DD
MM
YYYY

PAGES

DD
MM
YYYY

spot_img

PAGES

Home Blog Page 4658

CEMRI ROUNDTABLE: How African Scholars Discussed Potential Metrics for Defining Influential Research

0

It is not new for African academics to gather and discuss various issues related to conducting research and presenting results. Thousands of academic conferences, workshops, and seminars have been held across the continent by institutions, groups, and centers since January 2022. According to our analyst, the majority of the events concentrated on how academia will continue to make significant contributions to African society.

The Centre for Multidisciplinary Research and Innovation hosted a roundtable discussion as one of these gatherings.  “CEMRI is a group of researchers who want to make impact from research and innovative activities. The group aims to share knowledge, orientate youth, proffer solutions to problems in businesses and government sector, also to empower young scholars on contributing actively to innovative research. Members of CEMRI comes from various research discipline and countries.”

Early career and established researchers from Africa and other continents attended the Zoom event. The discussion was started by Professor Olumuyiwa Asaolu from the University of Lagos, who presented a paper on measuring African scholars’ publications using the U-index. The paper was co-authored with some academics at the University.

It is “a new Universal metric as unique indicator of researcher’s contributions to academic knowledge.

“U is an indicator of an author’s impact over career-span, which appropriately aggregates how well their articles actually perform (TCIs) relative to projection (JIFs). It inherently normalizes for time and field without imposing a benchmark Expected Citation Rate that is burdensome to estimate or lacking in worldwide acceptability. Different entities use arbitrary weights for scoring co-authorship and a major contribution in our model is a prescription of simple formulae for general weights that fairly addresses three basic scenarios. U-index measures a researcher’s academic impact based on the contributions that such individual has made in authoring scholarly articles with or without citations. It will bring some relief to scholars in the emergent era of ‘publish, be cited or perish’ that is indirectly stimulated via institutional rankings.”

According to Professor Asaolu, the idea for researching the metric arose when it became clear that existing metrics for ranking African scholars did not accurately reflect the characteristics of African academics. Participants, for example, discussed the differences between social scientists and natural scientists. Google scholar was used as an example, considering its limitations.

Professor Ebo Hinson, pro-Vice Chancellor of Ghana Communication Technology University, however, urged Professor Asaolu and his team to consider how the metric could compete with the existing one by presenting its unique selling propositions. He believes that when this occurs, scholars and ranking organizations in the global north will accept the metric.

Professor Hinson emphasizes the importance of intra-citation and networking in increasing African publications and making research outcomes impactful on the continent and beyond in his paper titled Scholarly metrics beyond impact factor for Africans by Africans. According to Professor Hinson, it is extremely rare for scholars in the global north to cite those in the global south. As a result, African scholars must collaborate and cite one another. Furthermore, before the global north can reckon with Africa, it must produce and publish good articles. He, on the other hand, objects to African students’ attitude of ignoring African scholars in their works.

Professor Hinson emphasizes the importance of networking during academic events, noting that many scholars rarely engage with other scholars outside of conferences. Conferences and other academic events, he believes, should not be solely for presentation. “Scholars from other regions need to be really engaged. African scholars should not forget that the connection (within Academia) can compliments their theoretical presentation.”

“I agree with you Professor, we need to be proud of innovation from Africa. We should cite colleagues working in our area of expertise often as possible,” one of the participants says. One of the conclusions of the discussion was a call for the creation of a reliable African ranking database and/or the enhancement of the 1998-founded “African Journals Online.”

WhatsApp New Feature Enables Users to Send Messages to Themselves

0

Meta-owned messaging app Whatsapp has announced plans to roll out a new feature “message yourself”, that enables users to send messages to themselves.

With this new feature, Whatsapp seeks to ensure that users can easily access important messages such as reminders, to-do lists, notes, etc.

The “message yourself” feature which is slowly rolling out, is reportedly available to most Apple users and some Android users, as the company has disclosed that it will soon be made accessible to all users.

Messages sent by users to themselves will be visible on all their linked devices, which are end-to-end encrypted.

Users can also pin their self-chat messages to the top of the conversation list if they don’t want to go through the hassle of searching for their messages amid other chats.

How Users Can Use the WhatsApp “Message Yourself” feature

Step 1: Open your WhatsApp

Step 2: Click on the action button in the lower-right corner of the screen

Step 3: Users can find their contact at the top of the contact list

Step 4: Click on the contact and start messaging

Before the launch of this feature, Whatsapp in October 2022, embarked on testing improvements for sending messages to yourself on iOS and Android beta.

