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Home Blog Page 4279

Thank you Amazon AWS

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Tekedia Capital and Tekedia Institute want to THANK Amazon AWS for a really long partnership we have enjoyed from one of the finest companies in the world. You have made our companies, and dozens of our portfolio companies better through your world-class support. I also appreciate the exceptional assist you extended today.

I thank the London team. I thank the Dubai team. I thank the Johannesburg  team. Great customer team. Thank you for always helping whenever we ask for help.

Thank you AWS; we’re building on the wings of the giant.

Rating: 5 stars. A+. Excellent.

Tekedia Unveils Internship Placements To Support Our Learners

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Greetings! We’re writing to share that Tekedia Institute has unveiled a new initiative to support our Learners. Over the last few quarters, we have placed many learners in local and global companies for internships (or industrial attachments). We have also taken time to examine the outcomes. The good news is that data does validate that value is created for learners through this process.

Consequently, we are opening the process to all learners who may be interested in part-time and full-term internships in companies. Tekedia Institute does not receive any financial benefit on this; we simply recommend learners, when companies reach out,  relying on Capstones, Homeworks, etc we have on file. For Tekedia Practice (agriculture, digital tech and new energy), an internship is already included in the program. A page has been created and we will be posting Internship opportunities therein.

Open Opportunity: we have a request from a United States-based neobank for PAID graduate interns. Go here and check if you qualify.

Meanwhile, for Companies looking for interns, we want to read from you; please email info@tekedia.com with your requests including role and qualifications, location (physical or remote), duration, compensation if any, and other necessary requirements like work permits. 

Finally, do not forget that registration for  the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA (June 5 – Sept 2, 2023) is ongoing and discounts for early bird registration are available here. Share with friends, associates, etc and ask them to register. The next edition is tagged “AI in Business” edition as the Institute will distill how businesses will position and win the future, which AI (artificial intelligence) is expected to anchor and power.

Have a great day!

Team Tekedia Institute

Boston, USA | Owerri, Nigeria

Meta Announces Plan to Use Generative AI to Create Ads For Companies

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Giant tech company Meta has revealed plans to use generative AI to create ads for different companies by the end of the year.

The company’s CTO Andrew Bosworth disclosed that a generate AI team has been created, and Meta expects to ship tools to create ads with AI that will help companies make different images for different audiences.

In his words, “I expect we will start seeing some of them (commercialization of the tech) this year. We just created a new team, the generative AI team, a couple of months ago, and they are very busy. It is probably the area that I am spending I’m spending the most time in as well as Mark Zuckerberg and Chief Product Officer Chris Cox”.

While Meta is expanding its focus beyond social media to encompass building the metaverse which is on the company’s long-term plan, it is no doubt seeking to generate more revenue following its plan to use generative AI to create ads.

Recall that during the company’s fourth quarter (Q4) call, the CEO Mark Zuckerberg disclosed to investors and employees that Meta’s management theme for year 2023 is the “year of efficiency”, hence, the company is focused on looking for more avenues to make more money and generative AI seems to be its next bet.

With machine learning, Facebook will deliver relevant AI-powered ads fast and effectively. Analysts disclose that use of AI to run ads improves a company’s return of interest (ROI) due to the fact that it lies in the fact that AI makes advertising data-driven.

Meanwhile, amid concerns that these could pose a threat to the digital space, Artificial intelligence and machine learning are nowhere near threatening digital business. On the contrary, they are making people’s lives a lot easier. Digital advertising is one of the things that AI makes more effective. That is why Facebook and Google have invested so much money and effort into powering their ad platforms with machine learning technology.

It is however interesting to note that Meta isn’t the only company experimenting with generative ads, as Omneky a startup that leverages OpenAI’s DALLE-2 and GPT-3 models to generate visuals and text, is also using AI to generate social media ads. The company wants to make online ads both cheaper and more effective thanks to recent innovations in artificial intelligence.

