Organizations involved in Kingdom Business (or Business as Mission) are categorized into the following:
Association-based Businesses
University Centers and Departments
Foundations and Government Agencies
Investors (Venture Capitalists)
Lenders
Christian Ministries
Networking-based Organizations
Training or Mentoring-based Organizations
Association-based Businesses
Inter-University Consortium for International Social Development (IUCISD)
IUCISD, an organization of practitioners, scholars and students in the human services, seeks to develop conceptual frameworks and effective intervention strategies geared to influence local, national and international systems. It is committed to creating peaceful solutions to the problems of survival at the local, national and global levels. The IUCISD technical assistance roster links members' special expertise in international social development to agencies, governments and organizations upon request. Areas of expertise include: community and economic development, organization and program building, education and training in problem-solving processes, and monitoring of social development projects
International Christian Chamber of Commerce (ICCC)
 ICCC is a membership organization that calls for a world wide networking and mobilization of Kingdom entrepreneurs, executives, educational and government leaders into purposeful, strategic, global Kingdom initiatives. ICCC provides both member services and external services. Member services include a network of worldwide contacts, a clearing house of information, national and international conferences (provides teaching and training on Kingdom principles in business), ICCC magazine, prayer support, Christian mediation and arbitration, and advice and counseling. External services include a business lifeline outreach to non-members with businesses in trouble, support for national and international organizations, coordination of assistance to developing countries, and assistance in the job creation process in many countries.
International Economic Development Council (IEDC)
 IEDC, the nation’s largest economic development professional association is a non-profit membership organization dedicated to helping economic developers do their job more effectively and raising the profile of the profession. IEDC provides leadership and excellence in economic development for its communities, members and partners to build economically strong, sustainable communities. Its services include world-class conferences with networking opportunities, professional development, advisory services and research, legislative affairs, and providing independent feedback on operations.
Kenya Investment Trust (KIT)
 KIT seeks to reduce poverty among Kenyans through promoting access to business credit, providing business training, counseling, mentoring, lobbying and advocacy for an enabling environment and facilitating the networking of local and international businesses guided by the principles of Jesus Christ.
University Centers and Departments
Biola University, USA
 Biola University offers Business as Mission course modules.
Center for Commerce and Economic Development (McHenry County College)
 The mission of this center is to enhance the economic well being of the people of the McHenry County College district by providing leadership and collaboration in support of business, community, economic and workforce development.
Center for Economic Development (California State University, Chico)
CED has developed a world class research facility specializing in economic development, planning and community development issues. It also hosts events (workshops and conferences), creates research reports and databases, offers internships, assists small businesses, and provides specialized research and analysis services to grant writers and business owners.
Center for International Development (CID) at Harvard University
CID was established with one overriding conceptual notion: the need for cross-disciplinary approaches to the challenges of sustainable development. CID is a pillar of Harvard’s deepening commitment to the problems of international development. With major in put from CID, Harvard now runs a 2-year degree program on international development. CID also conducts research, both student and faculty-based within an overall program that addresses the core intellectual challenges of sustainable development. Research grants are provided. Further, CID conducts economic growth and development workshops.
Chalmers Center for Economic Development at Covenant College, USA
 The Chalmers Center for Economic Development is a research and training initiative of Covenant College that specializes in community economic development. The Center provides training opportunities for missionaries, church workers, non-profit organization staff, and students worldwide; consulting services to churches, mission agencies and Christian organizations; writes and disseminates training materials, has published working papers, newsletters and books on holistic, church-centered economic development programs; and educates churches and Christian agencies on strategic collaborations.
Eastern University, USA
 Eastern University offers degree programs with international economic development concentration.
The Falcone Center for Entrepreneurship at Syracuse University
 The Falcone Center for Entrepreneurship is affiliated with the department of Entrepreneurship and Emerging Enterprises at Syracuse University. The Falcone Center’s aim is the facilitation of entrepreneurial activity on the campus, in the local and regional community, and beyond. It focuses on outreach efforts, offering a portfolio of innovative programs and initiatives for various constituencies. These programs are organized into three areas: student and campus-focused initiatives, community outreach, and venture creation from emerging technologies.
Herman J. Russell, Sr. International Center for Entrepreneurship (Georgia State University)
The Russell International Center for Entrepreneurship is dedicated to improving the chances for 21st century entrepreneurs. The center has three areas of activity with approximately equal emphasis: degree programs (graduate courses in entrepreneurship), worldwide knowledge creation, and engagement in the community through the Society of Entrepreneurs.
