Neftaly is a Global Solutions Provider working with Individuals, Governments, Corporate Businesses, Municipalities, International Institutions. Neftaly works across various Industries, Sectors providing wide range of solutions.
Purpose of the Meeting The purpose of the meeting was to introduce learners to entrepreneurship concepts, focusing on generating business ideas, identifying problems and solutions, and understanding key components of starting and managing a business.
Agenda Items and Discussions
2.1 Generating Business Ideas
Learners were encouraged to develop creativity as a foundation for entrepreneurship.
Mind Mapping was introduced as a method for planning and identifying steps required to start a business.
SCAMPER Technique was discussed as a creativity tool:
Substitute
Combine
Adapt
Modify
Put to another use
Eliminate
Reverse
2.2 Problem Solving in Business
Problem solving was highlighted as a way to improve existing products or services.
Learners were advised that starting a business often involves operating at a loss for the first few months.
Common Business Problems and Solutions 3.1 Car Wash Business Example
Problems Identified:
Lack of water
Electricity outages
Proposed Solutions:
Use of JoJo water tanks
Installation of solar panels
3.2 Delivery Business Challenges in Diepsloot
Disadvantages Identified:
Risk of hijacking
Poor road infrastructure
Proposed Solutions:
Restrict delivery times between 09:00 and 18:00
Schedule first orders for delivery the following day
Trend Spotting and Marketing
Trend spotting was discussed as researching current market needs and business opportunities.
Digital Marketing was introduced as a method of promoting businesses through social media platforms.
Evaluating Business Ideas The following criteria were discussed when evaluating a business idea:
Sustainability: Long-term or short-term viability
Profitability: Ability to generate income
Visibility: Ease of being found by customers
5.1 Visibility Study
Learners were advised to conduct research to determine whether a business idea is likely to succeed.
5.2 Operations and Finance
Operations: Ability to deliver products or services effectively
Finance: Determining required capital
Example provided:
Startup capital: R50,000
Running capital: R150,000
Emphasis was placed on the importance of thinking quickly and creatively when operating with limited funds.
Legal and Environmental Issues
Legal and environmental factors that may affect businesses were discussed.
Example given: Pollution as an environmental issue affecting fast-food businesses.
Business Plan Components The following components of a business plan were discussed:
Investors and partners
Day-to-day business operations
Cash Flow: Managing money received and expenses immediately
Profitability Projection: Breaking down all costs and expected income
Vision, Mission, and Objectives
Learners were guided on developing a clear vision, mission, and objectives based on personal motivation.
Meeting Closure The meeting was adjourned at 12:00.
To the Chairperson of Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Mr. Clifford Legodi, all Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Members, Neftaly Royal Chiefs and all Neftaly Human Capital.
Kgotso a ebe le lena.
Neftaly Development Royal
“Empowering Communities, Delivering Impact”
Slide 1: Title Slide
Title: Neftaly Development Royal – Q4 2026 Implementation Plan
Subtitle: January – March 2026
Presented by: Neftaly Chief Development Royal
Date: 03 February 2026
Slide 2: Agenda
Chief Presentation & Executive Overview
Q4 Implementation Plan
Implementation Calendar / Sheet
Monitoring & Reporting Plan
Human Capital Weekly Schedule
Neftaly Events & Community Engagement
Slide 3: Executive Overview
Purpose: Deliver Q4 operational priorities for Neftaly Development Royal.
Goal: Ensure smooth execution of programs, events, and human capital initiatives.
