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JTW-WES-03 Justice, Trade & Work Work & Enterprise Support CORE Excellence v2.9.7

Entrepreneurship workshops and advisory support (Sharīʿah-aligned)

Evaluating the provision of expert-led workshops and advisory services that foster entrepreneurship, this measure is vital for Islamic excellence. It empowers community members toward self-sufficiency through lawful enterprise, strengthening economic resilience, preventing market harm (iḥtikār), and advancing public interest (maṣlaḥah). By cultivating business acumen, these initiatives fulfill farḍ kifāyah (communal obligation) regarding economic independence, promoting taʿāwun (mutual cooperation) and ensuring commerce remains rooted in kasb ṭayyib (pure earning) for broader societal welfare.

KPI / Measure
MetricEntrepreneurship support outputs and outcomes
TargetMin 2 workshops/year; ≥75% satisfaction; ≥20% register within 12 months; ≥15% first sales within 6 months; ≥70% 12-month survival; ≥30% reach from priority groups
FrequencyQuarterly tracking; annual roll-up
MethodCount workshops/participants; survey and administrative follow-up at 3, 6, 12 months; satisfaction survey; demographic monitoring
UnitCounts and percentages
Maturity Levels
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc

No formal workshops or advisory services for business startups exist. Any support is informal, ad-hoc, and reactive.

Level 2: Developing

Basic, occasional workshops or one-off advisory sessions are offered. The content is generic and not part of a structured, ongoing program.

Level 3: Established

Defined program with structured curriculum (planning, marketing, finance) including Sharīʿah-compliant finance and contract documentation; expert-led advice by competent advisors; documented Sharīʿah review/sign-off of curriculum and referral list; baseline compliance pack in place (privacy notice, FCA disclaimer, safeguarding).

Level 4: Advanced

Effectiveness systematically measured with defined KPIs (registrations, sales, funding, jobs, 12-month survival, satisfaction, diversity reach); 3/6/12-month follow-up with GDPR-compliant SOP; curriculum reviewed using PDCA based on data and needs assessments.

Level 5: Optimizing

Recognised centre with integrated mentorship (≥10 active mentors), networking, AAOIFI-aligned content, and access to Sharīʿah-compliant seed/micro-funding; formal partnerships (e.g., Growth Hubs/CDFIs); public impact report with ≥30% launch rate, ≥70% 12-month survival, and equitable reach; continuous innovation.

Applicability

Organisation Types

community-center youth-organization womens-organization professional-association trade-body general-enterprise social-enterprise community-interest-company charity-relief humanitarian-aid zakat-sadaqah-body islamic-center mosque-prayer-space

By Organisation Size

SizeApplicabilityNotes
Micro exempt Lacks financial resources and staff capacity to develop formal curricula or hire accredited trainers.
Small optional May offer informal business advice or guest speakers, but mandating SFEDI/IOEE accredited trainers is disproportionate.
Medium partial Expected to cover compliance basics (e.g., right-to-work) in workshops, but strict trainer accreditation requirements can be scaled down.
Large full
Major full

Applicable When

  • The organization has a mandate to support community development or economic empowerment
  • The organization has the resources and expertise to deliver such workshops
  • There is a demonstrated need for such services within the community
  • For a Mosque/Islamic Center/Charity: when part of their community outreach/welfare programs

Not Applicable When

  • The organization's sole focus is on a very specific religious function (e.g., only prayer services)
  • The organization lacks the capacity to deliver such services
  • The organization has a specific geographic focus outside of community based support.

Discussion (1)

Administrator 2026-03-07 11:07:57.837056

📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json

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