Tag: Istituto Marangoni Milan

  • Punjab NGO Expo 2026: Building a Scalable NGO Ecosystem for India

    Punjab NGO Expo 2026: Building a Scalable NGO Ecosystem for India

    Ludhiana (Punjab) [India], February 09: The Punjab NGO Expo 2026, organised by CityNeeds with the District Administration, Ludhiana, as Official Partner and the Municipal Corporation as Venue Partner, concluded successfully at the Indoor Stadium, Pakhowal Road, Ludhiana, emerging as a landmark initiative in India’s evolving social sector landscape.

    Held over two days on 1st and 2nd February 2026, the Expo went beyond the conventional format of an NGO exhibition to present a working model of an integrated NGO ecosystem, bringing together government, industry, educational institutions, social clubs, religious organisations, forums, influencers, volunteers, and citizens on a single collaborative platform.

    With participation from 70 plus credible NGOs across Punjab, over 10,000 visitors, and more than 2,000 students from 40 plus schools and colleges, the Expo reflected a growing national interest in structured, transparent, and outcome-driven social engagement.

    From Charity to Systems: A New Approach

    The Punjab NGO Expo 2026 marked a shift in narrative from isolated charitable activities to ecosystem-led social development. At the centre of this approach was CityNeeds’ focus on addressing one of the most persistent challenges in the social sector. While NGOs do impactful grassroots work, many lack access to digital tools, trained manpower, and structured engagement mechanisms.

    Through the Expo, CityNeeds demonstrated how NGOs can be made findable, fundable, and functionally stronger using simple, scalable digital infrastructure combined with trained volunteer support. Rather than positioning NGOs as beneficiaries, the platform treated them as partners in a larger social value chain, supported by institutions, industry, and citizens.

    Digital Enablement as the Backbone

    A key highlight of the Expo was the emphasis on digital enablement of NGOs. CityNeeds showcased its technology-driven approach that enables NGOs to present their work through structured digital profiles, communicate transparently with donors, raise funds through organised digital channels, and report impact in a data-backed and credible manner.

    This digital-first approach resonated strongly with industry representatives and institutions seeking accountability, scalability, and trust in social engagement.

    Student-Led Volunteering: Creating the Next Generation of Social Enablers 

    One of the most distinctive features of the Punjab NGO Expo 2026 was the active integration of students from schools and colleges. Rather than limiting student participation to visits or awareness sessions, CityNeeds embedded them into a structured volunteering framework.

    Students interacted directly with NGOs, learned about real-world social challenges, and were introduced to roles such as documentation, outreach support, content creation, and community mobilisation. This approach aligns closely with the experiential learning goals outlined under the National Education Policy 2020 and creates a steady pipeline of trained youth to support local NGOs over time.

    Cross-Sector Collaboration at Scale

    The Expo underscored the importance of cross-sector collaboration in achieving sustainable social outcomes. Impact Honour Hours across both days recognised contributions from industry leaders for CSR and community development, educational institutions for experiential learning and civic engagement, social clubs and religious organisations for grassroots mobilisation, forums, and social media influencers for driving awareness and civic responsibility.

    Parallel workshops on waste management, consumer rights, child protection, volunteering, and CSR implementation translated policy discussions into practical, ground-level insights for NGOs, corporates, and citizens.

    Founder’s Perspective

    Reflecting on the broader significance of the initiative, Maneet Dewan, Founder of CityNeeds, said,

    India does not suffer from a lack of intent in the social sector; it suffers from a lack of systems. NGOs are doing commendable work, but without digital visibility, structured fundraising tools, and trained support, their impact remains limited. Through CityNeeds and platforms like the Punjab NGO Expo, our objective is to build sustainable ecosystems where NGOs, students, institutions, industry, and government work together as long-term partners in social development.

    A Replicable National Model

    Over two days, the Punjab NGO Expo 2026 demonstrated a replicable, city-level ecosystem model that can be adapted across states without heavy infrastructure or dependence on large-scale funding. By combining digital tools, student-driven volunteering, and institutional partnerships, CityNeeds positioned itself as an NGO ecosystem builder with the capability to support NGOs across India in becoming more transparent, resilient, and scalable.

     Looking Ahead

    Building on the success of the Punjab NGO Expo 2026, CityNeeds plans to expand its digital NGO tools nationally, strengthen student-integrated volunteering programs, and work closely with local administrations to create city-specific NGO ecosystems.

    The Expo reaffirmed a clear message for the social sector and policymakers alike. Sustainable impact lies not in one-time events, but in building systems that empower NGOs to grow, collaborate, and deliver measurable outcomes.

    For more information visit www.cityneeds.info

    If you object to the content of this press release, please notify us at pr.error.rectification@gmail.com. We will respond and rectify the situation within 24 hours.

  • A Significant Session with Designer Niti Singhal for IDT Students

    Surat (Gujarat) [India], June 11: “Inspiration can come from anywhere you just need to be observant around you!”

    IDT students got the opportunity to have an informative “Ask me Anything “ session with the Founder and designer of the leading sustainable brand – Twee In One and an alumna of Istituto Marangoni Milan, Ms. Niti Singhal. Her brand which is known for its ‘less is more’ mission specializes in reversible and convertible clothing for women.

    Being the creative brain behind the conceptual clothing brand, she shared the latest and greatest experiences related to the field as well as advised students on every aspect related to the fashion industry.

    Highlighting the major concerns that fashion designing is one of those industries that pollute our environment the most, Niti guided the students to generate ideas with which they can contribute towards the fashion industry and to the environment as a whole.

    People talk about going organic & follow sustainability but there is a need to add more meaning to the organic term and hence she came up with twee in one reversible clothing wherein people can have two choices with the same pair of the garment be it day to night look, office to party wear, casual to a formal look, etc.

    She urged the fashionistas that there isn’t you don’t need to shop frequently and no need to dispose them off fast and that one can repeat by simply flipping the outfits whenever required and manage for any occasion.

    Niti also advised students about their future prospects. If they want to apply for any big houses; they had to put in a lot of hard work; should be well updated about fashion trends and well versed with the brands around the globe. Moreover, one should obey the fact that no work is small and one can learn in any situation.

    The students were overwhelmed by the life mantra revealed by the renowned designer that one needs to carry a style statement that makes one comfortable.

    The Director of IDT, Ms. Ankita Goyal expressed, “IDT is grateful to Ms. Niti Singhal who took out time to share insider tips about her journey and addressed the students about the challenges in the fashion industry and how can one convert them into opportunities. IDT continuously strives to provide its students with more such edifying experiences in the near future.”