Key Areas:
Program Implementation
Events & Partnerships
Monitoring & Reporting
Human Capital Management
Slide 4: Q4 Implementation Plan – Strategic Objectives
Objective
Expected Outcome
Operationalize Q4 Work Plan
All initiatives scheduled and resourced
Launch Q4 Events
Successful community engagement
Strengthen Monitoring & Reporting
Accurate and timely progress tracking
Align Human Capital
Efficient staffing and task allocation
Slide 5: Q4 Key Initiatives
Month
Initiative
Chief Responsible
January
Kick-off & Stakeholder Outreach
Chief Development Royal
February
Mid-Quarter Events & Workshops
Events Chief
March
Quarterly Review & Reporting
Chief Monitoring
Slide 6: Implementation Calendar
Visual timeline / Gantt view recommended for clarity
January: Kick-off, approvals, staff alignment
February: Execute events, mid-quarter reviews
March: Consolidate results, final reporting, Q1 planning
The following daily coordination and reporting meetings will be implemented:
Daily Day Planning Meeting – 09:15
Daily Report Submission to Royal Sub-Committee – 14:00
Daily Committee Handover Report – 14:30
Daily Report Review – 14:45
Daily Committee Review – 15:00
Daily Today Events Review – 08:30
Daily Tomorrow Events Planning – 16:45
Daily Challenges Report – 10:00
Daily Training & Workshops Report – 13:00
Daily Feedback Report – 12:30
Daily Meetings Report – 12:15
Daily Strategy Targets Review – 10:30
Daily Planned vs Implemented Review – 10:00
Daily Project Progress & Budget Review – 09:45
Daily Performance Report Review – 16:00
Daily Income Report – 16:15
20. SAYPROCDR EVENTS & ARSENAL PROGRAMMES
Item
Details
Presentation Title
Neftaly Development Royal Q4 Implementation Plan
Presented By
Neftaly Chief
Implementing Unit
NeftalyCDR
Implementation Period
January – June
Daily Event Time
11:30 – 13:00
Events Per Day
2
Target Group
Students / Youth
Platforms
Neftaly Ideas, Neftaly Events
21. IMPLEMENTATION AREA ACTION PLAN
Implementation Area
Planned Action
Target
Student Engagement
Conduct daily student-focused events
10+ students per event
Events Delivery
Two events per day
Daily
Membership Growth
Enrol students into Neftaly
Increased registrations
Innovation & Ideas
Encourage idea submissions
Active Neftaly Ideas use
Reporting
Submit activity reports
Daily / Weekly
22. SAYPRO CHIEF IMPLEMENTATION CALENDAR
Period
Activity
Frequency
January – June
Student events
Daily
January – June
Monitoring & reporting
Weekly
Monthly
Review meetings
Monthly
As scheduled
Official Neftaly Events
As per events calendar
23. SAYPRO CHIEF MONITORING & REPORTING PLAN
Monitoring Area
Indicator
Measurement
Events Implementation
Events conducted
2 per day
Student Attendance
Students per event
10+
Student Enrolment
New enrolments
Count per period
Student Interest
Repeat participation
Attendance trends
Reporting Compliance
Reports submitted
On time
24. SAYPRO CHIEF HUMAN CAPITAL WEEKLY SCHEDULE
Day
Human Capital Activity
Monday
Planning and coordination
Tuesday
Event preparation and facilitation
Wednesday
Event delivery and student engagement
Thursday
Monitoring, data collection, reporting
Friday
Review, feedback, and adjustments
25. SAYPRO EVENTS INTEGRATION
Event Category
Purpose
Source Platform
Orientation Events
Student enrolment and awareness
Neftaly Events
Skills & Innovation Events
Increase student interest
Neftaly Events
Talent & Creative Events
Boost participation
Neftaly Events
Community Engagement Events
Expand Neftaly visibility
Neftaly Events
26. SAYPRO IDEAS PRESENTATION PLAN
Item
Description
Content Type
Event updates, reports, achievements
Objective
Promote events and attract students
Target Audience
Students and youth
Platform
Neftaly Ideas
Expected Outcome
Increased participation and enrolment
27. ACHIEVEMENTS (Q4)
Achievement Area
Outcome
Student Enrolment
More students enrolling into Neftaly
Student Interest
Increased interest and enthusiasm in events
Event Participation
Consistent attendance of 10+ students
Membership Growth
Growth in registered Neftaly members
Programme Visibility
Stronger awareness of Neftaly activities
28. SAYPRO DIEPSLOOT ARSENAL DEVELOPMENT
Programme Focus: Football development, life skills, health & wellness, and community engagement.
Target Participants: 100–150 youth across U11, U13, U15, U17, U35–40, and Senior categories.
Q4 Focus Area
Foundation building, mobilisation, and training initiation.
Q4 Activity Plan (January–March 2026)
Week/Month
Activities
Target Youth
Events
Responsibility
Jan
Recruitment of volunteers
02
Staff & volunteer onboarding
Neftaly Manager & Programme Coordinator
Feb
Player registration & community outreach
50–80
Launch event “Neftaly Diepsloot Arsenal 2026 Kick-Off”
Programme Coordinator & Community Liaison
Feb
Baseline skills & fitness assessment
100
Internal skills challenge
Coaches & M&E Officer
Feb
Weekly football training (3x/week)
100
Soccer Clinics
Coaches
Feb
Life skills workshop: Leadership & Discipline
100
Soccer Clinics
Life Skills Facilitator & Mentors
Feb
Friendly matches between age groups
100
Mini-Tournament
Coaches & Volunteers
Mar
Participation in local league matches
100
League matches
Coaches & Programme Coordinator
Mar
Health & GBV awareness
100
Community
Saff & Coaches
Mar
Community football tournament
120
“Neftaly Community Cup – Q4”
Programme Coordinator & Volunteers
Mar
Quarterly review & awards
100
Recognition of top performers
Neftaly Manager & M&E Officer
Q4 Arsenal Targets (Jan–Mar 2026
Player registration: 75–120 youth
Training attendance rate: 75%
Community events participation: 100–120 youth
29. OVERALL ACHIEVEMENT STATEMENT
The key achievement of the NeftalyCDR Q4 Implementation Plan is the increase in student enrolment and strengthened student interest through consistent, engaging, and well-coordinated training, events, and Arsenal development activities
To the Chairperson of Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Mr. Clifford Legodi, all Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Members, Neftaly Royal Chiefs and all Neftaly Human Capital.
