Our Interns are Transforming Lives
Well Being Shiksha Foundation Internship helps Interns to demonstrate an understanding of different approaches to financial wellbeing working with communities and develop a sense of empathy and compassion.
I analyzed the risk profile of the respondents and the credit instruments used by them. I found out that more than 75℅ of women do not have savings accounts in any bank. -Abhijeet Shekhar, G. L Bajaj Institute of Management
I learned setting financial goals will help the difficult decisions that come with budgeting become a little bit simpler. You should define short, medium, and long-term goals and monitor your progress toward them as you create a budget. - Sailee, Institute of Public Enterprise (IPE), Shamirpet, Hyderabad
I could spread financial education to the younger generations and develop my financial knowledge. I was declared as the Best Intern of the Organization for the year 2022. I have cracked the interview with Piramal Capital and Housing Finance Limited, as a Branch Credit manager for which I am very happy. - Kompella Chandana, Institute of Public Enterprise (IPE), Shamirpet, Hyderabad
I have learned so many things like where I should spend or where I should not spend my money, and a great way to distinguish between your spending and saving is by making a budget regularly. Before this internship, I also didn’t know about RD accounts and now I have my own RD account. -Aakriti Kohli, IITM Janakpuri
I understood the difference between saving money in a piggy bank or, better investing it in some funds or recurring deposits or fixed deposit accounts. I got to know the importance of saving money through this saving campaign which was given to us as a task assigned. - Harsh Vardhan Dubey, IITM Janakpuri