The “message yourself” feature will no doubt be very useful to those who use WhatsApp to take notes or those who use it to write things they want to buy when going for shopping.

Meanwhile, this feature is not new to some messaging platforms, as instant messaging platform Slack, has a feature titled “Jot Something Down” that enables users to send messages to themselves.

Also, a cloud-based instant messaging app, Telegram offers a similar feature called Saved Messages that lets users bookmark any important messages as well as save their notes and reminders that can be later accessed when needed.

WhatsApp’s “Message Yourself” feature comes shortly after the messaging platform in November, launched a new tool called communities, which lets users message multiple groups at once.

Remittance to Nigeria’s Foreign Reserve Has Dried Up – Central Bank of Nigeria

0

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Friday dropped a bombshell that has once again ignited discussion on Nigeria’s falling currency, the naira.

At the 57th Chartered institute of Bankers Nigeria (CIBN) annual lecture entitled: “Radical Responses to Abnormal Episodes: Time for Innovative Decision-making”, the CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, while outlining policy thrust for 2023, expressed optimism that the short-term outlook of the Nigerian economy remains good.

While he projected that the rate of inflation will remain elevated and above the 12.5% growth-aiding threshold, Emefiele said that the CBN will maintain the current tight Monetary Policy stance in the near-term, “especially in view of rising inflation expectations and exchange market pressures.”

The CBN governor, while assuring Nigerians that the central bank will continue to act in the best interest of the economy, revealed that remittance to Nigeria’s foreign reserve has dried up.

“The official foreign exchange receipt from crude oil sales into our official reserves has dried up steadily from above US$3.0 billion monthly in 2014 to an absolute zero dollars today,” he said.

As Emefiele reiterates the need to boost Nigeria’s foreign exchange inflows through non-oil proceeds, it dawned on Nigerians that he had just revealed that the country’s foreign resee went from receiving $36 billion annually in 2014 to nothing in 2022 under his watch.

This underpins economic experts’ take on the naira’s free fall and Nigeria’s inflation. Experts have for long pointed at insufficient liquidity as the reason for the naira’s growing decline in the foreign exchange market, while Emefiele keeps pointing fingers at many things.

At the CIBN Annual Bankers Dinner, Emefiele blamed the current state of the naira on Nigerian students seeking education abroad. He said that Nigeria recorded a tremendous increase in visa issuances by the United Kingdom in 2022 alone.

According to him, the number of student visas given to Nigerians by the United Kingdom spiked from a yearly average of about 8,000 visas in 2020 to almost 66,000 in 2022, implying an eight-fold increase amounting to $2.5 billion yearly in study-related forex outflow to the UK alone.

He stated that the move had immensely put pressure on Nigeria’s foreign reserves and the Naira.

In September 2021, the central bank governor notoriously accused AbokiFX, an online FX aggregator, of economic sabotage. He said the forex rates publisher is responsible for the naira’s dwindling performance against the dollar, forcing it to shut down operations. The naira was at N570/$1 then.

Several months after AbokiFX suspended operation, the naira’s depreciation spiraled further downward. Emefiele said then that it was due to non-working refineries in the country, which forces the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation Limited (NNPCL) to spend as much as 40% of the proceeds from crude oil exports on importation of petroleum products – gulping the foreign exchange that should have built up the foreign reserve.

As 2022 winds down, the naira has been dangling below and above N800/$1 irrespective of Emefiele’s blames and monetary policies. The crisis has been duly traced to Nigeria’s low oil output mainly orchestrated by oil theft.

Nigeria is the only oil producing country that did not benefit from the oil windfall induced by the Russia-Ukraine war. This is because more than half of the oil produced in the West African country has been stolen, leaving the government with meager oil export that is significantly insufficient for the amount of forex liquidity required to boost the naira.

Against the backdrop of oil theft, Emefiele’s open admission that the foreign reserve is not receiving any remittance from the NNPCL, underscores the belief that his blame antics emanates from cluelessness – his inability to proffer a solution to Nigeria’s raging forex crisis. It also paints a gloom future for Nigeria as an oil-based economy. The country has taken to borrowing as the revenue shortfalls bite harder, shooting its public debt profile high.

With non-oil exports yielding insignificant forex proceeds, the oil theft-inspired revenue shortfalls mean that the naira’s recovery is still farfetched.

A few digital marketing tips for all brands

0

In its digital marketing strategies, every brand should be able to effectively communicate the distinctive features of its industry, leveraging them in the creation of its online content and positioning itself even more effectively in its target market, taking every opportunity to clearly stand out from its competitors.