Meanwhile, while many fields have been automated in one way or another, creating ads is still mostly a manual process which requires human input. The commencement of the use of AI in digital advertising is totally worth it. Now advertisers can run highly relevant ads to grow Return On Advertising Spend (ROAS), and sales without constantly tracking the ad performance and fine-tuning the settings of their campaigns every day. 

Meta continues to shift its focus from the metaverse to artificial intelligence. The Facebook parent on Wednesday released a new AI model called “Segment Anything” that can identify and isolate individual objects within an image, such as a fish in an aquarium. The tool could be useful not just in photo editing and content creation, Meta says, but in fields as diverse as augmented reality and Earth studies. Meanwhile, Meta plans to unveil AI-powered tools later this year that will help companies create ads, Chief Technology Officer Andrew Bosworth tells Nikkei Asia. Key executives including CEO Mark Zuckerberg are now spending most of their time working on Meta’s AI efforts, Bosworth says.

Digitizing and Financing Agriculture in Africa – Tekedia Live

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It is time for agriculture and we have one of the finest young visionaries in the sector coming to teach us at Tekedia Mini-MBA Live. Blessing Mene understands agriculture, and through Vetsark Limited, he has touched lives and communities.

He has used technology to digitize the supply chain system, bringing transparency which has made it possible for capital to get to smallholder farmers and farming cooperatives. His mission is very impressive. We’ll learn a lot from him.

To register for the next edition of Tekedia Institute Mini-MBA, go here 

Nigeria’s Unemployment Rate to Hit 40.6% in 2023 – KPMG

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Nigeria’s unemployment rate is expected to take a new turn in 2023, rising further to 40.6 percent, according to an economic report by KPMG.

The fourth quarter report of the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) for 2020 had put Nigeria’s unemployment at 33.3 percent, while in the past two years; the nation has recorded further dip in job losses amid sluggish economic growth and influx of fresh graduates into the labor market, pushing the figure up.

KPMG In its report titled; ‘Global Economic Outlook’, said the resulting consequence of the slow economic growth will be an increase in the unemployment figures. The NBS has not published the unemployment rate since 2020, but KPMG estimates that the rate has increased to 37.7% in 2022 and will rise further to 40.6% in 2023.

“Unemployment is expected to continue to be a major challenge in 2023 due to the limited investment by the private sector, low industrialization and slower than required economic growth and consequently the inability of the economy to absorb the 4?5 million new entrants into the Nigerian job market every year,” KPMG said in the report.

“Although lagged, the National Bureau of Statistics recorded an increase in the national unemployment rate from 23.1% in 2018 to 33.3% in 2020.

In the report, KPMG projected that Nigeria’s gross domestic product (GDP) would continue to grow at a relatively slow pace of three percent in 2023, citing slowdown in economic activity that typically characterizes periods of political transition in Nigeria.

Per the firm, the spillover from an expected slowdown in the global economy and its trade and financial flows implications are likely to drag on the country’s GDP. It added that key non-oil sectors such as manufacturing, trade, accommodation, food services and transportation would be negatively affected by the naira redesign policy introduced by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), further slowing down overall GDP growth in 2023.

“Nevertheless, we expect telecommunications, trade services, as well as an expected recovery in the oil sector, on account of measures being taken to tackle security issues, to drive our forecast of 3% growth in 2023,” the firm said.

Nigeria’s economic trajectory has significantly shifted amid decline in oil revenue, forcing the government to introduce a new tax regime as a way of augmenting revenue generation from the non-oil sector – which has served as the country’s economic cash-cow as the oil sector took a downturn.

In addition to slow economic growth, the government is grappling with the burden of fuel subsidy payments, which it has in recent times, been borrowing to upset. Though the federal government has set a mid 2023 timeline for the total removal of the subsidy, there is no clear path to it.

The fuel subsidy gulps a significant percent of Nigeria’s annual budget. While its removal in June will save the government a whopping amount of money, it will likely result in social-economic unrest.

KPMG projected that the incoming administration would face a deeply rooted challenging environment characterized by fragile and slow economic growth and challenges in the foreign exchange market. It added that government revenue remained inadequate to support much needed expenditure, leading to a high debt stock and high debt service payments.