+ Mission specifics
+ Target markets (ranked by importance)
Women
1
Clients living in rural areas
2
Clients living in urban areas
3
+ Development goals (ranked by importance)
Increased access to financial services
1
Growth of existing businesses
2
Development of start-up enterprises
3
Poverty reduction
4
Gender equality and women's empowerment
5
Employment generation
6
Youth opportunities
7
Children's schooling
8
Health improvement
9
Water and sanitation
10
Housing
11
Improvement of adult education
12
+ Poverty targets
Very poor clients
Poor clients
Low income clients
+ Governance
Has trained members of its board on social performance management
Has a formal board committee that monitors social performance
+ Range of products and services
+ Financial products and services offered
+ Credit products offered
Microcredit loans for microenterprises
SME loans
Loans for education
+ Savings products offered
+ Compulsory insurance products required
Compulsory credit life insurance
+ Voluntary insurance products offered
+ Other financial products and services offered
+ Non-financial services offered
+ Enterprise services offered
Enterprise skills development
Business development services
Capacity building exercises
+ Education services offered
Child and youth education
+ Health services offered
+ Women's empowerment services offered
Leadership training for women
Women's rights education/gender issues training
Counseling/legal services for female victims of violence
+ Products and services targeting the poor
Products and services specifically designed to target the poor:
Hope - IGL
+ Social responsibility to clients
+ Client protection principles in use
The loan approval process requires evaluation of borrower repayment capacity and loan affordability. Loan approval does not rely solely on guarantees (whether peer guarantees, co-signers or collateral) as a substitute for good capacity analysis.
Internal audits check household debt exposure, lending practices that violate procedures including unauthorized re-financing, multiple borrowers or co-signers per household, and other practices that could increase indebtedness.
Productivity targets and incentive systems value portfolio quality at least as highly as other factors, such as disbursement or customer growth. Growth is rewarded only if portfolio quality is high.
Prices, terms and conditions of all financial products are fully disclosed to the customer prior to sale, including interest charges, insurance premiums, minimum balances, all fees, penalties, linked products, third party fees, and whether these can change over time.
Staff is trained to communicate effectively with all customers, ensuring that they understand the product, the terms of the contract, their rights and obligations. Communications techniques address literacy limitations (e.g. reading contracts out loud, materials in local languages).
Acceptable and unacceptable debt collection practices are clearly spelled out in a code of ethics, book of staff rules or debt collection manual.
The organization's corporate culture values and rewards high standards of ethical behavior and customer service.
A mechanism to handle customer complaints is in place, has dedicated staff resources, and is actively used. (Suggestion boxes alone are generally not considered adequate.)
Customers know how their information will be used. Staff explains how data will be used and seeks permission for use.
+ Cost of services to clients
Flat interest method
+ Social responsibility to staff
+ Human resources
Transparency on salary (a clear salary scale based upon market salaries)
Benefits (medical insurance, pension contribution)
Protection at work (safety, anti-harassment)
+ Basis of staff incentives related to social performance
+ Social responsibility to the environment
This institution raises clients' awareness about environmental impacts
This institution identifies enterprises with environmental risk
+ Poverty measurement tools in use
Grameen Progress out of Poverty Index (PPI)