Kgotso a ebe le lena.
1. ORGANISATIONAL OVERVIEW
Organisation Name: Neftaly Year: 2026 Implementation Period: 01 January 2026 – 31 December 2026
Mandate: Neftaly is a youth development institution dedicated to empowering communities—especially youth, women, and persons with disabilities—by enabling access to education, technology, health, entrepreneurship, and skills development opportunities.
2. PURPOSE OF THE ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
The Annual Implementation Plan (AIP) translates Neftaly’s strategic objectives into actionable programmes and activities for the 2026 financial year. It provides a clear framework for implementation, monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and reporting.
3. STRATEGIC PRIORITY AREAS FOR 2026
Skills Development & Accredited Training Programmes
Youth Employment, Internships & Learnerships
Entrepreneurship & SMME Support
Digital Transformation & Technology Access
Gender, Social Inclusion & Disability Mainstreaming
Strategic Objective: Expand access to accredited and occupational skills training.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Curriculum Development
Review and update accredited & occupational courses
Training Department
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Updated curricula
Programme Accreditation
Apply for new accreditation & programme alignment
Compliance & QA
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Approved programmes
Training Delivery
Deliver priority training programmes nationwide
Training & Facilitators
Q2–Q3 (Jul–Sept)
Trained beneficiaries
Assessments & Certification
Conduct assessments and issue certificates
QA & Assessors
Q3–Q4 (Oct–Dec)
Certified learners
5.2 Youth Employment, Internships & Learnerships
Strategic Objective: Improve employability and work readiness of youth.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Internship Recruitment
Recruit youth for internship programmes
HR & Programmes
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Interns recruited
Workplace Placement
Place interns with partners & host employers
Partnerships Unit
Q2–Q3 (Apr–Sep)
Active placements
Mentorship & Coaching
Provide structured mentorship support
Programmes Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Mentored youth
Exit & Absorption Support
Job placement and exit evaluations
HR & M&E
Q4 (Oct–Dec)
Employment outcomes
5.3 Entrepreneurship & SMME Support
Strategic Objective: Support youth-led enterprises and startups.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Entrepreneurship Training
Business & proposal writing training
Enterprise Unit
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Trained entrepreneurs
Incubation Support
Coaching, mentorship & compliance support
Enterprise Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Supported SMMEs
Market Access Initiatives
Link SMMEs to markets & procurement
Partnerships
Q3–Q4 (Jul–Dec)
Market linkages
5.4 Digital Transformation & Technology Access
Strategic Objective: Enhance digital skills and access to technology.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Digital Skills Training
ICT, digital literacy & online tools training
ICT & Training
Q1–Q4 (Jan–Dec)
Digitally skilled youth
E-Learning Platform
Improve Neftaly online learning systems
ICT Unit
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Functional LMS
Tech Access Projects
Devices & connectivity support
ICT & Partners
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Improved access
5.5 Gender, Social Inclusion & Disability Mainstreaming
Strategic Objective: Promote inclusive participation across all programmes.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
GSI Policy Implementation
Roll-out inclusion policies
Governance Unit
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Implemented policy
Targeted Programmes
Women, youth & disability-focused training
Programmes Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Inclusive participation
Awareness Campaigns
Gender & inclusion advocacy
Marketing & Comms
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Awareness reached
5.6 Governance, Compliance & Sustainability
Strategic Objective: Strengthen organisational governance and compliance.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Policy Review
Review governance & operational policies
Governance
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Updated policies
Financial Management
Budgeting, audits & reporting
Finance Unit
Q1–Q4 (Jan–Dec)
Clean audits
Resource Mobilisation
Funding proposals & donor engagement
Management
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Secured funding
5.7 Neftaly and Diepsloot Arsenal Implementation Plan 2026
The Neftaly and Diepsloot Arsenal Implementation Plan for 2026 outlines a collaborative approach to youth development in Diepsloot through an integrated sports, education, and life-skills programme. The partnership leverages Neftaly’s programme management and compliance expertise with Diepsloot Arsenal’s football development experience to deliver structured, safe, and impactful interventions for children and youth aged 8 to 18.
