Sports Journalist, Kass Naidoo, founder of the gsport4girls initiative is dedicated to ensuring that sportswomen receive the exposure they need and making their brands more commercially viable, in an effort to help them make a living out of sport.
âWomenâs sport needs to turn fully professional for us to truly claim that we are succeeding. For now, everyone is doing their best to play their part in changing the game, but until there is a strong commercial structure around womenâs sport, telling positive stories alone will only change so much,â said Naidoo.
The initiative focuses on sharing the stories of sportswomen in South Africa, from emerging stars to established professionals whilst honouring them at the gsport awards every year. According to Naidoo,The gsport initiative was founded to tell the untold story of women in sport but gsport goes beyond that and supports emerging and disadvantaged sportswomen through consistent media coverage. “This
Articles and blog posts are shared on the interactive website. Sportswomen can sign up to become members on the site.âThe membership allows members to use free gsport online tools to build their brand by blogging and promoting their athletic and/or professional achievements, to update the womenâs sport calendar with women-in-sport calendar events and to post free adverts to promote their brands and women-in-sport business opportunities in the gsport classifieds,â Naidoo explained.
The organisation also focuses on job creation and skills development. âThis year, gsportâs big focus is job creation. The initiative will ensure that members benefit directly from the 2020 Momentum gsport Awards campaign, by providing awards campaign-related services in the form of short-term work opportunities,â added Naidoo.
The first gsport member to benefit is Lonwabo Miso-Nkohla, who was appointed on 1 July as the awards campaignâs sub-editor.âIt is such an honour to be part of gsport. I applied because I was looking for an opportunity in sport that would help me grow in my career. I hope to do my bit for the young girl who is fighting to be heard, seen and acknowledged,â said Miso-Nkohla.