Lang Center for Entrepreneurship (Columbia University)
The mission of the Lang Center is to instill entrepreneurial thinking in all Columbia Business School students and to create a community of business practitioners with a life-long commitment to achieving social and economic progress through entrepreneurship. Besides integrating entrepreneurship throughout the core MBA curriculum, students are also offered a comprehensive program of specialized courses, labs, workshops and funding opportunities. Also, through participation in the Mentor Network, successful entrepreneurs can help MBA students with entrepreneurial aspirations to successfully launch and manage their own ventures.
The Macquarie Christian Studies Institute, Australia
 The Macquarie Institute offers programs in marketplace theology.
Regent College, Canada
 Regent College offers marketplace ministries courses at the Marketplace Institute.
Research Valley Partnership
Founded out of Texas A & M University, the Research Valley Partnership is a network that seeks to expand businesses in order to better promote A & M and to build a database of former students with ties to corportate America.
Texas Center for Border Economic and Enterprise Development
Texas Center for Border Economic and Enterprise Development is a consortium effort between Texas A & M International University, the University of Texas Pan-American, and the University of Texas-El Paso. The center works closely with all three universities – both students and faculty – in specific community-based activities designed to foster economic development and improve the standard of living in the border region.
Von Allmen Center for Entrepreneurship (University of Kentucky)
The Von Allmen Center for Entrepreneurship offers consultation and a variety of business services (e.g., developing business plans) and networking opportunities for entrepreneurs in Central Kentucky and to alumni of the University of Kentucky.
Wheaton College, USA
 Wheaton College has a Business as Mission research focus with collaboration of missions and economics faculties.
Whitworth College, USA
 Whitworth College offers courses related to BAM through its School of Global Commerce and Management.
Foundations and Government Agencies:
Atkinson Foundation
The Atkinson Foundation funds programs that promote self-sufficiency and promotes improvement in the lives of individuals and families.
Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA)
The Canadian International Development Agency’s mandate is to support sustainable development in developing countries in order to reduce poverty and contribute to a more secure, equitable, and prosperous world. The agency's work is concentrated in the poorest countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. CIDA also supports democratic development and economic liberalization in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union and supports international efforts to reduce threats to international and Canadian security
Calvert Foundation
 Calvert Foundation is an independent non-profit dedicated to building homes, creating jobs and transforming lives. It was established as a social investment foundation to help end poverty through investment. It serves as a facility for individuals and institutions, seeking to place capital on softer terms to finance affordable homes, fund small and micro businesses and to make available essential community services. It works to provide investment capital to local partner non-profits that help people in disadvantaged communities to work themselves out of poverty. The foundation does not offer grants, but lends funds to groups that will re-lend the money to businesses, non-profits or projects in their respective communities.
Citigroup Foundation
The Citigroup Foundation aims at stimulating economic growth, increasing educational opportunities and enriching lives in Citibank's communities around the world. Working with a global network of colleagues and partners, one aspect of the foundation’s work is to make grants which support organizations that help build and strengthen communities and entrepreneurs amongst other things. Commonwealth Development Corporation (CDC) Capital for Development
CDC is the UK government’s instrument for investing in the private sector in developing economies. The CDC's mission is to generate wealth, broadly shared in emerging markets (particularly in the poorest countries) by providing capital for investment in sustainable and responsibly managed private sector businesses. Through skilled and experienced fund managers, CDC has invested US$1.6 billion in private sector businesses in their target markets. Department for International Development (DFID)
The Department for International Development promotes UK private sector trade and investment in developing countries through collaboration with businesses on individual projects. eBay Foundation
The mission of the eBay Foundation is to make investments that improve the economic and social well-being of local communities. The eBay Foundation works to fulfill its mission by collaborating with non-profit organizations and funding innovative programs primarily in micro-enterprise development. Funding is provided for several areas, including: technical assistance and training; credit and access to credit; access to markets; and economic literacy and asset development. The Eurasia Foundation
 The Eurasia Foundation is a privately managed grant making organization dedicated to funding programs that build democratic and free market institutions in the 12 New Independent States (NIS) of the former Soviet Union (i.e. Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan). Its grant making program supports innovative projects with the potential to significantly advance private enterprise development, public administration and policy and civil society.
