Tag: Minutes

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  • SayProCSPR Daily Planning Meeting Minutes on the 6th March 2026


    Date: 06 March 2026
    Location: Online
    Facilitator: Miss Mdaka

    Attendees:

    • Miss Mdaka
    • Miss Mamabolo
    • Miss Talana
    • Mr Barker

    1. Opening

    Miss Mdaka opened the meeting, welcoming all attendees and outlining the purpose of the daily planning session. The primary focus was to confirm the tasks for the day and ensure proper task allocation.


    2. Confirmation of Tasks

    Each attendee confirmed that they had tasks assigned for the day and were ready to proceed with their responsibilities.

    • Miss Mamabolo, Miss Talana, Mr Barker: Confirmed tasks for the day were received and understood.
    • Miss Mdaka: Noted attendees without tasks and assigned relevant tasks to ensure full coverage of daily objectives.

    3. Task Assignment by Facilitator

    Miss Mdaka assigned tasks to those attendees who did not initially have tasks, ensuring that all responsibilities for the day were allocated efficiently.


    4. Additional Notes

    • Attendees confirmed that their SayProCSPR websites were functioning or noted any issues as needed.
    • Emphasis was placed on collaboration and communication throughout the day to ensure smooth workflow.

    5. Closing

    Miss Mdaka closed the meeting, thanking all attendees for their participation and confirming that all tasks were properly assigned and understood

    Minutes Prepared by: Miss Mdaka


  • SAYPROCDR & SCHAR Meeting Minutes: System Development Learnership Updates

    Date: 02 March 2026Time: 09:30 – 10:00


    1. Attendance

    • Linah Ralepelle – Development Manager
    • Ntshuxeko Shihangu – Development Administrator
    • Daniel Makano – Advice Desk Officer
    • Manoko Ditsoabane – Development Specialist

    2. Purpose of the Meeting

    To discuss the status and way forward regarding the System Development Learnership students following the conclusion of their formal learnership period and the current financial year considerations.


    3. Background

    • The System Development Learnership officially ended on 31 August 2025.
    • Learners continued their activities until December 2025.
    • On 06 January 2026, a communication ticket was issued indicating that all individuals who had not received payment were required to pause their work.
    • Learners were informed that they had to decide whether to:
      • Pause their participation until funding/payment issues were resolved, or
      • Continue working despite the possibility of not receiving payment.

    As the organisation approaches the end of the financial year, clarity is required on whether the learners should continue.


    4. Discussion

    • The financial sustainability of continuing the learners was discussed.
    • The importance of ensuring that any continuation aligns with organisational budget constraints and delivers measurable value was emphasized.
    • It was noted that learners should not continue under uncertain financial conditions without clear agreement and understanding of the implications.

    5. Resolution / Way Forward

    1. The organisation will formally engage the learnership students to determine their willingness to continue.
    2. Learners who wish to continue must:
      • Confirm their willingness in writing.
      • Understand and accept the financial implications.
      • Ensure their continued involvement makes economic and operational sense to the organisation.
    3. If learners are not willing to continue under the outlined conditions, the organisation will proceed with formally concluding their participation.

    6. Action Items

    Action ItemResponsible PersonTimeline
    Draft and send communication to learners requesting confirmation of continuationDevelopment Manager & Development AdministratorWithin 3 working days
    Review financial implications and budget availabilityDevelopment ManagerBefore financial year-end
    Prepare formal exit process (if required)Development SpecialistUpon final decision

    Meeting Adjourned: 10:00

    Minutes Prepared by:
    Manoko Ditsoabane
    Development Specialist


  • MINUTES OF CLIENT CALLS

    Date: 24 February 2026
    Purpose: Inviting clients to come and fill the Army Post

    1. Minutes written by:
      Manoko Irene Ditsoabane
    2. Objective

    To contact listed clients and invite them to visit the Centre to complete Army Post application forms.