Programme Purpose
The primary purpose of the programme is to use sport—specifically football—as a development tool to promote discipline, teamwork, leadership, and personal growth, while reinforcing the importance of education, health, and positive social behaviour. The programme is designed to provide young people with consistent, supervised activities that contribute to their physical, emotional, and social well-being.
Strategic Objectives
The programme seeks to:
Provide regular, structured football training supported by qualified coaches.
Integrate life-skills education, leadership development, and mentorship into sports activities.
Encourage academic responsibility and positive life choices among participants.
Create safe and inclusive spaces for youth engagement.
Strengthen community ownership and parental involvement in youth development initiatives.
Target Group
The programme will benefit primary and secondary school learners from the Diepsloot community, with particular focus on vulnerable and at-risk youth. Participation will be inclusive, promoting equal access regardless of gender or background.
Core Programme Components
Sports Development:
Participants will receive weekly football training sessions focusing on technical skills, physical fitness, teamwork, and game strategy. The programme will include friendly matches, league participation, and tournaments to enhance competitive exposure and talent identification.
Education and Life Skills:
Life-skills sessions will address discipline, goal-setting, communication, teamwork, and leadership. Learners will be encouraged to balance sport with education, supported through academic guidance and mentorship where possible.
Health, Wellness, and Social Development:
The programme promotes physical fitness, healthy lifestyles, and emotional well-being. Sessions will include wellness awareness, injury prevention, and personal responsibility, ensuring holistic development beyond sport.
Implementation Approach and Timeline
The 2026 programme will be implemented across four quarters:
Quarter 1: Planning, stakeholder engagement, recruitment of coaches and facilitators, equipment procurement, and participant registration.
Quarter 2: Full programme rollout, regular training sessions, life-skills workshops, and community engagement activities.
Quarter 3: Mid-year review, leadership activities, tournaments, and programme refinement based on performance and feedback.
Quarter 4: Final assessments, showcase events, reporting, and planning for sustainability and continuation into 2027.
Roles and Responsibilities
Neftaly will lead programme coordination, monitoring and evaluation, compliance, reporting, and stakeholder communication.
Diepsloot Arsenal will be responsible for technical football training, talent development, team management, and day-to-day participant engagement.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting
The programme will implement continuous monitoring through attendance registers, activity reports, and performance reviews. Quarterly evaluations will assess progress against objectives, with an end-of-year report capturing outcomes, challenges, lessons learned, and recommendations.
Risk Management and Safeguarding
Child protection, health, and safety are central to programme implementation. The partnership will enforce safeguarding policies, ensure adequate supervision, provide first-aid support, and implement emergency response procedures during all activities.
Expected Outcomes
By the end of 2026, the programme is expected to:
Improve football skills, discipline, and teamwork among participants.
Enhance leadership, confidence, and life-skills development.
Increase positive youth engagement and reduce exposure to social risks.
Strengthen collaboration between Neftaly, Diepsloot Arsenal, families, and the wider community.
5.8 Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom (March 2026)
Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom is an educational and developmental program designed to provide a fun, inclusive, and structured learning environment for primary (Grades 3–6) and secondary (Grades 7–11) school children. The program focuses on academic enrichment, creativity, physical wellness, and social development through interactive and age-appropriate activities.
Purpose and Goals
The program aims to enhance children’s cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development by combining education, technology, arts, sports, and teamwork. It seeks to foster creativity, critical thinking, leadership, and problem-solving skills while ensuring a safe and engaging learning space.
Key Objectives
Deliver structured educational sessions aligned with learning outcomes.
Integrate technology to improve engagement and learning.
Promote physical activity, wellness, and teamwork.
Encourage creativity through arts, music, drama, and extracurricular activities.
Build communication, leadership, and social skills.
Implementation Timeline
March 2026 (Pre-launch Phase): Curriculum finalisation, staff recruitment, infrastructure setup, material procurement, staff training, safety reviews, community outreach, and test sessions.
April 2026 (Program Launch): Commencement of classes, introduction of daily routines, delivery of academic and extracurricular activities, use of technology-based learning tools, and ongoing learner assessments.
Program Structure
Primary School Programme: Focuses on literacy, numeracy, basic science, creative arts, physical education, storytelling, introductory coding, and outdoor exploration.
Secondary School Programme: Emphasises advanced literacy, critical thinking, leadership development, STEM activities, coding and robotics, sports, public speaking, and community service.
Staffing and Management
The program is supported by qualified educators, specialised facilitators, program coordinators, health and safety officers, volunteers, and guest speakers from various professional fields.
Communication and Engagement
Regular internal staff meetings, newsletters, parent updates, and active social media engagement ensure transparency, collaboration, and community involvement.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Safety
Continuous assessment, feedback from learners and parents, and end-of-term evaluations are used to improve program quality. Strong risk management measures, health and safety protocols, and emergency response plans are in place.
