DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 4287

Tekedia T-Shirts: Thanks for wearing them!

0

Just to thank Eyitayo Adeleke, mMBA for bringing a lot of ideas to Tekedia programs. The day he told me that some learners would like permission to make our t-shirts, I was like “are you sure people will wear the t-shirts?” Fascinatingly, the learner-managed cup-, t-shirt-, hoodie-, and broad merchandize-idea has distributed hundreds of these items.

The biggest delivery was the day he went to Kwara State Government House to deliver a Tekedia t-shirt to the First Lady. She had sent 600 youth from Kwara State for Tekedia Institute to train them on business management. He led a team to the government house, and that is part of our history. See Eyitayo as he handed the t-shirt to First Lady, Amb Dr Mrs. Olufolake Abdulrahman.

I want to thank our Learners for making us feel great by buying these t-shirts which continue to bring us learners. Thanks. How many schools can boast that their learners graduate and are happy to spend their money to buy the school’s t-shirts?

If you need one, contact Eyitayo, I know nothing about it. He does all with our learners, from design to delivery. I thank our learners who spend their money on these shirts for honouring Tekedia Institute in this way. Thanks.

Igba-Boi Center – for developing and advancing the Igbo Apprenticeship System

0

The proposed Abia State University’s Igba-Boi Centre will have a mandate to train and educate students and the world on the principles of Igba-Boi (the Igbo apprenticeship system), the Igbo worldview business philosophy of entrepreneurial capitalism and prosperity through enterprise, succession planning, retirement, etc.

The Centre will work to uplift and internationalize this Igbo heritage in this age of stakeholder capitalism, and upgrade, codify and modify where necessary the framework, for more international adoption. We expect the world to come to Abia and learn about Igba-Boi, and understand how the Igbos, for centuries, have been practicing what the modern world has called “stakeholder capitalism” as I wrote in Harvard https://hbr.org/2021/05/a-nigerian-model-for-stakeholder-capitalism

(Our expectation is that someone will fund and endow this center, and we do believe in the Economic Transformation team that institutionalizing Igba-Boi in a modern way, where our sons actually go to school, before going into trade/commerce, is going to be catalytic in the knowledge base of the state).

Invest in Abia because #AbiaIsBetter

Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Co-Chair, Abia State Economic Transformation Transition Council

The Most Important A+ in School

1

I read a particularly unflattering LinkedIn comment on my piece where I noted that I do not invest in undergraduate students building startups, since running a startup (not a small business) cannot be a part-time job! The argument was this: a smart student could maintain good grades while running a company! Good People, there is a clear difference between running a company and working in one.  Grades are not everything!

Understand that companies do not hire you just because you made good grades in school. You are hired because you’ve demonstrated attributes which resulted in a good outcome (good grades). To get good grades, you managed your time, showed discipline to accomplish a purpose, etc. The assumption is this: if you can apply those attributes in a job, the outcome would be good. 

Please understand that the processes to get a good grade are more important than the grade. Most attributes to success are universal while grades are not.  Staying on course with those attributes makes the future predictable even when the grades become irrelevant!

Success in life is not defined by academic grades even though good grades will not hurt. The fact is this: a person can make As in a university-life-phase and still fail drastically in a professional-life-phase. While the phase-exams are different, behind them are clear relationships: process. It is safer to hire an A student than a C student as the A student has demonstrated the ability to set goals (every student desires to make good grades) and accomplished them. The key thing is not the A but the process that leads to the A. Simply, if you hire that A-student graduate, and he/she continues to apply those principles, there is a high chance he can deliver A performance in the company. That also explains the quality and the difficulty of getting that A in a school. One school’s A is another’s C. So, it comes down to processes which are needed for those grades.

To be a founder of  a startup, some attributes which will make you a great staff may not favour you! So, combining school with work, and building your company (a startup, not a small business)  while in school are different things! But even that requires a process. So, the key is mastering the process of what you need to thrive.

If someone asks you the “course” you must make A+ in school, tell him/her: PROCESS.

The best city to reside in Nigeria.

0

Without mincing words or being sentimental, Abuja is currently the best city to reside in Nigeria.

Here is a quick story; I was away from Abuja last weekend for the Salah holidays. On Friday, my house gatekeeper called me to inform me that the electricity transformer that supplies electricity to the estate I reside in got blown up. 