The Ford Foundation
 Through the Economic Development unit, the Ford Foundation seeks to make durable economic improvements in the lives of the disadvantaged by coordinating efforts. It does this by supporting organizations that help businesses create employment opportunities and help low-income people acquire, develop and maintain savings, investments, businesses, homes, land and other assets. The foundation also administers Program-Related Investments (PRI), which are usually loans or loan guarantees that help meet the credit needs of organizations in low-income communities that lack capital to finance important projects.
Grameen Foundation, USA
http://www.gfusa.org/about_us/ The Grameen Foundation USA (GFUSA) is a global non-profit organization that combines microfinance (i.e. affordable capital and other financial services), new technologies, capacity building resources, and innovation to empower the world's poorest people to escape poverty. Founded in 1997, GFUSA’s global network includes 50 partners in 20 countries. The network has impacted an estimated 5.5 million lives in Asia, Africa, the Americas, and the Middle East. Hewlett-Packard http://grants.hp.com/us/programs/micro_index.htl Through the Micro-enterprise Development Program, the Hewlett-Packard supports non-profit agencies that have a primary focus on providing micro-enterprise development programs and services in underserved communities. The goal of the program is to advance economic growth in diverse, low-income communities by making such agencies more efficient through the use of technology for best micro-enterprise practices.
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB)
 Through their Social Entrepreneurship Program (SEP), IDB and the Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) finance a number of loans and grants for micro and small business development in Latin America and Caribbean countries. The MIF grants support small-scale, targeted interventions that pilot new approaches and act as a catalyst for larger reforms. Depending on the scope of the proposed project, the MIF can provide resources to both public and private sector (e.g., NGOs, industry associations, chambers of commerce, etc) organizations and intermediary institutions.
The Institute for Social Entrepreneurs
 The Institute for Social Entrepreneurs conducts seminars, workshops and consulting services for social entrepreneurs in the United States and abroad. The institute has also established a social fund, The Social Enterprise Fund, which is a private operating foundation that will be capitalized initially with $20 million in charitable contributions. The fund will provide unsecured, subordinated, mezzanine debt financing for established social enterprises, with a typical loan size of $1 million or more. The fund's mission is to accelerate the expansion of established social enterprises by providing a combination of long-term working capital and strategic guidance. John Deer Corporate Foundation The John Deere Foundation invests its resources in human services, community development, entrepreneurial programs (e.g., micro-credit programs, small business programs), educational enterprises, and cultural opportunities in Latin America (especially Brazil). Open Society Institute and Soros Foundation Network The Open Society Institute (OSI), a private operating and grant-making foundation, aims to shape public policy to promote democratic governance, human rights, and economic, legal, and social reform. Through its Economic and Business Development Program (EBD), the foundation promotes the restructuring of transitional economies, focusing on building viable market economies and providing opportunities for businesses, entrepreneurs and donors to create new jobs. The EBD supports rural and urban projects that finance small-and medium-sized businesses or non-profit organizations. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) As a development agency of the United States government, the Overseas Private Investment Corporation helps US businesses invest overseas, fosters economic development in new emerging markets, complements the private sector in managing the risks associated with foreign direct investment, and supports US foreign policy. The Pentair Foundation The mission of the Pentair Foundation is to enrich and advance the communities in which Pentair operates by funding local programs that promote education, vocational readiness, cultural understanding, self-sufficiency, and general well-being so that people in these communities benefit by its presence. The Foundation mainly focuses on education and community (including offering job training, education assistance and resources, and entrepreneurial and small business opportunities for and with economically disadvantaged individuals). Swedish Agency for International Development (SIDA) The Swedish Agency for International Development Cooperation is a government agency under the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. SIDA's goal is to contribute to making it possible for poor people to improve their living conditions. Scaife Foundation The Sarah Scaife Foundation’s grant program is primarily directed toward public policy programs that address major domestic and international issues. There are no geographical restrictions. The foundation does not make grants to individuals for any purpose or to nationally-organized fundraising groups.
US Agency for International Development (USAID)
 USAID is an independent federal government agency that supports long-term and equitable economic growth and advances US foreign policy objectives all over the world by supporting economic growth, agriculture and trade; global health; and democracy, conflict prevention and humanitarian assistance. USAID works in partnership with private voluntary organizations (PVOs), local non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and other organizations to extend the much-needed services to an expanding circle of underserved clients - especially women, the rural poor and smallholder farm families.