Long-Term Vision
By the end of 2025, Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom aims to be a trusted educational initiative, with plans to expand participation, introduce advanced programmes, and partner with additional educational institutions.
5.9 Neftaly Events Implementation Plan 2026
The Neftaly Events Implementation Plan for 2026 provides a structured framework for the planning, coordination, and delivery of community, youth, sports, lifestyle, and promotional events throughout the year. The plan focuses on delivering high-quality, well-managed, and impactful events that support Neftaly’s objectives of community development, youth engagement, brand visibility, and social impact.
Purpose of the Events Programme
The primary purpose of Neftaly Events is to create platforms that promote participation, learning, wellness, and community cohesion. Events are designed to engage diverse audiences, provide positive social experiences, and support developmental outcomes while enhancing Neftaly’s public presence and partnerships.
Strategic Objectives
The 2026 events programme aims to:
Deliver safe, inclusive, and professionally managed events.
Promote youth participation, physical activity, and creative expression.
Strengthen partnerships with community organisations, sponsors, and stakeholders.
Increase brand visibility and community trust in Neftaly initiatives.
Create sustainable event models that can be replicated and scaled.
Key Event Categories
Community and Youth Development Events
These include youth empowerment workshops, educational activations, community dialogues, and awareness campaigns aimed at skills development and social cohesion.
Sports and Wellness Events
Events such as fitness challenges, tournaments, fun runs, and wellness days promote healthy lifestyles, teamwork, and active participation.
Creative, Cultural, and Lifestyle Events
These events provide platforms for arts, music, fashion, and cultural expression, encouraging creativity and community participation.
Promotional and Brand Activation Events
Strategic events are used to showcase Neftaly programmes, attract partners, and engage audiences through interactive brand experiences.
Implementation Approach
The implementation of Neftaly Events in 2026 follows a phased approach:
Planning and Design: Event concept development, budgeting, scheduling, risk assessments, and stakeholder engagement.
Coordination and Logistics: Venue booking, supplier management, equipment procurement, permits, security, and transport.
Programme Delivery: Event execution, facilitation, crowd management, and on-site coordination.
Post-Event Review: Evaluation, reporting, stakeholder feedback, and documentation of lessons learned.
Quarter 2: Rollout of community, youth, and sports events with ongoing monitoring.
Quarter 3: Flagship events, mid-year evaluation, and programme refinement.
Quarter 4: Major closing events, impact reporting, and planning for the following year.
Roles and Responsibilities
Neftaly Events Team: Overall planning, coordination, compliance, and reporting.
Facilitators and Event Staff: Programme delivery, participant support, and on-site management.
Partners and Sponsors: Resource support, co-branding, and technical input.
Volunteers: Event support, logistics assistance, and community mobilisation.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting
Event performance will be tracked through attendance registers, activity reports, feedback forms, media coverage, and post-event evaluations. Quarterly and annual reports will document outputs, outcomes, challenges, and improvements.
Risk Management and Compliance
The plan prioritises health, safety, and risk mitigation through crowd control measures, emergency plans, first aid services, security arrangements, and compliance with local regulations and safeguarding policies.
Expected Outcomes
By the end of 2026, Neftaly Events is expected to:
Successfully deliver multiple high-impact events across communities.
Increase youth and community participation in positive activities.
Strengthen Neftaly’s brand presence and stakeholder relationships.
Demonstrate measurable social and developmental impact.
Establish a strong foundation for sustainable and scalable event programming.
To the Chairperson of Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Mr. Clifford Legodi, all Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Members, Neftaly Royal Chiefs and all Neftaly Human Capital.
Kgotso a ebe le lena.
1. ORGANISATIONAL OVERVIEW
Organisation Name: Neftaly Year: 2026 Implementation Period: 01 January 2026 – 31 December 2026
Mandate: Neftaly is a youth development institution dedicated to empowering communities—especially youth, women, and persons with disabilities—by enabling access to education, technology, health, entrepreneurship, and skills development opportunities.
2. PURPOSE OF THE ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN
The Annual Implementation Plan (AIP) translates Neftaly’s strategic objectives into actionable programmes and activities for the 2026 financial year. It provides a clear framework for implementation, monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and reporting.
