Good Sammy Enterprises

Good Sammy Enterprises

Non-profit Organizations

Canning Vale, WA 2,113 followers

We develop, inspire & support people with disability to achieve their employment goals and enjoy a better future.

About us

Good Sammy is a for-purpose organisation focused on creating employment opportunities for Australians with disability. Everything we do is motivated by this purpose, and has been since we were founded in 1958. At Good Sammy we offer a variety of structured development programs and employment choices to encourage people living with a disability to explore life. As a registered NDIS provider, we deliver quality personalised services that help participants achieve their employment goals and transition to their careers of choice.

Industry
Non-profit Organizations
Company size
501-1,000 employees
Headquarters
Canning Vale, WA
Type
Nonprofit
Founded
1958
Specialties
Employment, Training and Community Living for people living with disability, Retail, Logistics, Social Enterprise, NDIS, Training, and Disability

Locations

Employees at Good Sammy Enterprises

Updates

  • Good Sammy Enterprises reposted this

    View profile for Kely Maciel, graphic

    Test Engineer

    Feeling incredibly grateful for the opportunity to be part of Motorola Solutions here in Perth, Australia for the past 4 months! 🙌 Today, I had the privilege to join my colleagues for a volunteer day at Good Sammy Enterprises, an initiative promoted by our company. It's one more example of how Motorola Solutions encourages us to give back to the community. As a Test Engineer, it has been rewarding to work at the local headquarters that produces high frequency and very high frequency radios at Barrett Communications. The experience of applying my English skills daily has been invaluable, and I’m constantly inspired by the brilliant minds and friendships I've found here. This job has truly been a blessing from God, and I’m excited to keep learning and growing in this amazing role. 🌟 #MotorolaSolutions #VolunteerWork #GoodSammy

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Good Sammy Enterprises, graphic

    2,113 followers

    Good Sammy is a proud member of Charitable Reuse Australia, a national network of purpose-driven reuse enterprises. Chief Operating Officer Aaron Harding (pictured) and Circular Economy Coordinator Janelle Osenton travelled to the recent Charitable Reuse Australia Conference in Melbourne where Aaron delivered a case study on retail growth and diversification. The conference ended with a call to action to optimise networks and resources in order to stay relevant in an increasingly competitive retail market - a journey Good Sammy is already embracing. We're also thrilled to announce Aaron was appointed WA Director of Charitable Reuse Australia for the next 3 years - congratulations! #TheFutureIsReuse

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
  • View organization page for Good Sammy Enterprises, graphic

    2,113 followers

    🌟Are you an excellent and experienced admin superstar with a ‘can do’ attitude? 🌟Want to be part of a supportive and dynamic team? 🌟Know your way around a spreadsheet, database, and can write too? 🌟Can speak the languages of fundraising and marketing? We’d love to meet you! Check out this role and apply asap ☺️ https://lnkd.in/g362dDcD

    Philanthropy and Marketing Administrator Job in Canning Vale, Perth WA - SEEK

    Philanthropy and Marketing Administrator Job in Canning Vale, Perth WA - SEEK

    seek.com.au

  • View organization page for Good Sammy Enterprises, graphic

    2,113 followers

    We’re honoured to have Volunteer Coordinator Karen Andrews as part of the Good Sammy team. Karen is an incredible advocate for our mission to create disability employment in WA and our efforts to enhance environmental sustainability in the community. Thanks Karen! Volunteering WA

    View organization page for Volunteering WA, graphic

    3,210 followers

    For our second instalment of #ManagementMusings we had the pleasure of sitting down with Karen Andrews, the Volunteer Coordinator for Good Sammy Enterprises! Good Sammy is an organisation providing opportunities for people with disabilities to find employment in WA. After a tour of Good Sammy Enterprises, it was clear that Karen is beloved by her volunteers—watch through to the end to find out the experiences and insights that have made her such a successful Volunteer Coordinator. Thanks Karen for sharing! Know a Volunteer Manager who goes above and beyond? Nominate them for this series: https://bit.ly/3LufJV6 Learn more about membership: https://lnkd.in/gAA2AYY5 #VolunteerManagement

  • View organization page for Good Sammy Enterprises, graphic

    2,113 followers

    At the Impact Economy Forum, Good Sammy CEO Kane Blackman spoke about the power of social procurement to create employment outcomes, at the same time as delivering quality and affordable services to procurement partners. Kane outlined the numerous B2B and B2C relationships that Good Sammy has fostered to create new jobs for people with disability. Good Sammy is engaging with the Department of Finance, Minister Sue Ellery and Minister Don Punch to develop a social procurement policy that materially drives employment outcomes for people with disability. Our policy submissions and engagement focus on the cost-neutral opportunity for Government to redirect funding to suppliers that deliver economic AND social outcomes. The leadership of the Victorian Government in this space provides a blueprint for others to follow. We are striving for a procurement policy that has targets, public outcome reporting and involves all those tendering for Government goods and services.

