villages by leveraging their tourism potential, while the latter helps market indigenous farm produce from local communities.

"In less than three years, the lower sub-Himalayan trek of Nag Tibba has seen a 40-fold increase in footfalls, from only 1,200 annual participants to 47,000 trekking enthusiasts in a year. With Bakri Chhap, we work with nearly 80 farmers directly and over 500 farmers indirectly. We provide fair trade prices by eliminating middlemen and supplying quality produce to luxury hotels," says Roopesh.

"We started using WhatsApp since the day of inception"

WhatsApp has been a key enabler for the social enterprise.

"We started using WhatsApp since the day of inception. We knew that dependence on emails would not work as our rural workforce was intimidated by the idea of reporting on emails. But they all knew about WhatsApp and had no apprehensions about using it."

Sharing more details on how they have leveraged WhatsApp to streamline operations, Roopesh says, "We created groups based on departments and sites and the entire reporting and micro-management takes place through these WhatsApp groups."

Staying connected on WhatsApp has also helped the team mitigate emergencies. In addition to staying connected with the team, Green People also uses WhatsApp to share information about new destinations and new products with their customers.


Περισσότερες Ιστορίες από India

Περισσότερη Εξερεύνηση
  • Superbottoms

    Superbottoms

    Ινδία
  • Hey Deedee

    Hey Deedee

    Ινδία

WHATSAPP

Χαρακτηριστικά

Ασφάλεια

Λήψη

WhatsApp Web

Επαγγελματικό

Απόρρητο

ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ

Σχετικά

Καριέρες

Κέντρο μάρκας

Έλατε σε επαφή

Blog

Ιστορίες WhatsApp

ΛΗΨΗ

Mac/PC

Android

iPhone

ΒΟΗΘΕΙΑ

Κέντρο βοήθειας

Twitter

Facebook

Κορονοϊός

2022 © WhatsApp LLC

Προσωπικά Δεδομένα & Όροι