3. STRATEGIC PRIORITY AREAS FOR 2026
Skills Development & Accredited Training Programmes
Youth Employment, Internships & Learnerships
Entrepreneurship & SMME Support
Digital Transformation & Technology Access
Gender, Social Inclusion & Disability Mainstreaming
Strategic Objective: Expand access to accredited and occupational skills training.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Curriculum Development
Review and update accredited & occupational courses
Training Department
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Updated curricula
Programme Accreditation
Apply for new accreditation & programme alignment
Compliance & QA
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Approved programmes
Training Delivery
Deliver priority training programmes nationwide
Training & Facilitators
Q2–Q3 (Jul–Sept)
Trained beneficiaries
Assessments & Certification
Conduct assessments and issue certificates
QA & Assessors
Q3–Q4 (Oct–Dec)
Certified learners
5.2 Youth Employment, Internships & Learnerships
Strategic Objective: Improve employability and work readiness of youth.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Internship Recruitment
Recruit youth for internship programmes
HR & Programmes
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Interns recruited
Workplace Placement
Place interns with partners & host employers
Partnerships Unit
Q2–Q3 (Apr–Sep)
Active placements
Mentorship & Coaching
Provide structured mentorship support
Programmes Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Mentored youth
Exit & Absorption Support
Job placement and exit evaluations
HR & M&E
Q4 (Oct–Dec)
Employment outcomes
5.3 Entrepreneurship & SMME Support
Strategic Objective: Support youth-led enterprises and startups.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Entrepreneurship Training
Business & proposal writing training
Enterprise Unit
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Trained entrepreneurs
Incubation Support
Coaching, mentorship & compliance support
Enterprise Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Supported SMMEs
Market Access Initiatives
Link SMMEs to markets & procurement
Partnerships
Q3–Q4 (Jul–Dec)
Market linkages
5.4 Digital Transformation & Technology Access
Strategic Objective: Enhance digital skills and access to technology.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Digital Skills Training
ICT, digital literacy & online tools training
ICT & Training
Q1–Q4 (Jan–Dec)
Digitally skilled youth
E-Learning Platform
Improve Neftaly online learning systems
ICT Unit
Q1–Q2 (Jan–Jun)
Functional LMS
Tech Access Projects
Devices & connectivity support
ICT & Partners
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Improved access
5.5 Gender, Social Inclusion & Disability Mainstreaming
Strategic Objective: Promote inclusive participation across all programmes.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
GSI Policy Implementation
Roll-out inclusion policies
Governance Unit
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Implemented policy
Targeted Programmes
Women, youth & disability-focused training
Programmes Unit
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Inclusive participation
Awareness Campaigns
Gender & inclusion advocacy
Marketing & Comms
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Awareness reached
5.6 Governance, Compliance & Sustainability
Strategic Objective: Strengthen organisational governance and compliance.
Activity
Description
Responsible Unit
Timeframe
Key Outputs
Policy Review
Review governance & operational policies
Governance
Q1 (Jan–Mar)
Updated policies
Financial Management
Budgeting, audits & reporting
Finance Unit
Q1–Q4 (Jan–Dec)
Clean audits
Resource Mobilisation
Funding proposals & donor engagement
Management
Q2–Q4 (Apr–Dec)
Secured funding
5.7 Neftaly and Diepsloot Arsenal Implementation Plan 2026
The Neftaly and Diepsloot Arsenal Implementation Plan for 2026 outlines a collaborative approach to youth development in Diepsloot through an integrated sports, education, and life-skills programme. The partnership leverages Neftaly’s programme management and compliance expertise with Diepsloot Arsenal’s football development experience to deliver structured, safe, and impactful interventions for children and youth aged 8 to 18.
Programme Purpose
The primary purpose of the programme is to use sport—specifically football—as a development tool to promote discipline, teamwork, leadership, and personal growth, while reinforcing the importance of education, health, and positive social behaviour. The programme is designed to provide young people with consistent, supervised activities that contribute to their physical, emotional, and social well-being.
Strategic Objectives
The programme seeks to:
Provide regular, structured football training supported by qualified coaches.
Integrate life-skills education, leadership development, and mentorship into sports activities.
Encourage academic responsibility and positive life choices among participants.
Create safe and inclusive spaces for youth engagement.
Strengthen community ownership and parental involvement in youth development initiatives.
Target Group
The programme will benefit primary and secondary school learners from the Diepsloot community, with particular focus on vulnerable and at-risk youth. Participation will be inclusive, promoting equal access regardless of gender or background.
Core Programme Components
Sports Development:
Participants will receive weekly football training sessions focusing on technical skills, physical fitness, teamwork, and game strategy. The programme will include friendly matches, league participation, and tournaments to enhance competitive exposure and talent identification.
Education and Life Skills:
Life-skills sessions will address discipline, goal-setting, communication, teamwork, and leadership. Learners will be encouraged to balance sport with education, supported through academic guidance and mentorship where possible.
Health, Wellness, and Social Development:
The programme promotes physical fitness, healthy lifestyles, and emotional well-being. Sessions will include wellness awareness, injury prevention, and personal responsibility, ensuring holistic development beyond sport.