Lenders:
ACCION International
 ACCION International, an NGO based in Massachusetts but active throughout Latin America, is now one of the world’s leading micro-finance organizations that is dedicated to bring financial services to small businesspeople. Along with other organizations, ACCION is also involved in training, testing, research, policy advocacy and publication on key micro-finance issues. Every year, ACCION takes current and prospective donors to affiliate programs to visit some of the micro-lending institutions and delegates get to see for themselves how micro-loans can transform the lives of many. ACCION has also begun working in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Grameen Bank
 Grameen Bank (GB), founded by Professor Muhammad Yunus in 1976, reversed conventional banking practice (removed the need for collateral) and created a banking system based on mutual trust, accountability, participation and creativity. It provides credit to the poorest of the poor in rural Bangladesh. Through the Grameen Fund, GB finances small projects and micro-enterprises in the sectors of poultry, dairy and fishery, engineering workshops, agriculture, auto engineering services, handicrafts, etc. GB is also involved in venture projects (e.g., Grameen Cyber Net Limited, one of the pioneer Internet service providers in the country) with private entrepreneurs and organizations outside Grameen family.
International Finance Corporation The International Finance Corporation (IFC) is a member of the World Bank Group and promotes sustainable private sector investment in developing countries as a way to reduce poverty and improve people's lives. IFC is the largest multilateral source of loan and equity financing for private sector projects in the developing world. It promotes sustainable private sector development primarily by financing private sector projects, helping private companies to mobile financing in international financial markets and providing advice and technical assistance.
Mennonite Economic Development Association (MEDA)
 MEDA is an association of Christians in business and the professions committed to addressing human needs around the world through business-oriented economic development programs, and to applying Biblical teachings in the marketplace. As part of North American Business Development, MEDA offers business training to low income entrepreneurs who want to start or strengthen businesses through a program called ASSETS (A Service for Self-Employment Training and Support). Lending is also given in the form of micro-loans. Each year, MEDA creates or sustains about 10,000 jobs around the world.
Opportunity International (OI)
 Opportunity International provides entrepreneurs in developing countries with access to capital and business training in order to start or expand small businesses. While their strategy is to create jobs, stimulate small businesses and strengthen communities among the poor, their method is to work through indigenous partner organizations that provide small business loans, training and counsel. Their network has expanded to include 52 implementing partners affiliated in 25 developing countries and support partners in 7 developed countries.
Enterprise Development International
 Enterprise Development International provides training, technical assistance and capital to local business programs across the developing world. It does this by working through its network of faith-based partner organizations, helping build each into a local, independent, financially sustainable micro-lender. Through income-generating enterprises and its network of partner agencies, Enterprise Development International has helped create more than 250,000 jobs since its inception, and has directly benefited over 880,000 people.
World Hope International
 World Hope International is a faith-based relief and development organization alleviating suffering and injustice through education, enterprise and community health. World Hope uses a variety of tools to assist entire communities of enterprising poor people. Education training programs teach business skills to people involved in small enterprises, providing greater ability to succeed in the larger economy. Micro-loan programs are then provided to the poor who, through hard work and judicious use of credit, grow their own businesses to impact their communities in positive ways.
Christian Ministries:
Canadian Food for the Hungry International (CFHI)
 CFHI is a Christian non-profit, charitable organization committed to disaster relief and long-term sustainable development. CFHI has begun a micro-enterprise loan program to enable women to earn more income for their families through small business ventures. The women are divided into lending groups of 10 to 15 for encouragement, training and accountability. A local women’s union manages the program, which includes projects like buying a cart for door-to-door vegetable delivery, renting land to grow orchard crops, and buying pigs and ducks for breeding.
Catholic Relief Services (CRS)
 As the official international relief and development agency of the US Catholic community, CRS aids the poor and the disadvantaged by first providing direct assistance where needed and then encouraging them to help with their own development. CRS capitalizes on micro-finance to provide the self-employed poor, especially women, with access to reliable financial services. CRS, which has undertaken USAID-funded projects under the matching-grant program, concentrates its efforts on transforming profitable micro-finance programs into specialized micro-finance institutions. Its micro-finance programs have reached over 307,000 clients (of whom 84% are women) in 33 countries in Africa, Middle East, Asia, Europe, Latin American and the Caribbean.
Christian Aid
 Christian Aid is an agency of churches in the UK and Ireland, which works with ecumenical church partners and sister agencies, as well as with alliances of other faiths and secular groups, which share their passionate determination to end poverty. Christian Aid supports local organizations, which are best placed to understand local needs, and provides on-the-ground help through 16 overseas offices.
