The women empowerment program equips women (especially mothers of orphans and widows) with start-up capitals to start small-scale businesses or revive existing small-scale businesses. The program enables women to earn a livelihood from home and cater for their children’s needs and own personal needs. The program provides them with bi-weekly meetings where they are provided with basic Islamic knowledge, and are trained on financial literacy, savings and profit generation. They are taught how to source for target audiences and how to detect which businesses to start depending on environment, availability of raw materials and customer-demand. The Program also encourages collective savings and investment among women. This program also led to the establishment of a women-led cooperative society named WADATA. WADATA is therefore a subsidiary of the Women empowerment program, running independently for members who successfully graduated from the WEP. WADATA also provides members with skills to learn financial discipline, enhance mutual economic support, improve women’s literacy and financial management skills.