Implementation Approach and Timeline
The 2026 programme will be implemented across four quarters:
Quarter 1: Planning, stakeholder engagement, recruitment of coaches and facilitators, equipment procurement, and participant registration.
Quarter 2: Full programme rollout, regular training sessions, life-skills workshops, and community engagement activities.
Quarter 3: Mid-year review, leadership activities, tournaments, and programme refinement based on performance and feedback.
Quarter 4: Final assessments, showcase events, reporting, and planning for sustainability and continuation into 2027.
Roles and Responsibilities
Neftaly will lead programme coordination, monitoring and evaluation, compliance, reporting, and stakeholder communication.
Diepsloot Arsenal will be responsible for technical football training, talent development, team management, and day-to-day participant engagement.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting
The programme will implement continuous monitoring through attendance registers, activity reports, and performance reviews. Quarterly evaluations will assess progress against objectives, with an end-of-year report capturing outcomes, challenges, lessons learned, and recommendations.
Risk Management and Safeguarding
Child protection, health, and safety are central to programme implementation. The partnership will enforce safeguarding policies, ensure adequate supervision, provide first-aid support, and implement emergency response procedures during all activities.
Expected Outcomes
By the end of 2026, the programme is expected to:
Improve football skills, discipline, and teamwork among participants.
Enhance leadership, confidence, and life-skills development.
Increase positive youth engagement and reduce exposure to social risks.
Strengthen collaboration between Neftaly, Diepsloot Arsenal, families, and the wider community.
5.8 Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom (March 2026)
Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom is an educational and developmental program designed to provide a fun, inclusive, and structured learning environment for primary (Grades 3–6) and secondary (Grades 7–11) school children. The program focuses on academic enrichment, creativity, physical wellness, and social development through interactive and age-appropriate activities.
Purpose and Goals
The program aims to enhance children’s cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development by combining education, technology, arts, sports, and teamwork. It seeks to foster creativity, critical thinking, leadership, and problem-solving skills while ensuring a safe and engaging learning space.
Key Objectives
Deliver structured educational sessions aligned with learning outcomes.
Integrate technology to improve engagement and learning.
Promote physical activity, wellness, and teamwork.
Encourage creativity through arts, music, drama, and extracurricular activities.
Build communication, leadership, and social skills.
Implementation Timeline
March 2026 (Pre-launch Phase): Curriculum finalisation, staff recruitment, infrastructure setup, material procurement, staff training, safety reviews, community outreach, and test sessions.
April 2026 (Program Launch): Commencement of classes, introduction of daily routines, delivery of academic and extracurricular activities, use of technology-based learning tools, and ongoing learner assessments.
Program Structure
Primary School Programme: Focuses on literacy, numeracy, basic science, creative arts, physical education, storytelling, introductory coding, and outdoor exploration.
Secondary School Programme: Emphasises advanced literacy, critical thinking, leadership development, STEM activities, coding and robotics, sports, public speaking, and community service.
Staffing and Management
The program is supported by qualified educators, specialised facilitators, program coordinators, health and safety officers, volunteers, and guest speakers from various professional fields.
Communication and Engagement
Regular internal staff meetings, newsletters, parent updates, and active social media engagement ensure transparency, collaboration, and community involvement.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Safety
Continuous assessment, feedback from learners and parents, and end-of-term evaluations are used to improve program quality. Strong risk management measures, health and safety protocols, and emergency response plans are in place.
Long-Term Vision
By the end of 2025, Neftaly Neftaly Kingdom aims to be a trusted educational initiative, with plans to expand participation, introduce advanced programmes, and partner with additional educational institutions.
5.9 Neftaly Events Implementation Plan 2026
The Neftaly Events Implementation Plan for 2026 provides a structured framework for the planning, coordination, and delivery of community, youth, sports, lifestyle, and promotional events throughout the year. The plan focuses on delivering high-quality, well-managed, and impactful events that support Neftaly’s objectives of community development, youth engagement, brand visibility, and social impact.
Purpose of the Events Programme
The primary purpose of Neftaly Events is to create platforms that promote participation, learning, wellness, and community cohesion. Events are designed to engage diverse audiences, provide positive social experiences, and support developmental outcomes while enhancing Neftaly’s public presence and partnerships.
Strategic Objectives
The 2026 events programme aims to:
Deliver safe, inclusive, and professionally managed events.
Promote youth participation, physical activity, and creative expression.
Strengthen partnerships with community organisations, sponsors, and stakeholders.
Increase brand visibility and community trust in Neftaly initiatives.
Create sustainable event models that can be replicated and scaled.
Key Event Categories
Community and Youth Development Events
These include youth empowerment workshops, educational activations, community dialogues, and awareness campaigns aimed at skills development and social cohesion.
