M4JAM, Green Office to pilot crowdsourcing recycling initiative
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Company Announcement - Microjobbing platform M4JAM (Money for Jam) is breaking new ground again since its launch in August 2014. Today, M4JAM ‘Chief Jammer’ and founder, Andre Hugo, announced the launch of a pilot recycling project being pioneered on the platform in collaboration with Green Office. M4JAM is a new digitally-enabled microjobbing platform hosted on WeChat, which allows companies to allocate microjobs to tens of thousands of geographically dispersed jobbers’ across South Africa and pay them cash via the platform at the till points of selected retail outlets. WeChat’s innovative mobile social communications platform allows virtual collaboration like this to turn into real-world activities on a scale and in ways never before possible.
On the back of a hugely successful launch six weeks ago, Green Office approached M4JAM to place jobs on the platform to pilot a recycling campaign in three locations. Through the M4JAM Official Account on WeChat, the campaign offers to pay jobbers to collect undamaged used toner cartridges so that Green Office can recycle them. With jobs being grabbed every 10 seconds on the platform, Hugo expects a good response to the recycling initiative. “Usually, people just throw cartridges away or drop them at a depot for recycling in an effort to do good. But now, this recycling initiative can be used by schools and welfare organisations as ongoing fundraising initiatives – and by normal people who want to make some extra money.”
According to Hugo, Green Office, an environmentally-conscious document management solutions business, is the ideal partner to pilot this campaign given their established footprint in toner cartridge recycling. Green Office will designate specific collection dates at its Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban recycling depots over a three-week period and jobbers will be paid R5 for each qualifying cartridge dropped off at the designated locations on the specified days. The campaign will be promoted in advance, asking jobbers to grab the job and estimate how many cartridges they will drop off at each depot. Green Office employees will be stationed at the depots to collect the cartridges and the jobbers will be paid through the usual M4JAM wallet mechanism. The campaign may be extended indefinitely to over 1000 locations around the country if the pilot proves to be successful.
Hugo says this pilot – a first in South Africa to take the manual task of recycling into the digital crowdsourcing arena – paves the way for similar initiatives in any industry where recycling is a priority. It could also significantly increase the sustained earnings potential of our jobbers. “We are currently also in talks with a glass manufacturer, a tyre recycling organisation and a beverage company about similar recycling projects using the M4JAM platform. The concept can be extended to any recyclable, including plastic, cardboard, light bulbs, e-waste and paper,” he notes. “Green Office has taken the lead in harnessing crowdsourcing to step up its recycling activities, but we expect to see many more companies following suit once this campaign has proved successful.”
Increased recycling activity also reduces harmful waste in landfills, a fact that M4JAM welcomes. Hugo says: “Our mission was to uplift South Africans one microjob at a time. With initiatives like this, we are creating more opportunities for people to earn money by changing behaviour in the market, bringing positive change to the environment, and educating people through the process.”
Green Office reconditions many of the used cartridges for resale and has started a non-profit company called Greenable to make use of cartridges that are damaged or redundant. Greenable employs woman with disabilities to recycle the damaged cartridges materials into roof tiles for low income houses. Since inception, three years ago, Greenable has employed 28 woman who have benefitted significantly – both financially and from a self-esteem perspective.
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