    View organization page for Impact Seed, graphic

    5,428 followers

    It’s a wrap. Yesterday saw the largest convergence of leaders across sectors we’ve ever hosted in WA at the inaugural Impact Economy Forum. 200 attendees discussing all things impact investment, wellbeing economics and equitable innovation with a First Nations leadership vein running deep through a day of panels, provocations, keynotes, and a social enterprise showcase.  A few takeaways that landed with our audience include: 🔶 Rethink value - First Nations economic models are built on culture, not the other way around – responsibility, respect and reciprocity as first principles. To translate this to a western sensibility, focus must shift from activity, output and doing to being, people and place. 🔶Equitable, inclusive innovation – innovation for what purpose? If it’s for communities and the economy, then it has to reach all those left behind, and those in remote and regional WA communities. Impact-driven innovation accelerates economic diversification & sustainable job growth when it is embedded in communities. 🔶Innovation = Risk & Learning – The investment and public policy landscape is geared to risk minimisation - yet innovation is taking risks, accepting failure and learning. 🔶All organisations have an impact – positive and negative, (often both) –  The burden of data and measurement shouldn’t sit solely on those creating positive impact (often with the least resourcing and capacity) but it currently does. We can’t shy away from the negative impact and externalities we are creating – it happens, let's normalise and account for these as well. We have to generate a culture of transparency and learning, and share the responsibility in accounting for impact. 🔶Just Transition - Community-level engagement and leadership is key to achieving a Just Transition towards clean energy – compromises will be made but people need to benefit from the transition, and have agency in what’s decided. 🔶Capital is a source of power - for real change we need to shift who gets to invest and how we invest, adopting localised, place-based and culturally sound approaches – particularly by and for First Nations Thank you to all our speakers, our awesome IS team and partner WASEC (WA Social Enterprise Council), and our 200(!) guests for participating in this conversation about designing and actioning the future of the WA economy – one where community, culture and environment are at the core of business and finance. An impact economy. We look forward to sharing more stories from the inaugural Impact Economy Forum soon, and to the many conversations and partnerships that will emerge from us spending the day together in Kings Park on a beautiful Djilba day. Thanks to our major funding partners who made this Forum possible - Paul Ramsay Foundation, Department of Jobs, Tourism, Science and Innovation, Westpac Foundation and our enabling partners and supporters (in the comments)

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
      +13
  • View organization page for Good Sammy Enterprises, graphic

    2,113 followers

    We can’t wait to see what comes from this exciting partnership with Enitiate Inc! If you’ve ever been to a Containers for Change depot you’ll no doubt be familiar with the ear-piercing sound of hundreds of glass containers being tipped and sorted. The Enitiate Inc. project team is working on an innovative soundproof box to minimise this noise at our depots – an improvement that will be gladly welcomed by customers and staff alike. Stay tuned for updates.

    View organization page for Enitiate Inc., graphic

    224 followers

    Good Sammy Enterprises is a Western Australian organisation that was founded in 1958 and their primary goal is to provide employment opportunities for those with disabilities. Good Sammy runs multiple op shops and containers for change warehouses which encourages recycling across our communities. Over 50% of employees identify as having a disability, demonstrating the overall success of their mission. The Good Sammy Containers for Change initiative was established in 2020 and is a program that enables the community to recycle drink containers. The employees stand beside large bins where they throw containers into the appropriate bins so the bottles can go on to further processing. Throwing glass containers into storage bins creates a loud noise, which is amplified by the sound echoing off the corrugated walls. A large proportion of Good Sammy employees have a disability and working in loud environments can inhibit their ability to work. Enitiate aims to produce a report outlining potential designs and materials for sound-barrier shrouds to be used in the container disposal process. By doing so, this will reduce the overall noise pollution in the workplace and make it a more comfortable workplace for all employees.

    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image
    • No alternative text description for this image

Similar pages

Browse jobs