EUknow.it offers practical and affordable tools to bring even nonspecialists closer to European planning. Let’s find out how, with Matteo Sisto

Our fellow travelers: the experience of Matteo Sisto, project manager and European design expert for youth organizations

European design is an exciting but often lonely journey, amid deadlines, forms to fill out, and partners to coordinate. We want to tell you how the new Guide can accompany you on your European design journey, and to do so we have chosen exceptional traveling companions from the world of European design, academia, local government and civil society, as well as our partners.

In this third installment, Matteo Sisto, project manager and founder of Europiamo, a network of youth organizations active in the Erasmus+ and European Solidarity Corps programs, tells us why the Guide can be a key tool for engaging young and inexperienced people in European planning.

 

Matteo Sisto is a professional who has been active for more than eight years in European planning, facilitation and organizational development in the Third Sector. After several international experiences, he started a consulting business with which he supports Italian and European organizations in writing, managing and reporting on EU-funded projects, especially Erasmus+, ESC, CERV and other lines dedicated to civil society. In 2020 he co-founded Europiamo ETS, the largest Italian network of young people, youth workers and youth organizations active in European programs. Within the organization he coordinates youth participation projects, training paths and capacity building initiatives, helping to spread knowledge about European youth policies and build links between local organisations and European institutions. As a trainer and facilitator, he has designed and led over 200 nonformal education sessions and workshops on European planning, youth participation and networking. He collaborates on an ongoing basis with European organizations and networks and has overseen transnational processes dedicated to the development of methodologies, toolkits and guidelines for the field. She believes deeply in the transformative value of European programs and the role of design as a tool for empowerment, innovation and active citizenship. Her work focuses on making EU projects and funding accessible, clear and useful to young people, organizations and communities who want to generate real impact.

The Guide: engaging resources to support those taking their first steps in European design

EUknow.co.uk is a valuable resource for those working to bring non-specialist audiences, such as young people and less experienced organizations, into European design. If you reflect yourself in this profile, let’s try to learn more: here are some reasons why the Guide is the tool for you.

 

These are just some of the resources you can find by browsing EUknow.co.uk. Subscribing to the Newsletter allows you to stay informed about new content being published. Keep following us in the next videopills to discover the sections and contents of the Guide, along with new fellow travelers.