Evangelistic Commerce
 Evangelistic Commerce provides a vehicle for business owners and executives to engage internationally, and has created a network of like-minded people who encourage and inspire them to act. Evangelistic Commerce currently interacts with professors and students from over 200 universities across North America in efforts to identify and nurture these new leaders.
FARMS International
 FARMS International is a Christian ministry that serves the church by equipping families in poverty with the means for self-support. By working through the local church, FARMS provides loans, technical support for income generating projects, and spiritual training for families. It does this by establishing country programs managed and directed by national FARMS boards, providing funds to the national boards to distribute as loans, teaching for families in management skills, and recycling repaid loans to help additional families.
World Relief
 World Relief partners with local evangelical churches to bring relief to suffering people and restores hope through ministries that address poverty, disease, hunger, persecution and the effects of war and disasters. In some of the world's poorest nations, World Relief's community banking or microfinance program (rooted in the church) is helping thousands of families escape poverty's vicious cycle. More than 85,000 families are benefiting from life-changing loans, also called "life-loans".
World Vision International
 World Vision International, one of the largest Christian relief and development organizations in the world, works for the wellbeing of all people, especially children. Through emergency relief, education, health care, economic development and promotion of justice, World Vision helps communities help themselves. Micro Enterprise Development (MED), which comprises of micro-finance (loans, savings and insurance) and business development services (training, marketing and consulting) is one of World Vision's market orientated and financially self-sustaining programs.
Networking and Partnership-based Organizations:
Business Professional Network (BPN)
 BPN links Christian business people in the West with believing nationals in developing nations, nations closed to the gospel, and regions of high unemployment and poverty. This is accomplished in the developing nations through a local network consisting of a local organization that oversee essential activities, an advisory committee, and a group of godly entrepreneurs with demonstrated business skills and proven commitment to their church. In the US, BPN organizes Business Development Groups (BDPs) consisting of 8-12 men and women within a local church or a chapter of a marketplace ministry or a discipleship group.
Go Africa Safaris
 Go Africa Safaris is a for-profit Kingdom business that strives to provide excellent tours and safaris to both leisure holiday vacationers and short-term mission groups. The purpose of the business is to create many jobs for the local communities and also plough back a good part of the return on investment to the local Church.
Jubilee Action
 Jubilee Action's work includes the business partnerships concept. Jubilee Action is re-defining how charities tackle poverty by using effective business partnerships with local people, to develop significant commercial ventures that will transform poor communities.
Kingdom Business Forum (KBF)
 KBF exists to advance the concept of Kingdom business. Through KBF, investors, entrepreneurs, business professors and students, and mission leaders can come together to share information.
OPEN Net workers
 OPEN exists to upgrade, serve and facilitate tentmakers who are currently on the field working among the least reached peoples of the world. OPEN provides a network for servicing and coaching tentmakers through relationships built on trust.
Partners Worldwide
 Formerly Partners for Christian Development, Partners Worldwide is a faith-based international partnership of business and professional people who want to follow Jesus Christ in eliminating poverty and transforming lives. Their approach is to grow businesses and create jobs in areas of need through developing business partnerships, offering business mentoring and training, increasing access to capital, and advocacy.
Social Enterprise Alliance
 Social Enterprise Alliance is a membership-based organization devoted exclusively to building sustainable non-profits through earned income strategies. They accomplish this through a network connecting entrepreneurial non-profits with learning opportunities, technical assistance and resources to further their efforts. Though Social Enterprise Alliance members are predominantly non-profit practitioners and grant makers, they also include technical consultants, for-profit businesses and academics as well.
Social Venture Network (SVN)
 Social Venture Network is a non-profit network committed to transforming the way the world does business by leveraging its members’ collective strengths of leadership, knowledge and enterprise for a more just and sustainable economy. SVN promotes new models and leadership for socially and environmentally sustainable business in the 21st century. They champion this effort through initiatives, information services and forums that strengthen the community and empower their members to work together on behalf of their shared vision.
Transformational Business Network (TBN)
 TBN strives to connect people with business and entrepreneurial skills with those in desperate need of motivation and training for business in the developing world. In other words, they provide a network which any professionals and business people can join in order to effectively participate in making a real difference to the lives of the poor. TBN supports businesses or enterprises that promote social transformation, demonstrate a clear enterprise component, are self-sustaining and are able to replicate themselves. It currently supports two projects in Kenya and one in South Africa.
