Liziane Silva | Catalyzing Social Impact in Brazil
alumni

Liziane Silva | Catalyzing Social Impact in Brazil

Written By Nancy Hopkins
March 8, 2018

Brazilian social entrepreneur Liziane Silva thinks at scale. Liz is the Founder and CEO of Ink, a Sao Paulo-based consulting and training firm that is improving the lives of people across Brazil by harnessing the power of nonprofit organizations and businesses to create positive change. Liz has seen first-hand that when it comes to tackling tough challenges like improving access to health care, reducing inequality, or improving environmental protection, big dreams and good intentions are not enough. Her mission is to help professionalize the social change sector by improving her clients’ ability to implement high-impact development projects. Ink is the leading company in Brazil using the Project Management for Development (PMDPro) methodology, which draws on recognized best practices in the business sector and adapts them for the increasingly complex reality of social development, including incorporating such factors as community engagement and impact on quality of life.

Liz is driven by a deep appreciation for the day-to-day work of changemakers around the world. She is inspired by other nonprofit leaders and social entrepreneurs “because they move us all forward by offering their unique systemic perspective and work hard every day to solve problems we all struggle with and have no ready solutions for.”

Since founding Ink, Liz and her colleagues have trained more than 1,400 people in over 400 organizations in the PMD methodology, in person and online. Ink can take credit for issuing more than 80% of PMDPro certificates in Brazil. Liz and her company have received several awards for their work, including a 2015 prize for outstanding contributions to the expansion of professionalization of project management in the development and humanitarian sectors.

In 2016 Liz was selected by the U.S. Department of State for the prestigious Young Leaders of the Americas (YLAI) Professional Fellows Program. She spent one month in Charlottesville, hosted by the Presidential Precinct, as an “entrepreneur-in-residence” at the Center for Nonprofit Excellence (the CNE), a local organization whose mission is to strengthen nonprofits to realize the potential of the Charlottesville community. Liz and her colleagues at the CNE built lifelong professional and personal connections through four intensive weeks of sharing ideas, approaches, and perspectives. In spring 2017 Liz and the CNE’s Director of Strategic Initiatives, Cindy Colson, were selected to participate in the highly competitive “reverse exchange” component of the YLAI program, enabling Cindy traveled to Brazil to collaborate with Liz and Ink to deliver lectures and training programs on nonprofit management and organizational effectiveness for a wide range of stakeholders.

It is no surprise that Liz was one of only 11 young leaders in the entire country of Brazil invited to meet on October 5, 2017 with President Barack Obama. At an intimate roundtable, President Obama and these young leaders discussed the challenges and opportunities their communities face and the innovative solutions they are using to achieve impact. They also talked about the fact that many of these challenges are universal, and that creating positive change worldwide requires sharing some of these innovative solutions with changemakers around the world to use and adapt for their own country contexts.

Not only is Liz passionate about using her knowledge and expertise to help others, she recognizes that effective social entrepreneurship is an iterative process. “My number one priority as an entrepreneur is to learn. That means learn from what I’m doing as an organization and learn as an individual to be the leader I can and want to be.”

Liz came to the Presidential Precinct in fall of 2016 as a Young Leaders of the Americas Initiative Fellow. In 2017, Barack Obama visited Liz and ten other emerging leaders in São Paulo. Watch more about his visit below:

Recent News

Building Markets, Building Futures: A Conversation with AlaSan Ceesay

02/13/2026

AlaSan Ceesay, an alum of the Presidential Precinct’s ’25 Corporate Leaders Program, leads with a philosophy shaped by responsibility,...
Read More

AlaSan Ceesay on Leadership, Food Security, and the Corporate Leaders Program

02/13/2026

For AlaSan Ceesay, a 2025 alumnus of our Corporate Leaders Program, leadership is not abstract. It is personal, lived, and deeply tied to r...
Read More

Data Protection as a Democratic Imperative: Janaína Rodrigues Valle Gomes on Privacy, Power, and Digital Rights in Brazil

01/13/2026

In an era defined by rapid digital transformation, questions of privacy, power, and human rights are no longer abstract — they shape ever...
Read More

Empowering a Generation as a Presidential Precinct Alum: Joseph Doe's Journey from War-Torn Roots to Digital Leadership

10/31/2025

From a childhood shaped by conflict to a career dedicated to peace and empowerment, Joseph Doe is helping young Africans find their voice t...
Read More

Keys to Success in Entrepreneurship: An Interview with Joël Sikam

10/06/2025

What does it take to succeed as an entrepreneur?  Joël Sikam, a 2025 Presidential Precinct Corporate Leader, is founder and CEO of FIS...
Read More

Making Justice Accessible: Dennis Orengo Juma's Struggle Against Extrajudicial Killings in Kenya

09/03/2025

In 2015, a memorial football match in Nairobi’s Mathare slums marked the unlikely origin of a nationwide human rights movement. The match...
Read More

Becoming A Young African Leader From Sierra Leone

09/20/2023

In 2016, I was privileged to be selected as a young and emerging leader from Sierra Leone to participate in one of the most prestigious fel...
Read More

Ahmed Adetola-Kazeem on the Greatest Strengths of the Mandela Washington Fellowship

06/17/2023

In 2017, Ahmed Adetola-Kazeem arrived at the Presidential Precinct as a Mandela Washington Fellow from Nigeria. Today, he continues doing t...
Read More

Dear Young Leaders: The MWF Experience

09/08/2021

Dear Young Leaders, My name is Josephine Kamara and I’m a 2021 Mandela Washington Fellowship Alumna from Sierra Leone.   &nbs...
Read More

KAPATAMOYO: Reassurance in Zambia's Seventh President

08/31/2021

Kyapalushi Kapatamoyo is a 2017 Alumna of the Mandela Washington Fellowship and a 2019 Alumna of the Presidential Precinct's Global Pathfin...
Read More