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Home Blog Page 5520

A Call to Mission for the Future of Nigeria

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Good People,  I understand the optimistic exuberance for Nigeria to raise a new generation of leaders who can fix our national paralyses and take our nation to the mountaintop where our citizens will experience opportunities, shared prosperity and abundance for all. While I have engaged here on that call to mission, it is important that I make it clear that I am not running for any political post, yet.  Also, if anyone invites you to contribute money or whatever, be assured that I have not approved it.

We need to be real – running and winning elections in Nigeria must not be trivialized. The nation of LinkedIn and Facebook is not the Nigerian nation. As I wrote recently in the Harvard Business Review, we need to examine our One Oasis and see where the Double Plays will come. Possibly, social media is our gameplan’s One Oasis and we need to then capture political value (votes) in communities and wards. That must be developed for us to have any chance.

Keep your money and any fundraising so that we do not bring fudge factors into this. Let us continue the conversations. Nigeria is at a state where the citizens will want the best to win because many are at ground zero. That opens an opportunity.

But as we look at many playbooks, note this – I will be the best president in the history of Nigeria. Any expense above N5 million will be posted online for all to see. And I will reform EFCC to focus on prevention of corruption instead of just prosecution. I will bring velocity to our land assets and begin a new age of deepening property rights across communities. By the time we are done, GDP will be doubled and rural Nigeria will rise. It is just a 5-point pillar and a new dynamic, vibrant and hopeful nation will emerge.

But it would be easier if both APC and PDP endorse me. How about that?

Uber is Launching Pool Chance, A Co-share, Low-cost Feature in Africa to Win Market Shares

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Uber is trialing a new business feature that may turn things around for its wobbling revenue, especially in low income countries.

TechCrunch reports that it discovered that Uber is testing Pool Chance, a feature that lets riders heading in the same direction share the cost of the journey, in Nairobi Kenya. And that an Uber spokesperson later confirmed it was part of a pilot of the service that it plans to roll out more widely, including to Ghana and Nigeria, pending the outcome of the smaller test.

“We are currently trialing a new Uber ride, Pool Chance, which will cut costs for riders in Nairobi (Kenya) when they share their ride with others heading in the same direction,” Uber’s head of communications for East & West Africa, Lorraine Ondoru, told TechCrunch.

“We use this approach when introducing something new and we want to ensure the marketplace remains healthy and balanced. We will share more details once this has been officially launched,” she added.

The Pool Chance trip option is available on the budget service, Chap Chap in Nairobi; in Nigeria’s commercial capital Lagos and Ghana’s capital Accra, it will be accessible on the UberX category, the report says.

A thread in an Uber drivers’ forum, shared by TechCrunch, describes the Pool Chance as a feature where you have a chance of getting a discounted ride if the driver picks up other riders; otherwise you pay the regular fees you’d pay for an individual ride. UberPool negotiates a specific carpool rate for the rider regardless of who else gets into the vehicle.

The Pool Chance presents a chance for Uber to win more market shares across Africa. Uber is available in eight markets across Africa including Egypt, South Africa, Uganda, Tanzania, and Morocco. The ride-hailing giant said on the app that Pool Chance will bring the cost of rides down by up to 30%, further making its trips more affordable to riders.

“Affordable shared rides can mean more riders using the app, which can lead to more trips, less downtime, and more overall earnings for you,” Uber said about the new service, in a message to its drivers, in the three African countries.

Pool Chance is similar to Uberpool, a low-cost ride-hailing service that was launched in the San Francisco Bay Area in 2014, and has been introduced to other cities around the world since then. But TechCrunch noted that the feature has been suspended in many regions in compliance with Covid-19 social distancing directive. But as vaccine roll out scores more success, and restrictions get eased, Uber is gradually bringing back the service, and introducing it in new markets.

Uber said Uberpool and Pool Chance share a similar concept but are not identical, without offering further detail.

However, Uber is widely introducing Pool Chance in other countries. In April, Uber launched Pool Chance in Auckland, New Zealand after introducing it in Kyiv, Ukraine in October last year. They also switched back on the low-cost rideshare service in Australia’s Sydney and Perth cities earlier in the year, and thereafter launched Pool Chance in Adelaide, according to TechCrunch.

As for Africa, there has been an uptick in products rolled out by Uber, buoyed by dwindling revenue and intense competition from rivals like Estonian-based ride hailing firm, Bolt and InDriver. As part of its African expansion, Uber earlier this month introduced its services to two additional cities in Nigeria – Ibadan and Port Harcourt.

Uber has foreseen a shift toward fare-splitting service in the transport ecosystem and it’s shaping its products around it across countries, especially in Africa. In a recent report quoted by TechCrunch, the California-based company said that “ride-sharing will likely play an increasingly important role within the public transportation mix in the next 3-5 years.”

