Because the tallest statue on the planet, the Statue of Unity has welcomed lakhs of holiday makers since its inauguration. Roughly 25 km away from this towering presence is the quaint city of Rajpipla. Positioned close to the Narmada River, this once-princely state was the capital of the previous Kingdom of Rajpipla.
“Dwelling to a number of royal palaces, waterfalls, and wealthy cultural heritage, it is likely one of the hidden gems of Gujarat,” resident Ghanshyam Barot tells The Higher India.
To faucet into the rising tourism alternatives within the area, Ghanshyam opened ‘Rover Keep’ — a budget-friendly hostel with a rooftop kitchen within the royal city. “However sadly, many of the vacationers would solely go to the Statue of Unity and never come to Rajpipla, though the city is roughly 20 minutes drive from the place,” provides the 38-year-old.
Ghanshyam tried totally different strategies to extend the variety of visitors visiting his hostel — from creating an Instagram web page to often posting content material to attract consideration. “However nothing labored,” he says.
Practically eight months again, he got here involved with Delhi-based startup ‘Volunteer Yatra’, which helped him develop his enterprise.
“Their workforce helped us file good high quality content material utilizing drones and charming movies highlighting native tradition and meals. As well as, they embellished the property utilizing murals on partitions and artistic maps,” says Ghanshyam.
This boosted his followers from 400 to over 1,000, which in flip elevated the variety of guests visiting his hostel; thereby growing his revenue by 20 p.c. “Individuals have began discovering us on social media. Now, we welcome 60 to 70 visitors in a month, which was earlier 20 to 30,” he says.
Like different rural residents, Ghanshyam might have moved to the town for higher job alternatives, however he wished to remain within the village. And because of Volunteer Yatra, he was capable of run a thriving enterprise whereas being rooted in his village.
The Higher India obtained in contact with Aakash Maan, the co-founder of Volunteer Yatra, to know the way he’s tapping into volunteer tourism to assist small companies flourish and stop rural migration.
Aakash, primarily based in Delhi, possesses experience in advertising and marketing, filmmaking, and images. His ardour for entrepreneurship ignited throughout his faculty years, main him to enterprise into enterprise. In 2018, he made the daring determination to drop out of engineering faculty and set up his personal manufacturing firm.
“As soon as, whereas engaged on a movie on local weather change, I realised the potential hurt that forces rural communities emigrate to cities for work leaving their houses behind. After the movie was launched, I made a decision to deal with action-oriented work,” he tells The Higher India.
Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, Aakash obtained a name from a pal in Himachal that helped him realise his true calling.
“My pal used to run a homestay however this enterprise was adversely affected amid the lockdown. He was in excessive losses and didn’t even have cash to rearrange two sq. meals for his household. He requested for my assist in advertising and marketing options,” remembers Aakash.
“It took us two months to attract vacationers to his homestay. In three months, he began incomes as much as Rs 50,000 a month. He was so glad that he provided me to go to him anytime and keep so long as I wished,” he provides.
“This gave me the concept to collaborate with related small companies and supply them with the assist of expert volunteers, who in flip will get alternatives to discover offbeat locations without cost,” says Aakash.
After practically six months of analysis, Aakash alongside along with his brother Karunesh Maan and Rakshit Kumar launched Volunteer Yatra in 2021.
A win-win for volunteers and communities
Explaining how the platform works, Aakash says, “These small companies are depending on journey brokers to draw vacationers. As they can’t afford expert advertising and marketing specialists and content material creators to advertise their works, we shortlisted volunteers to deal with this hole.”
After creating the suitable advertising and marketing methods, Aakash assigns volunteers from various backgrounds to go to small enterprise house owners. “Throughout their temporary on-site journey, they help them in selling their work by means of content material creation, graphic designing, optimising social media, creating murals on partitions, connecting with proper companions, and far more,” he provides.
“Most of those volunteers are freelancers, on sabbatical, or these working from house. This additionally allows them to embark on significant journeys whereas they save on lodging and meals bills and contribute to group growth,” says Aakash.
To date, Aakash and his workforce have established a military of two,000 lively volunteers who collaborate with hosts for a interval of six months to 1 12 months. To date, these volunteers have assisted 170 hosts — largely hostels, homestays, and self-help teams — throughout the nation in states like Himachal Pradesh, Kerala, Jammu and Kashmir, Goa, and Sikkim.
One among their volunteers, Prem Suraj Tenkar moved to Rajpipla to help Ghanshyam in content material creation and optimise social media. It has been greater than 40 days since he arrived within the city.
Sharing his expertise, he tells The Higher India, “Once I got here to Rover Keep hostel, I used to be their solely visitor for the subsequent 15 days. Utilizing my cinematic and storytelling abilities, I recorded distinctive content material concerning the area to draw vacationers to Ghanshyam’s hostel. We additionally embellished domes utilizing wall murals. All of my reels have crossed greater than 40,000 views on Instagram. We at the moment are engaged on a YouTube sequence to additional appeal to vacationers.”
Whereas the enterprise noticed progress after 25 days, for Prem, this expertise has been extraordinarily enriching personally. “After working within the company sector for seven years in Bengaluru, I stop my job to journey. As a solo traveller, price range is all the time a constraint. However volunteering not solely helped me use my abilities for group growth but additionally to pursue my ardour. It was extraordinarily rewarding to discover Rajpipla on my bike and file its scenic magnificence on my GoPro and drone. I’ve explored the place greater than I used to be anticipating,” he provides.
To maintain the for-profit enterprise, Aakash expenses an annual charge of Rs 2,000 from volunteers. Whereas he expenses Rs 5,000 per 30 days from revenue-generating companies, he claims to take no charge from non-profits and low-income companies akin to Ghanshyam’s.
“As an entrepreneur, usually I’m the final individual to attract a wage or typically I don’t receives a commission for months. It’s powerful. However our purpose is to develop stronger and hold going with each impactful mission that we do,” he shares.
Speaking about making a constructive distinction by means of volunteer tourism, Aakash says, “Volunteer Yatra is far more than a volunteering platform. We, as a workforce, have solved the organisational issues of our hosts in probably the most inexpensive approach. One among our hosts might pay for his son’s tuition charge as his enterprise took off after connecting with us,”
“Now we have skilled so many tales already, with many extra to come back,” remarks Aakash.
(Edited by Pranita Bhat; All photographs: Volunteer Yatra)