Sports and Wellness Events
Events such as fitness challenges, tournaments, fun runs, and wellness days promote healthy lifestyles, teamwork, and active participation.
Creative, Cultural, and Lifestyle Events
These events provide platforms for arts, music, fashion, and cultural expression, encouraging creativity and community participation.
Promotional and Brand Activation Events
Strategic events are used to showcase Neftaly programmes, attract partners, and engage audiences through interactive brand experiences.
Implementation Approach
The implementation of Neftaly Events in 2026 follows a phased approach:
Planning and Design: Event concept development, budgeting, scheduling, risk assessments, and stakeholder engagement.
Coordination and Logistics: Venue booking, supplier management, equipment procurement, permits, security, and transport.
Programme Delivery: Event execution, facilitation, crowd management, and on-site coordination.
Post-Event Review: Evaluation, reporting, stakeholder feedback, and documentation of lessons learned.
Quarter 2: Rollout of community, youth, and sports events with ongoing monitoring.
Quarter 3: Flagship events, mid-year evaluation, and programme refinement.
Quarter 4: Major closing events, impact reporting, and planning for the following year.
Roles and Responsibilities
Neftaly Events Team: Overall planning, coordination, compliance, and reporting.
Facilitators and Event Staff: Programme delivery, participant support, and on-site management.
Partners and Sponsors: Resource support, co-branding, and technical input.
Volunteers: Event support, logistics assistance, and community mobilisation.
Monitoring, Evaluation, and Reporting
Event performance will be tracked through attendance registers, activity reports, feedback forms, media coverage, and post-event evaluations. Quarterly and annual reports will document outputs, outcomes, challenges, and improvements.
Risk Management and Compliance
The plan prioritises health, safety, and risk mitigation through crowd control measures, emergency plans, first aid services, security arrangements, and compliance with local regulations and safeguarding policies.
Expected Outcomes
By the end of 2026, Neftaly Events is expected to:
Successfully deliver multiple high-impact events across communities.
Increase youth and community participation in positive activities.
Strengthen Neftaly’s brand presence and stakeholder relationships.
Demonstrate measurable social and developmental impact.
Establish a strong foundation for sustainable and scalable event programming.
A content creator meeting was held on 29 January 2026 to engage students in a discussion about content creation, popular content creators, and the tools required to become a successful content creator. The session aimed to inspire students and provide guidance on building a content creation career.
Participants were asked to share their favourite content creators. Responses showed diverse interests:
Vutomi Ndlovu identified William M and MrBeast as preferred content creators.
Lelethu highlighted Cyan Boujee due to her role as a DJ and influencer.
Kekotso nominated himself as Lesh, noting his role as a host for ladies.
Samkelo expressed interest in horror and artist movie content.
Most students reported following TikTok and Facebook creators, particularly those producing dance, prank, and influencer content. Students indicated that they mainly follow South African creators, as they relate to them and learn skills they hope to apply in their own content creation journeys.
4. Requirements for Becoming a Content Creator
Students identified basic requirements for content creation, including:
Social media platforms
Smartphones
Internet data
Ring lights
Appropriate backgrounds
Cameras
The facilitator further emphasized the importance of:
Quality equipment such as microphones and stable recording surfaces
Proper lighting to avoid dark visuals
Developing a unique branding signature
Using video editing applications
Maintaining a clear branding identity
Understanding target audiences and content focus
5. Questions and Clarifications
A student asked whether it is possible to post and edit pictures using Google. The facilitator clarified that Google cannot be used for proper posting and editing of content.
6. Conclusion
The meeting successfully raised awareness about content creation and provided students with valuable insights into the tools, branding, and audience targeting needed to become content creators. Students showed strong interest in pursuing content creation, particularly on social media platforms such as TikTok and Facebook.
Most students indicated that they follow TikTok and Facebook content creators, particularly those who focus on dancing, pranks, and influencing. Students mostly follow creators based in South Africa, as they learn from them and aspire to become like them in the future.
The event commenced at 12:00. The facilitator, Andrice Macuacua, officially opened the session by welcoming all participants. An ice-breaker activity was conducted to encourage student participation and create an interactive learning environment.
The facilitator introduced the topic by asking students to explain what they understand by the term “entrepreneurship.” The objective of the event was clearly outlined as:
Students provided different definitions and perspectives on entrepreneurship. One key response was:
“Entrepreneurship is someone who is willing to take a risk.”
The facilitator expanded on this idea by explaining that risk-taking is a core part of entrepreneurship and is not an easy path. An example was shared of the founder of Pick n Pay, who started by selling tomatoes before growing the business into a major retail brand.
Students were encouraged to learn from mistakes and continuously improve. The facilitator also recommended watching motivational videos to understand that failure is not the end, but a learning opportunity.