I quickly made arrangements with him on how we can switch to an alternative power supply because I was already thinking that it will probably take at least a week or even more for it the transformer to get fixed; considering the Nigerian factor and how non-challant public workers are to work and the bureaucratic process it takes for issues like this to get to the topmost top of those that will give the directives for it to be fixed.

Well, I was amazed when the gatekeeper called me back on Monday morning (which was still a Salah holiday) to inform me that the transformer had been fixed. He said the Abuja Electricity Distribution Company (AEDC) officials came as early as 10 am to fix the transformer. 

Well, if you have lived in any city in Nigeria then you will understand why this is shocking to me. I have lived in Benin, Kano, Port Harcourt, Onitsha, Abakaliki and Lagos and I can tell you that none of those cities I mentioned have seen a blown transformer get fixed in less than a month. That is why I was amazed that a blown transformer could get fixed in less than one working day in Abuja.

Maybe we Abuja residents are enjoying this level of preferential treatment because we live close to the corridors of power. It is possible that the AEDC officials quickly attended to us probably because the estate is littered with top government officials like senators, house representatives members, Ministers, Director Generals, Executive Secretaries, CEOs etc. In fact, inside the state, there is an embassy, so maybe it is one of the “ Ogas at the top” living in the estate that called AEDC officials to act on it this fast and they got a blown transformer fixed in less than a day. 

Outside blown transformers getting fixed in a jiffy; there are as well other things that helped me form the opinion that Abuja still remains the best city to reside in Nigeria as of now. kudos to the FCT minister, you can barely see portholes around the Abuja city centre; once there is a porthole, it gets fixed in a matter of days, unlike other cities I have lived in where portholes turn into death traps and take long before they are finally fixed. 

In terms of security, Abuja is averagely safe; you barely see or hear of bag snatching or robbery, especially in the city centres unlike other cities like Lagos where you can even be robbed in Ikeja, a stone throw from the government house or even in Ikoyi. I am yet to see “Agberos” harassing motorists and road users in Abuja, unlike other Nigerian states.

Well, this is not me marketing or promoting Abuja, this is my personal opinion that Abuja is close to being the most sane city to reside in Nigeria.

Ten points about copyright protection

0

The 23rd of April was the world copyright day. World Book and Copyright Day, which is known as the International Day of the Book, are celebrated with the purpose of promoting the publishing, reading, and protection of intellectual property rights in books. 

So in the spirit of the celebration, here are the ten most important things you (as an author or as a book lover) should know about copyright protection and their corresponding laws around the world. 

  1. Copyright is a right bestowed on the creator of a book so as to enjoy the exclusive rights to control the publication/re-publication, distribution and adaptation or exploitation of the book.  Therefore, if you who is not an author of a book is interested in the distribution or republication, the adaption of the book into a play or movie or the general exploitation of the book, you will have to seek express consent and authorization of the writer who as a way of granting you his authorization will transfer his copyright to you through contract. 
  2. Copyright protection was introduced as a way of ensuring that book authors enjoy just reward and recognition for their hard work and creativity, hence, authors of books are granted a legal right known as copyright on a book they created. 
  3. The general rule as to copyright protection is to the effect that the author owns the copyright of his book once it is created but the exception to this general rule is that another person who is not an author of a book can acquire the copyright of the book through contract or by the transference of the rights from the author to the interested party.
  4. Copyright protection for a book begins immediately after the book has been written and fixed in a tangible form, ie once a book has been written; it does not matter if it is a manuscript, highlights or the unedited version of the book, once a writer has scribbled his original thoughts and ideas into a paper he there and then begins to enjoy the copyright protection over that work. 
  5. You do not have to apply for copyright over your book for you enjoy copyright protection over your book, although it is advisable that as an author you should take the extra-legal step of protecting your creativity by applying for the copyright over your work. This copyright certificate that will be issued to you will serve as a notice to the government, to the public and to intending infringers. 
  6. Copyright of an author over his/her book lasts throughout the lifetime of the author and expires 70 years after the death of the author. 
  7. Copyright is an alienable right; this means that it can be transferred from its original owner to another party and even to a third party. 
  8. Copyright on a book can be jointly owned or shared. This is to say that if a book is written by more than one person, the different people who contributed to the writing of the book enjoy equal copyright unless it is otherwise agreed through a contract. 
  9. Copyright protection does not cover only books written or published in hard copy format, e-books or books/articles published in digital format or electronically are also protected by copyright laws. 

Once again from all of us at Law Capitol Hill/ Tekedia Institute, happy belated world book and copyright day.