    1. Client Feedback Summary

    Client Name Feedback / Outcome
    Mahuwa Gadifeli Pricalia Does not qualify
    Malatji Alpha Kagiso Will visit the Centre
    Musina Miqwel Voicemail left
    Rapao Noluthando Tshwarelo Will come within an hour
    Rolomani Amahle Will come tomorrow
    Sebake Nonkululeko Both numbers not available
    Makobe Anitha Madigwe Will come before Friday
    Motlhaolwa Rethabile Lisbeth Voicemail left
    Mbhele Sibongile Will visit the Centre before Friday
    Marakalla Tebogo Will come before Friday
    Kwinda Munaka Angel Phone rang, no answer
    Mavundla Zanele Mutilda Will visit the Centre before Friday
    Ntshekang Tsholofelo Lucia Will come tomorrow
    Ncube Zethu Megan Phone rang, no answer

    1. Summary of Outcomes

    Confirmed to Visit (Today/Tomorrow/Before Friday): 8 Clients

    Voicemail / No Answer: 4 Clients

    Not Available (Numbers unreachable): 1 Client

    Does Not Qualify: 1 Client

    1. Action Plan

    Follow up with clients who did not answer or where voicemail was left.

    Prepare documentation for clients who confirmed their visit.

    Monitor attendance of clients who committed to visiting before Friday.

  • NeftalyCSPR Daily Planning Meeting Minutes for the 29th of January 2026

    NeftalyCSPR Daily Planning Meeting Minutes for the 29th of January 2026

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    Date: 29 January 2026
    Meeting Type: Daily Planning Meeting
    Royal: NeftalyCSPR

    Attendees:


    1. Opening and Confirmation of Daily Tasks

    Miss Mdaka opened the meeting and requested confirmation that each NeftalyCSPR Human Capital member has clear tasks allocated for the day. All members acknowledged their daily responsibilities and confirmed that they understand their assigned duties.

    2. Challenges Raised

    The team raised a concern regarding technical issues. Members reported that the Neftaly websites are not opening on their respective sites, which is affecting their ability to access information and complete certain tasks.

    3. Guidance and Way Forward

    Miss Mdaka encouraged all Human Capital members to:

    Members agreed to review their links and provide feedback if the problem continues.

    4. Closing

    The meeting concluded with a reminder from Miss Mdaka for all members to remain proactive, ensure accountability in daily reporting and communicate any challenges early.


    Minutes prepared by:
    Nancy Mdaka
    NeftalyCSPR

  • NeftalyCDR meeting minutes  Neftaly Q4 implentation plan

    NeftalyCDR meeting minutes  Neftaly Q4 implentation plan

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    SAYPRO – MEETING MINUTES

    Song led by: Ntshuxeko Shihangu
    Prayer by: Daniel Makano

    Meeting Title: Neftaly Q4 implentation plan and Meeting
    Meeting Type: Monthly
    Date: 16 February 2026
    Time: 14:00 – 17:00
    Venue / Platform: Neftaly Office / Development Boardroom
    Meeting Code: NeftalyP000-5-11-1-1-NeftalyCDR
    Prepared By: Linah Ralepelle
    Facilitator / Chairperson: Linah Ralepelle

    1. Attendance Register

    No.Name & SurnamePositionDepartment / CampusPresentApologyAbsent
    1Linah RalepelleNeftaly Chief Development OfficerNeftalyCDR
    2Ntshuxeko ShihanguNeftaly Development ManagerNeftalyCDR
    3Daniel MakanoNeftaly Advise Desk OfficerNeftalyCDR
    4Manoko DitsoabaneNeftaly Development SpecialistNeftalyCDR
    5Andrice Macuacua

    2. Agenda Items

    Opening & Welcome

    Attendance Confirmation

    Adoption of Previous Minutes

    Matters Arising

    Reports (Monthly Focus Groups & Quarterly Planning)

    New Business

    Action Items Review

    Decisions & Recommendations

    Announcements

    Next Meeting

    Closure

    3. Opening & Welcome

    The meeting was opened by Linah Ralepelle at 14:00.

    The purpose of the meeting was to discuss the implementation of Neftaly Monthly Focus Groups and Quarterly Project Planning under Neftaly Development Royalty.

    4. Confirmation of Previous Minutes

    Previous minutes dated February 2026 were:
    ☑ Adopted without corrections

    5. Matters Arising

    No.Matter ArisingDiscussion SummaryStatus
    1Community Data CollectionData collection tools were reviewed and aligned with focus group objectives.Closed
    2Stakeholder EngagementList of local leaders and stakeholders to be finalized.Open

    6. Reports Presented

    6.1 Neftaly Monthly Focus Groups (NeftalyCDR-1-1)

    Summary:

    The team discussed organizing monthly focus groups to gather qualitative data from community members. The aim is to understand:

    Skills gaps

    Work readiness levels

    Small business support needs

    Employment opportunities

    The focus groups will help NeftalyCDR register and enrol individuals who do not have qualifications and place them in relevant courses and job opportunities.

