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Young People in Nigeria Have Taken Over This Election [video]

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This video touched me: young people in Nigeria fighting to get their voting cards. I commend them for this uncommon commitment, and I am hoping that by 2023, they will get a president that will provide leadership. Young People, continue to fight for that future. The future belongs to you and you can take it back. Many of these leaders cannot steal it, even though they paused it, but with energies like this, there will be victory.

I call on INEC to deploy those billions of naira to make this process seamless. They need to ship more registration machines to the east, west, north and south.  Young People have taken over. Do not mess with them.

As that happens, I ask the Police to watch the registration intimidations happening in some cities. Those must be immediately addressed. You cannot prevent people from registering. Young People: this is your nation. Remember: vote for a leader that will save the future, forget the sound of his name, how he prays or those marginals. Focus on competence, decency, honour and service. I have already VOTED for all of you. May God bless the youth of Nigeria.

Multichoice To Focus More On Content Produced In Africa From 2024

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Africa’s leading entertainment company, Multichoice has disclosed its plans to focus more attention on content produced in Africa in the coming year. The company further revealed that it will be allocating 50% of its total general entertainment spend on the African continent, starting from 2024.

The company also seeks to select some local content, coupled with sporting events such as the English Premier League, UEFA Champions League, and the FIFA World Cup to drive its growth in streaming services.

Multichoice revealed that at the end of its financial results which ended in March 2022, the linear pay tax subscribers base increased by 0.9 million to reach 21.8 million households, comprising 9 million in South Africa and 12.8 million in the rest of Africa, which is led by Nigeria.

According to Multichoice Chief Executive officer, Calvin Mawela, he has this to say “As a platform of choice, our group will look to further expand our entertainment ecosystem by identifying growth opportunities that leverage our scale and local capabilities. We will continue to strive to be a trusted partner for our customers’ ever-evolving needs, enriching their lives by delivering entertainment and relevant consumer services underpinned by technology.”

“The group will continue to focus on and drive the penetration of its video entertainment services across the African continent, offering customers an array of unique and rich media content conveniently and cost-effectively. More specifically, the year ahead will see the group increasing its investment in local content, targeting an allocation of 50% of total general entertainment spend by FY24,” he added.

The company further revealed that the rest of Africa’s business greatly benefited from the reality TV show (Big Brother Naija) and Live sporting events.

This is a step taken in the right direction by Multichoice, with the company’s operation in 50 countries across Africa, it is ideal that more African content is magnified, with such content committed to telling African stories.

There is a large percentage of negative perceptions about the African region, which needs to be addressed. With more rich African content circulated by Multichoice, it will no doubt change these weird perceptions about the continent, which will change the narrative of people to begin to see Africa in a positive light.

Africa is uniquely blessed with rich culture and it is ideal that Multichoice invests significantly in local content with the commitment to telling African stories. This can also increase the number of tourist visitors to the African region to behold the beautiful culture, tradition and lifestyle.

Truth is, the African continent is richly blessed and as a leading credible source of the African narrative, Multichoice has no doubt been doing exceptionally well in not only showcasing and advancing filmmaking in Africa, but in also showcasing African talent on the global stage.

No doubt the African continent is taking its place in the world, by asserting its right to be heard and represented through their rich entertainment content. This new African presence is finding expression in numerous fields, such as creative arts, reality tv shows, soap operas, etc.

The Grand Equations of Business

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At Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins the Live Zoom session today, I will explain these two equations. Until the market has validated that idea, it remains “inventive”. We believe in the  construct that fixing market frictions must bring growth, and growth can only come when ideas become products to fix frictions customers have.

As that happens, those products must be awesome. There is never going to be a great company without awesome products or services. And to do that, a group of people must have efficiently organized factors of production with tools and processes, and executed at a superior level.

  • 1. Innovation = Invention + Commercialization
  • 2. Great Companies = Awesome Products + Superior Execution

Have a bigger momentum [Impact] in markets; grow your size [mass] and have direction at fast pace [velocity]. Check well, we have solved the analogous physics in markets (Momentum = mass x velocity).

