Saloun has just finished repaying her loan with lendwithcare and when I met with her to ask about her business she said that her business was doing well and that she had now been able to expand her shop. She told me that she makes around $20 a day profit that she uses to cover her daily expenses including her three younger children’s education. Saloun's shop is open all day and she said the in the morning the most popular items are cooking ingredients and in the evening it is ice and soft drinks. Saloun still goes to the local market everyday to collect her stock but her husband sometimes assists her with this when he is not busy farming. Saloun told me that with her business and her husband's rice farming activities they have enough money to support their family's everyday needs. Now they expect they will be able to keep their daughter in education and even send her to university in Battambang town once she sits her exams this month. Since getting the loan from the local microfinance organisation they have been able to improve their working capital and expand their small shop to meet the demand of people in their village. Saloun said they don’t need to ask for another loan at this time since they have a healthy working capital and they can use the income from their rice farming to cover any future costs for their shop.