We are not just talking about the themes that best suit each product category and its online content, but certain intangible characteristics that represent the purest essence of each industry, such as dynamism, sophistication, passion, simplicity and many others. A brand specializing in interior design, for example, will have to do more than just communicate the functional characteristics of its products; it will also have to give each of its creations an aura of refinement and elegance that is specific to the industry, and which cannot be separated from everything else at all.

Among the tasks of online communication on social networks nowadays is also to discreetly express the founding characteristics of a brand, those often elusive and elusive elements that make up its essence, transforming them into a special bed on which to lay all the rest of the publications, whether corporate or product in nature, making the need for social media very clear.

The role of immateriality

Communication based essentially on technical, material, concrete features will have completely different effects on the network audience, and in all likelihood will bring no benefit in terms of leads or conversions.

On the other hand, content characterized by the co-presence of tangible and intangible elements, as indeed the distinctive features of an industry can be, has a completely different flavor, and seems to be animated by that touch of magic that makes it immediately distinguishable from cold posts devoted solely to the physicality of the product.

Sometimes, this effect can be achieved with words, perhaps by including a particularly elegant or sophisticated expression in the post, or even through a color choice of great aesthetic value, capable of producing a certain level of impact on observers.

In a social media such as Instagram, the innate characteristics of a particular industry can also be communicated through the color consistency of individual posts, which is clearly perceptible when scrolling through content from the main page of a profile, below the biography.

The case of Zain

A particularly interesting case study from this perspective is that of Zain, a Kuwaiti brand specializing in telecommunications. In its online communication strategy, articulated within the main website and several social media outlets, the brand managed to effectively and unobtrusively express the founding characteristics of a company specializing in telecommunications, through a content mix that was fully capable of adapting in the best possible way to the characteristics of the individual social networks used for its online communication.

The two main characteristics to be communicated, in this sense, were undoubtedly represented by the dynamism of modern telecommunications and the interconnection between people, fostered and nurtured precisely by the services offered by the Kuwaiti brand. On the brand’s profiles, these two features naturally emerge amidst all the other content posted, imposing themselves on the attention of every user with great effectiveness.

Anyone who consults even for a few minutes the brand’s profiles will certainly get the impression that they have visited the pages of a dynamic and people-serving company, particularly with regard to interconnectedness.

The trend of focusing communication activities around people, and their essential needs, has now become a real operational habit for a large number of companies, and not only in Kuwait. The point is that nowadays, in the face of changing consumer tastes and expectations, companies find themselves in the position of always having to offer very personalized and tailored services, giving the impression that they are devoting themselves body and soul to their consumer, just as is the case in Kuwait with the Zain brand.

The telecommunications sector, in Kuwait, is certainly not alone in offering specialized and extremely dynamic services for its users. The world of online entertainment, for example, continues to offer vast selections of online casinos in Kuwait and other games of the same genre, in order to allow anyone, regardless of their experience, to find the most suitable site where they can indulge in the pleasure of online entertainment, in a safe and perfectly legal manner.

The presence of reviews and invaluable guides, moreover, allows even beginners to start their online adventure in a simple and intuitive way, starting with registration and then continuing with the completion of the first deposit, until the actual game begins.

The real challenge, for today’s marketers, is to effectively communicate the intangible values of the brand as well, alongside the more material ones to create the perfect mix.

You’re Invited To Tekedia Mini-MBA Graduation Lecture

0

Tekedia Institute is very excited to invite the general public to Tekedia Mini-MBA edition 9 graduation lecture on Saturday, Dec 3 at 7 pm WAT. Over the last 12 weeks, our learners have mastered the mechanics of markets, and acquired skills and knowledge systems from executives in leading global and local companies, on innovation, business growth and operational execution. More than 80 faculty taught in this edition in both our pre-recorded and live sessions.

In this graduation ceremony, Lead Faculty of Tekedia Institute, Ndubuisi Ekekwe, will deliver a graduation message titled  “Building Category-King Companies and Winning in Business”. Here are the details:

  • Graduation Lecture: Building Category-King Companies and Winning in Business
  • Date/Time:  Sat, Dec 3 | 7pm – 8.30pm WAT
  • Presenter: Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe
  • Zoom Link – here

This is a public event and is rated E for everyone.  Come and celebrate with our learners as they graduate this Saturday in Africa’s temple for the mastery of business and entrepreneurial capitalism.

To join the next edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins on Feb 6, 2023, go here and register; massive discounts are available before the early bird ends.