We’re Tekedia Institute. We explain the foundational construct of Africa’s entrepreneurial capitalism in this business cambrian moment. Discover the physics in business. Discover the wealth in nations. Join us here 

Join the Academic Festival Today

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The academic festival begins today with Innovation, Growth and Mission of Firms. At Tekedia Institute, we’re excited to have you to co-learn with us. Thank you. Zoom link in the Board school.tekedia.com

Tekedia Institute offers Tekedia Mini-MBA, an innovation management 12-week program, optimized for business execution and growth, with digital operational overlay. It runs 100% online. The theme is Innovation, Growth & Digital Execution – Techniques for Building Category-King Companies. All contents are self-paced, recorded and archived which means participants do not have to be at any scheduled time to consume contents. Besides, programs are designed for ALL sectors, from fintech to construction, healthcare to manufacturing, agriculture to real estate, etc.

Insecurity Crisis In Nigeria Tumbles Foreign Investment In The Agric Sector By 99%

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Sources disclose that capital importation in Nigeria’s agriculture sector tumbled by 99.23 percent from $237.83m in the fourth quarter of 2021 to $1.76m in the first quarter of 2022. This signifies that there was a 99.23 percent decline within three months.

This was contained in the Nigerian capital importation report for Q1 2022 released by the National Bureau of Statistics. According to the report, it disclosed that at least 352 farmers had been killed and kidnapped in the past 12 months, amid rising insecurity in Nigeria.

In the figures obtained from the Nigeria security tracker, it showed that the 352 comprised 216 killed farmers and 136 kidnapped farmers. However, the figures are said to exceed 352 as there were cases of killings and kidnappings of farmers by unknown numbers.

Not only is the agricultural sector affected, but the rising insecurity has also affected the ease of doing business in the country, as a 2019 world bank annual ratings on the ease of doing business, ranked Nigeria 131 among 190 economies.

The insecurity challenge has constituted a threat to lives and properties which has seen a large number of farmers killed on their farmlands, while those who narrowly escaped are faced with the fear of returning which has affected food production in the country.

The insecurity crisis has discouraged local and foreign investors from investing in the agricultural sector, which is stifling and retarding socio-economic development as well as posing a serious challenge to the Gross Domestic output

Due to the halt of agricultural activities in some parts of the country, following the insecurity crisis, food Security which is essential for the country, has declined, thereby threatening food supply which has led to the increase in food prices.

Nigeria is known to be one of the largest producers of yam, cassava, and cowpea. Ironically, the country remains a food deficit nation with over-dependence on the importation of food commodities, grains, as well as livestock products.

It is estimated that Nigeria has cultivable land of 71 million hectares, yet only half is currently used for farming. Many have attributed this reason to the worrisome insecurity crisis that has seen herdsmen gruesomely attack and kill farmers, who a large percentage of them helplessly continue to abandon their farmlands.

This has seriously affected the country, as a large percentage of its population continues to groan under soaring food prices, coupled with hunger, malnutrition, and poverty, with an estimated 80 percent of its population living on less than $1 a day.

The government of Nigeria continues to handle the issue of insecurity with levity and disdain which has led to the decline of local and foreign investors in the Agricultural sector in the country.

No investor will be ecstatic to invest in a country that is ravaged by a widespread insecurity crisis, because it will pose a serious challenge to their investments. They will rather avoid such territories than avoid the risk of loss.

There is growing evidence that investing in underdeveloped and developing countries’ agricultural sectors is among the most efficient ways to reduce poverty and hunger, as such investment can generate a wide range of developmental benefits.

Unfortunately, due to the insecurity crisis in Nigeria, it will no doubt lead to lack of investors, especially in the agricultural sector which will no doubt affect the food production output as well as stagnate production.

The state of insecurity is currently at a frightening level which portends serious adverse implications for the country’s economic growth. It’s high time the government does something serious about the insecurity crisis in the country, because it will surely aggravate Nigeria’s capacity to attract and retain new investments if no serious measures are put in place.