    6.2 Monthly Data Analysis

    Survey and focus group data will be analysed monthly. The analysis will help:

    Identify unemployed youth

    Register businesses that are not yet formally registered

    Align course enrolment numbers with placement targets

    Target: Place 30 youth per month into opportunities.

    6.3 Monthly Community Interviews

    The team will:

    Collect a list of local leaders and stakeholders

    Set appointments for interviews

    Gather insights on community benefits, advantages, and challenges

    This will assist in prioritizing development needs.

    6.4 Monthly Needs Prioritization (NeftalyCDR-1-4)

    NeftalyCDR will prioritise urgent needs identified by leaders and community members. Support will include:

    Business registration assistance

    Basic business understanding courses

    Capacity building workshops

    6.5 Quarterly Project Planning & Management (NeftalyCDR-2)

    Monthly Project Design (2-1)

    Projects identified:

    Courses Enrolment Project

    Business Registration Project

    NGO Capacity Building Workshop

    Community Awareness Campaign

    Objectives include:

    Placement of 30 youth per month

    Registration of informal businesses

    Business management workshops

    Using awareness campaigns to collect community needs

    Monthly Budgeting – Zero Budget Planning (2-2)

    The meeting agreed to implement a Zero Budget Approach, meaning projects will run without direct funding.

    Purpose:

    Deliver impact without financial cost

    Maximise available resources

    Promote partnerships

    Encourage community participation

    Implementation Strategy:

    Use volunteers and local partnerships

    Use donated venues and materials

    Mobilise youth groups and faith-based organisations

    Conduct skills-sharing workshops and awareness campaigns

    Monitoring Measures:

    Attendance registers

    Activity reports

    Documentation of donated resources

    Monthly Resource Allocation (2-3)

    Resources to be used:

    Laptops

    Telephone

    Network/Internet

    Projector

    Printer

    For capacity building, participants will bring their own devices where possible. Internet access will be provided by Neftaly.

    Monthly Timeline Development (2-4)

    The team agreed to

    Develop monthly milestones

    Align focus groups with project planning

    Review progress at each monthly meeting

    7. New Business

    No.New ItemDiscussion SummaryResponsible PersonDeadline
    1Youth Placement TrackingDevelop tracking system for 30 youth monthly placementDevelopment ManagerEnd of February 2026
    2Stakeholder DatabaseCreate digital database of leaders and businessesDevelopment Specialist25 February 2026

    8. Decisions & Resolutions

    Monthly focus groups to start immediately.

    Placement target of 30 youth per month approved.

    Zero budget planning model adopted.

    Quarterly projects aligned with Neftaly Development Royalty objectives.

    9. Action Items

    No.Action ItemResponsibleDeadlineStatusNotes
    1Finalise stakeholder listDaniel Makano20 Feb 2026OpenSchedule interviews
    2Prepare focus group scheduleNtshuxeko Shihangu18 Feb 2026OpenMonthly plan
    3Develop youth placement trackerManoko DitsoabaneEnd Feb 2026OpenAlign with enrolment

    10. Announcements

    Emphasis on teamwork and accountability.

    All reports must be submitted monthly for review.

    11. Next Meeting

    Date: 17 March 2026

    Time: 14:00

    Venue / Platform: Neftaly Office

    Proposed Agenda Items:

    Focus Group Feedback Review

    Youth Placement Progress

    Business Registration Update

    12. Closure

    Meeting adjourned at 17:00 PM.

    Closing remarks by Linah Ralepelle, encouraging commitment to community impact and structured implementation.

    My message shall end here

    Linah Ralepelle | Development Manager | Neftaly

  • SAYPRO CDR – ECONOMIC SENSE MEETING MINUTES

    Date: 10 February 2026
    Venue: DYP

    1. Opening

    The meeting commenced with an opening song led by Ntshuxeko Shihangu, followed by an opening prayer by Daniel Makano.

    1. Attendance

    The following members were present:

    Linah Ralepelle – Chairperson

    Ntshuxeko Shihangu – SayPro Development Manager

    Andries Macuacua – SayPro Development Officer

    Daniel Makano – SayPro Development Specialist

    Manoko Ditsoabane – SayPro Development Specialist

    1. Chairperson

    The meeting was chaired by Linah Ralepelle.

