Mission: Possible – Innovating for the World’s Most Marginalized
Description:
Mission: Possible – Innovating for the World’s Most Marginalized examines social innovations at the intersection of technology, policy, and community action. Each episode features in-depth conversations with experts and innovators tackling systemic challenges in low-income and underserved contexts—from water access and financial inclusion to climate adaptation and digital public goods.
The podcast highlights not only what works, but why it works: unpacking business models, behavioral insights, design principles, and research evidence behind scalable social impact.
Designed for practitioners, researchers, students, and curious global citizens, this podcast translates complex development challenges into practical lessons for building a more equitable world.
Key content:
Innovation, Inclusion, Equity, Resilience, Poverty, Community, Empowerment, Impact, Justice, base of the pyramid, transformative services
Mission: Possible – Innovating for the World’s Most Marginalized
#47 Project Shakti: How Unilever Built a Rural Distribution Network by Empowering Women
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Description
In this episode, we explore Project Shakti, one of the most influential inclusive business initiatives ever launched by Unilever. What began in rural India in 2001 as an experiment in last-mile distribution has grown into a massive network of women micro-entrepreneurs—transforming both how products reach remote villages and how economic power is shared.
Facing stagnation in urban markets and the challenge of reaching hundreds of thousands of underserved villages, Unilever partnered with women’s self-help groups to create a new model: train and support rural women—known as Shakti Ammas—to become local distributors of everyday consumer goods. The result was a win-win system that expanded Unilever’s market reach while generating income, confidence, and social standing for women who previously had few economic opportunities.
The episode unpacks how Project Shakti works on the ground, from training and micro-entrepreneurship to digital tools and family-based distribution models. We also examine its scale—now involving hundreds of thousands of women across India and beyond—and its broader impact on gender norms, household incomes, health awareness, and rural development.
More than a distribution strategy, Project Shakti is a powerful case study in how large corporations can align commercial growth with social impact, showing that empowering communities can be a core business strategy—not just a CSR add-on.
Key words
Unilever, Project Shakti, inclusive business, rural distribution, women empowerment, micro-entrepreneurship, last-mile delivery, India rural markets, FMCG strategy, self-help groups, gender equity, shared value, emerging markets.