Training or Mentoring-based Organizations:
Advancing Churches in Missions Commitment (ACMC)
ACMC provides training and resources to equip mission pastors with Biblical understanding that business people have a calling to their workplace both locally and globally. ACMC works with mission committee and mission partners to establish BAM programs in the local Church.
Business as Mission Resource Center
 Originally started with the aim of providing Youth With A Mission (YWAM) with a place to hold resources on BAM issues, the center provides a collection of resources for all those interested in BAM. It is also home to comprehensive lists of books, articles, web links and toolboxes.
Centre for Entrepreneurship & Economic Development (CEED), USA
 CEED, USA, was introduced at the University of the Nations workshop in Seoul, Korea to provide a global network for mobilizing and equipping individuals with a call to disciple nations and extend the work of the Kingdom through the sphere of business. Besides holding training seminars for persons interested in serving restricted nations through business, CEED also offers services in entrepreneurial teams, franchising a business, micro-enterprise programs, helping people start their own businesses, employment with a multi-national firm, venture capital, mentors and coaching. Several new businesses have been launched from CEED initiatives.
Center for Entrepreneurship and Economic Development (CEED) at Montenegro
 CEED (Montenegro) aims at helping entrepreneurs in Montenegro to achieve a standard of excellence in every aspect of their business through programs, projects and activities that promote and practically implement the ideas of a free market, entrepreneurship, and private ownership in an open and democratic society based on the rule of law. CEED offers services such as consulting, economic research and advocacy, development of business associations, and corporate governance initiative.
Center for Entrepreneurship Education and Development (CEED), Canada
 CEED (Canadian-based) assists governments, organizations and communities in helping people achieve their potential through entrepreneurship. They do this by acting as a catalyst in the areas of entrepreneurship education, research and program design, professional development and community entrepreneurship. CEED offers solutions through partnerships by addressing entrepreneurship development in terms of technical assistance (project management and consulting), training, and curriculum development.
Christian Transformation Resource Centre (CTRC)
 CTRC is a non-stock, non-profit Christian foundation that seeks to see strong local churches that are self-sustaining, effectively witnessing the whole gospel. CTRC equips Christian development organizations in their task to empower members of the Church community through transformational and holistic mirco-enterprise development programs. It also carries a directory containing the names of organizations engaged in or supportive of holistic transformational development
EC Institute
EC Institute seeks to educate, equip, mobilize and connect Christian business owners, professionals and business faculty and students for business as mission. EC Institute does this through written resources, vision trips, training programs, conferences, seminars, workshops, internships and semester programs.
Fellowship of Companies for Christ International – Christ@Work
 Christ@work equips and encourages company leaders to operate their businesses and conduct their personal lives according to Biblical principles.
Global Disciples Network – Creative Access Associates
 Global Disciples Network brings together churches, mission agencies, businesses and concerned individuals to find ways for Christians to access restricted areas using economic development opportunities. It carries a categorized list of web links to country, people group and mission research information.
Global Opportunities
 Global Opportunities helps tentmakers disciple the nations. It offers free tentmakers training and articles on its site, plus tentmaking stories, news, events and other resources.
IMPACT Center
 IMPACT Center has a vision for mobilizing business people - by networking with the global body of Christ and helping people to bring societal change in the nations. It holds a yearly business seminar, with teaching and opportunities for trips.
Integra Venture
 Integra is a Central and Eastern European co-operative initiative which helps grow small businesses. They help local entrepreneurs succeed, enabling them to become agents of community transformation.
Intent
 Intent's vision is to network Kingdom professionals for global impact. Intent provides resources for kingdom professionals serving as tentmakers. It also provides a list of links to organizations and tentmaking opportunities.
International Coalition of Workplace Ministries (ICWM)
 ICWM is a network of workplace ministries with one common goal – to transform the workplace for Christ. It provides a comprehensive directory of organizations, events, articles and publications related to integrating faith in the marketplace.
Jholdas Group, Inc
 Formed out of the experiences of senior executives and CEO’s in Central Asia, Jholdas Group provides state of the art management processes that ensure stability and growth for the client companies. Jholdas comprises of a team of senior executives and CEO’s dedicated to helping businesses grow and become more profitable. They achieve this objective by combining coaching, training, planning, and implementation with years of experience to produce superior results for their client-partners.
International Development Enterprise (IDE)
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