    1. Purpose of the Meeting

    The purpose of the meeting was to discuss and explore income-generating services under the SayPro CDR Economic Sense initiative.

    1. Proposed Income-Generating Activities

    The following business activities were discussed:

    Internet Café

    Provision of internet access and related services to the community.

    Potential additional services: printing, photocopying, scanning, and computer training.

    Car Wash

    Establishment of a car wash service to generate sustainable income.

    Discussion included location, equipment requirements, and staffing.

    Security Training

    Offering accredited security training programs.

    Targeting unemployed youth and community members seeking certification.

    Office Rental

    Rental of office space to small businesses and entrepreneurs.

    Consideration of flexible leasing terms.

    Gown Rental

    Rental of academic and ceremonial gowns for graduations and special occasions.

    Potential partnership with local institutions.

    1. Roles and Responsibilities

    The following roles were acknowledged in support of the initiative:

    Ntshuxeko Shihangu – Oversight and strategic management.

    Andries Macuacua – Development coordination and implementation support.

    Daniel Makano – Program development and compliance support.

    Manoko Ditsoabane – Technical and development advisory support.

    Linah Ralepelle – Leadership and governance oversight.

    1. Way Forward

    Conduct feasibility studies for each proposed activity.

    Develop business plans and budgets.

    Identify potential funding sources and partnerships.

    Allocate responsibilities and timelines at the next meeting.

    1. Closure

    There being no further business, the meeting was adjourned with appreciation to all members for their participation and contributions.

    Minutes Prepared By: Manoko Ditsoabane
    Date: 10 February 2026

  • Minutes of the SayPro Human Capital Mapping Meeting – SayProCDR (SayProP0005)

    To the Chairperson of Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Mr. Clifford Legodi, all Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Members, SayPro Royal Chiefs and all SayPro Human Capital.

    Kgotso a ebe le lena.

    Presentation by: SayProCER – Mr. Neftaly Malatjie
    Date: 09 February 2026

    1. Attendance

    Mr. Neftaly Malatjie (SayProCER)

    Mr. Clifford Legodi (SayProCOR)

    Ms. Tsakani Rikhotso (SayProCLMR)

    Mr. Mpitlela (Executive Manager)

    Ms. Patricia Tsebe (SayProCRR)

    Ms. Linah Ralepelle (SayProCDR)

    Ms. Ntshuxeko Shihangu (SayProCDR)

    Mr. Daniel Makano (SayProCDR)

    Mr. Andrice Macuacua (SayProCDR)

    Ms. Manoko Ditsoabane (SayProCDR)

    All members were present and the meeting was duly constituted.

    1. Opening and Welcome

    The meeting commenced with a song led by Ms. Linah Ralepelle, followed by an opening prayer led by Mr. Clifford Legodi.

    Mr. Neftaly Malatjie welcomed all attendees and stated that the purpose of the meeting was to provide strategic direction to SayProCDR, ensure alignment with the Annual Implementation Plan, clarify responsibilities, and strengthen coordination across all program sectors for the 2026–2031 cycle.

    He emphasized accountability, measurable outcomes, and alignment with SayPro’s institutional mandate.

    1. Strategic Context and Alignment
      3.1 SayProCDR Mapping and Alignment

    Mr. Malatjie presented a detailed overview of SayProCDR structural mapping. The following key points were discussed:

    Review of Human Capital requirements, including staffing capacity, reporting lines, and performance management.

    Clarification of administrative responsibilities within SayProCDR to avoid duplication and ensure efficiency.

    Alignment of departmental outputs with the Annual Implementation Plan.

    Final review integration with the Plan Arsenal Framework to ensure operational consistency.

    Evaluation of planned 2024 activities to identify gaps, lessons learned, and areas requiring improvement.

    He emphasized that mapping must reflect:

    Clear deliverables per official.

    Defined quarterly targets.

    Budget-linked outputs.

    Evidence-based reporting.

    1. Policy Agenda and Institutional Framework
      4.1 Staff.SayPro.Online (SayPro0005-11-1-1 Activity)

    Responsibility assigned to SayProCDR for coordination and compliance.

    Digital tracking and documentation to be implemented.

    All staff participation and monitoring to align with policy standards.

