Privilege Girls Foundation sponsors young women aged 18 to 35 through fully funded vocational training in hairdressing and fashion — and supports them beyond graduation until they are standing on their own.

A Ghana where every young woman has access to the skills, confidence, and structure to build her own livelihood.
Privilege Girls Foundation sponsors young women aged 18 to 35 through fully funded vocational training in hair and fashion. We support them in building character, developing professional skills, and establishing their own businesses.
We do not stop at graduation. PGF stays until the woman is standing on her own.
Structure matters. Dignity matters. Follow-through matters. We invest in women as professionals in training — and we stay.
Every woman who enters a PGF program is treated as a professional in training, not a charity case. This is investment, not aid.
PGF does not perform generosity. The work speaks. The results speak. The women speak.
Every program is properly built before it grows. Quality of training matters more than number of graduates.
PGF does not stop at graduation. Business setup support means seeing it through until the woman is operating independently.
PGF is rooted in the belief that God places opportunity in the hands of those who will steward it well.
Most foundations give resources. PGF builds character and businesses. The difference is what happens after the training ends. PGF stays until the woman is standing on her own.
We do not use the language of charity. We do not speak about our women as vulnerable or marginalized. They are professionals in training. That is how we talk about them. That is how we treat them.
Building women who
build businesses.
This line captures everything PGF does in one breath. It communicates investment, agency, and outcome. The women are not recipients. They are builders.
PGF speaks with warmth and authority. Never pity. Never performance. Never “look what we did for these poor girls.”
The women are the story, not the foundation. PGF is the structure behind them, not the spotlight in front of them.
Language is clear, direct, and grounded. Short sentences. No jargon. No NGO-speak.
When PGF speaks publicly, it sounds like a woman who has been where these girls are going. Because it is.
Every year, thousands of young women in Ghana have the drive to work but no access to training. They are not lacking ambition. They are lacking opportunity.
Privilege Girls Foundation exists to close that gap.
We sponsor young women aged 18 to 35 through fully funded vocational training programs in hairdressing and fashion. Every cost is covered. Tuition. Materials. Accommodation. From the first day of training to the last.
But we do not stop at graduation.
Once a woman completes her program, PGF supports her in building character and setting up her own business. Because a certificate without a plan is just paper. We believe in building women who can stand on their own — from learning a skill to running a shop, from dependence to ownership.
This is not charity.
This is investment.
PGF is funded through corporate partnerships, individual donations, and in-kind sponsorships. Every contribution goes directly to training, materials, accommodation, and business setup costs for our women.
Whether you are a business owner, a supplier, a corporate partner, or an individual who believes in what we are building — there is a place for you in this work.
Your contribution is not a donation.
It is a stake in a woman's future.
Field notes
Training, craft, and community — captured in moments from our programs across Ghana.
Community
Hair
Fashion