    4.2 Community Development

    The following structured approach was confirmed:

    Conducting Needs Assessments (1.1) at community level.

    Development of Quarterly Project Plans informed by community data.

    Strengthened community engagement strategy, including stakeholder meetings and feedback sessions.

    All initiatives must comply with SayPro policies and governance requirements.

    Mr. Malatjie stressed that community development must be data-driven and impact-focused.

    1. Quarterly Program Implementation Framework

    Each program area was discussed in detail as follows:

    a. Capacity Building & Training

    Skills development workshops.

    Leadership development sessions.

    Institutional strengthening programs.

    Compliance with organizational training standards.

    Monitoring tools and attendance registers must support all activities.

    b. Infrastructure Development

    Assessment of community infrastructure needs.

    Support for improvement of sports grounds, training centers, and community facilities.

    Coordination with strategic partners for sustainability.

    c. Economic Development (5.11.1.1)

    Inclusion of entrepreneurs in SayPro-listed programs.

    Enterprise support initiatives.

    Business exposure opportunities.

    Economic participation tracking.

    Economic development must contribute to youth empowerment and income generation.

    d. Social Services & Support

    Programs to include:

    Wellness awareness campaigns.

    Educational assistance and academic monitoring.

    Computer literacy program (“Mouses”).

    Foodbank coordination and distribution.

    Counseling and psychosocial support services.

    Underperformance in education-related initiatives will trigger corrective action.

    e. Environmental Sustainability

    Environmental awareness campaigns.

    Community clean-up initiatives.

    Sustainable development advocacy.

    Integration of environmental education into youth programs.

    f. Cultural & Recreational Activities

    Monthly cultural festivals.

    Performing arts events.

    Exhibitions and historical preservation initiatives.

    Recreation programs targeting youth participation.

    These activities aim to strengthen social cohesion and community identity.

    g. Safety & Emergency Preparedness

    Safety awareness programs conducted in-house.

    School-based emergency preparedness initiatives.

    Risk mitigation and compliance training.

    Documentation of safety protocols was emphasized.

    h. Volunteerism & Civic Engagement (Indicator 11.4)

    Volunteer recruitment and coordination.

    Recognition and award programs.

    Civic participation initiatives.

    Structured monitoring of volunteer impact.

    1. Strategic Partnerships (Quarterly Review)

    Clarification of responsibilities between Office 1 and Office 2.

    Strengthening collaboration with institutional and community partners.

    Quarterly performance reviews to assess partnership contributions.

    Five-Year Strategic Plan (2026–2031)

    The long-term strategy was discussed in detail.

    Primary Target:
    Reach 500,000 participants in soccer and recreational programs by 2031.

    Planned implementation includes:

    Monthly match scheduling.

    Structured participant registration system.

    Tournament planning and coordination.

    Corekeeping and compliance monitoring.

    Award ceremonies and recognition events.

    The strategic plan requires consistent growth year-on-year.

    1. Culinary Activities, Innovation & Youth Mobilization

    Programs to include:

    Business Plan Competitions.

    Science and Technology Contests.

    Engineering and Robotics Initiatives.

    Culinary competitions promoting entrepreneurship.

    Office 2 will lead youth mobilization, stakeholder engagement, and relationship building.

    1. Technology & Digital Marketing

    Implementation of digital performance monitoring systems.

    Strengthening online visibility and program documentation.

    Tracking participant data and indicator performance.

    Immediate implementation of FY27 target of 10,000 participants.

    Long-term planning aligned to FY26–2031 projections.

    Digital tools will support accountability and transparency.

    1. Reporting, Monitoring & Compliance

    Mr. Malatjie emphasized:

    All reports must reflect measurable progress against approved indicators.

    Quarterly reporting deadlines must be strictly adhered to.

    Collaboration with Chiefs and cross-departmental coordination is mandatory.

    Proper mapping and timely submission of implementation requests required.

    Evidence-based documentation to support every activity.

    Performance reviews will be conducted quarterly.

    1. Key Resolutions

    Immediate implementation of the 2026–2031 strategic framework.

    Alignment of all SayProCDR programs with policy and reporting standards.

    Strengthened quarterly monitoring and evaluation mechanisms.

    Digital tracking and compliance under Staff.SayPro.Online activity.

    Clear accountability per program lead and office structure.

    1. Closing

    Mr. Malatjie reinforced the mandate of the Five-Year Development Plan and emphasized urgency, discipline, and measurable impact.

    Implementation begins immediately, with structured quarterly reviews across all sectors.

    The meeting concluded with a commitment from all members to execute responsibilities diligently and in alignment with SayPro’s institutional vision.

    My message shall end here

    Linah Ralepelle | SayProCDR | SayPro

  • Minutes of the SayPro Human Capital Mapping Meeting – SayProCDR (SayProP0005)


    To the Chairperson of Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Mr. Clifford Legodi, all Neftaly Kingdom Royal Committee Members, SayPro Royal Chiefs and all SayPro Human Capital.

    Kgotso a ebe le lena.

    Presentation by: SayProCER – Mr. Neftaly Malatjie
    Date: 09 February 2026

    1. Attendance

    Mr. Neftaly Malatjie (SayProCER)

    Mr. Clifford Legodi (SayProCOR)

    Ms. Tsakani Rikhotso (SayProCLMR)

    Mr. Mpitlela (Executive Manager)

    Ms. Patricia Tsebe (SayProCRR)

    Ms. Linah Ralepelle (SayProCDR)

    Ms. Ntshuxeko Shihangu (SayProCDR)

    Mr. Daniel Makano (SayProCDR)

    Mr. Andrice Macuacua (SayProCDR)

    Ms. Manoko Ditsoabane (SayProCDR)

    All members were present and the meeting was duly constituted.

    1. Opening and Welcome

    The meeting commenced with a song led by Ms. Linah Ralepelle, followed by an opening prayer led by Mr. Clifford Legodi.

    Mr. Neftaly Malatjie welcomed all attendees and stated that the purpose of the meeting was to provide strategic direction to SayProCDR, ensure alignment with the Annual Implementation Plan, clarify responsibilities, and strengthen coordination across all program sectors for the 2026–2031 cycle.

    He emphasized accountability, measurable outcomes, and alignment with SayPro’s institutional mandate.

    1. Strategic Context and Alignment
      3.1 SayProCDR Mapping and Alignment

    Mr. Malatjie presented a detailed overview of SayProCDR structural mapping. The following key points were discussed:

    Review of Human Capital requirements, including staffing capacity, reporting lines, and performance management.

    Clarification of administrative responsibilities within SayProCDR to avoid duplication and ensure efficiency.

    Alignment of departmental outputs with the Annual Implementation Plan.

    Final review integration with the Plan Arsenal Framework to ensure operational consistency.

    Evaluation of planned 2024 activities to identify gaps, lessons learned, and areas requiring improvement.

    He emphasized that mapping must reflect:

    Clear deliverables per official.

    Defined quarterly targets.

    Budget-linked outputs.

    Evidence-based reporting.

    1. Policy Agenda and Institutional Framework
      4.1 Staff.SayPro.Online (SayPro0005-11-1-1 Activity)

    Responsibility assigned to SayProCDR for coordination and compliance.

    Digital tracking and documentation to be implemented.

    All staff participation and monitoring to align with policy standards.

    4.2 Community Development

    The following structured approach was confirmed:

    Conducting Needs Assessments (1.1) at community level.

    Development of Quarterly Project Plans informed by community data.

    Strengthened community engagement strategy, including stakeholder meetings and feedback sessions.

    All initiatives must comply with SayPro policies and governance requirements.

    Mr. Malatjie stressed that community development must be data-driven and impact-focused.

    1. Quarterly Program Implementation Framework

    Each program area was discussed in detail as follows:

    a. Capacity Building & Training

    Skills development workshops.

    Leadership development sessions.

    Institutional strengthening programs.

    Compliance with organizational training standards.

    Monitoring tools and attendance registers must support all activities.

    b. Infrastructure Development

    Assessment of community infrastructure needs.

    Support for improvement of sports grounds, training centers, and community facilities.

    Coordination with strategic partners for sustainability.

    c. Economic Development (5.11.1.1)

    Inclusion of entrepreneurs in SayPro-listed programs.

    Enterprise support initiatives.

    Business exposure opportunities.

    Economic participation tracking.

    Economic development must contribute to youth empowerment and income generation.

    d. Social Services & Support

    Programs to include:

    Wellness awareness campaigns.

    Educational assistance and academic monitoring.

    Computer literacy program (“Mouses”).

    Foodbank coordination and distribution.

    Counseling and psychosocial support services.

    Underperformance in education-related initiatives will trigger corrective action.

    e. Environmental Sustainability

    Environmental awareness campaigns.

    Community clean-up initiatives.

    Sustainable development advocacy.

    Integration of environmental education into youth programs.

    f. Cultural & Recreational Activities

    Monthly cultural festivals.

    Performing arts events.

    Exhibitions and historical preservation initiatives.

    Recreation programs targeting youth participation.

    These activities aim to strengthen social cohesion and community identity.

    g. Safety & Emergency Preparedness

    Safety awareness programs conducted in-house.

    School-based emergency preparedness initiatives.

    Risk mitigation and compliance training.

    Documentation of safety protocols was emphasized.

    h. Volunteerism & Civic Engagement (Indicator 11.4)

    Volunteer recruitment and coordination.

    Recognition and award programs.

    Civic participation initiatives.

    Structured monitoring of volunteer impact.

    1. Strategic Partnerships (Quarterly Review)

    Clarification of responsibilities between Office 1 and Office 2.

    Strengthening collaboration with institutional and community partners.

    Quarterly performance reviews to assess partnership contributions.

    Five-Year Strategic Plan (2026–2031)

    The long-term strategy was discussed in detail.

    Primary Target:
    Reach 500,000 participants in soccer and recreational programs by 2031.

    Planned implementation includes:

    Monthly match scheduling.

    Structured participant registration system.

    Tournament planning and coordination.

    Corekeeping and compliance monitoring.

    Award ceremonies and recognition events.

    The strategic plan requires consistent growth year-on-year.

    1. Culinary Activities, Innovation & Youth Mobilization

    Programs to include:

    Business Plan Competitions.

    Science and Technology Contests.

    Engineering and Robotics Initiatives.

    Culinary competitions promoting entrepreneurship.

    Office 2 will lead youth mobilization, stakeholder engagement, and relationship building.

    1. Technology & Digital Marketing

    Implementation of digital performance monitoring systems.

    Strengthening online visibility and program documentation.

    Tracking participant data and indicator performance.

    Immediate implementation of FY27 target of 10,000 participants.

    Long-term planning aligned to FY26–2031 projections.

    Digital tools will support accountability and transparency.

    1. Reporting, Monitoring & Compliance

    Mr. Malatjie emphasized:

    All reports must reflect measurable progress against approved indicators.

    Quarterly reporting deadlines must be strictly adhered to.

    Collaboration with Chiefs and cross-departmental coordination is mandatory.

    Proper mapping and timely submission of implementation requests required.

    Evidence-based documentation to support every activity.

    Performance reviews will be conducted quarterly.

    1. Key Resolutions

    Immediate implementation of the 2026–2031 strategic framework.

    Alignment of all SayProCDR programs with policy and reporting standards.

    Strengthened quarterly monitoring and evaluation mechanisms.

    Digital tracking and compliance under Staff.SayPro.Online activity.

    Clear accountability per program lead and office structure.

    1. Closing

    Mr. Malatjie reinforced the mandate of the Five-Year Development Plan and emphasized urgency, discipline, and measurable impact.

    Implementation begins immediately, with structured quarterly reviews across all sectors.

    The meeting concluded with a commitment from all members to execute responsibilities diligently and in alignment with SayPro’s institutional vision.

    My message shall end here

    Linah Ralepelle | SayProCDR | SayPro

  • SayProCDR – Writing Meeting Minutes Training Agenda – 10 February 2026

    Training Agenda: Writing Effective Meeting Minutes
    Audience: Executive Manager

    Facilitator: Linah Ralepelle Chief Development Officer
    Duration: 1 hours

    Welcome and purpose of training

    • Why minutes are important

    What meeting minutes are

    • What to write down main points
    • What not to write down

    Basic parts of minutes

    • Date, time, venue
    • Attendances and Apologies
    • Agenda items
    • Decisions made
    • Action points (who does what)
    • Review previous meeting minutes if possible

    How to listen and take notes

    • Listening for key points
    • Writing clearly and simply

    Practice session

    • Questions and solution session for participates
    • Do not add information which wasn’t mentioned

    Review and feedback

    • Correct mistakes
    • Improve clarity
    • Give your senior to review the meeting minutes before you publish it

    Next steps

    • Publish your approve minutes to your SayPro websites
    • Send links for approval