The company explained that while bus and rail transportation will remain core to public transportation due to their ability to transport large numbers of people, they will be complemented by microtransit, ride-sharing and micro-mobility.

“The addition of new modes with a variable cost structure like ride-sharing and the proliferation of on-demand services will unlock new optimums of efficiency and lower cost structures for public transportation agencies,” said Uber.

This, it said, will go towards ensuring and improving “the equity, accessibility, resilience, and flexibility of their networks.”

However, apart from Bolt and InDriver, the Pool Chance will have to face another rival in Nigeria, Plentywaka, a ride-sharing bus service recently renamed Treepz. The startup is rapidly expanding to other cities across the country. A new player called Transtura just launched to join the fray. 

Big Numbers from Great Innovators

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This is one of the finest startups in Nigeria today. They did this without any external funding. Double-exit operators, they know how to deliver alpha*. The target is clear: “Prof, we plan to hit 1 million users by December 2021”. Join us to meet the team on Oct 30 during Tekedia Capital Demo Day.

And meet another one that generates close to N4 billion value on transactions monthly in Nigeria. All the best startups converge here because they like us! They like the intensity and rigour we bring to their missions.

Tekedia Capital >> building the Next Africa with Africa’s finest entrepreneurs and innovators. Join us here 

*Data, as of Oct 2.

Boss your time – And Advance

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Time is boundless in form but it is also the most limited available asset. A man/woman who cannot manage his/her seconds will wander through the boundless of hours. When you master your time, you position yourself to WIN your future. Do not allow time to boss you, but rather be in charge of your time. The time to think, plan, rest, and execute.

Spending 10 minutes to plan your day will save you at least 2 hours or improve productivity by 2 hours. Consistently do that, you will see improvement on your missions.  A day without a plan is a day that begins without time. Unfortunately, time will not stop because you have  not recognized it.

Boss your time – and advance!

The Police Have No Power Over Civil Matters

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Nigeria police continues to struggle to maintain peace

The police have no power over civil matters.

‘I will use the police to deal with you, I will lock you up in the police cell, I will make sure that you are detained for a lengthy time in the police custody until you pay me my money, blah blah blah…’ and so many other threats in the name of the Nigerian police force. That was the voice of a man whom I overhead threatening another man who he said is owing him some money, he is threatening to rain down on him all manners of evil with the powers of the police agency.

SHOCKER:
Police have no power in civil matters or cases that are of civil nature; therefore no police officer or officers should ever get involved in any matter that is civil in nature.

It is an abysmal situation that Nigeria is a country where money can buy you anything including loyalty from the police agency which is a law enforcement agency instituted by the constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria and embellished by the Nigerian police act for matters relating to crimes and of criminal nature only. It has been the case where the police officers are used by a person to harass and intimidate another person which he has a face off with. It is also no longer news that landlords employ the police officers to harass, intimidate and send packing their tenants whenever they please, people in business also use the police officers as debt collectors to collect their debts from their business partners, influential men of the society and the ones who can afford the services of the police use the police officers to enforce their failed or about to fail contracts. The men of the police agency are also always eager to jump into civil cases just for pay.

The constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria 1999 (amended) created the police force in s.214 (1) and it says; ‘There shall be a police force for Nigeria, which shall be known as the Nigeria Police Force, and subject to the provisions of this section no other police force shall be established for the Federation or any part thereof’.

The constitution went further to state in s.214 (2) (b) that the police agency and its officers shall have such powers and duties and functions as maybe be conferred to them by laws (paraphrased). The Nigerian Police Act of 2020 (as amended) specifically in s.4 highlighted the general duties and functions of the police as conferred to them by law and it says; ‘The police shall be employed for the prevention and detection of crime…’ (paraphrased).

No law in Nigeria, absolutely no law, gives the police power to get involved in civil matters and the court have constantly frowned at the act of the police getting involved in a matter which is not of criminal nature. The court of appeal even recently cautioned the police agency and its officers where the police delved into civil matter and acted as debt collector which is clearly not one of their functions as provided by law. The court succinctly stated in the case of NWADIUGWU v. IGP & ORS (2015) LPELR-26027(CA) that in the police are neither debt collectors nor Arbitrators and should be careful of delving into civil disputes as they don’t come into the purview of their functions, duties and clearly above their powers.

It could be said that the constant act of the police officers getting involved in civil cases is out of sheer ignorance of the members of the police agency or could it be that the police agents  just have a knack for flaunting orders, disobedience  of the rules of law and utmost disregard to the laws of the land. Whichever it is, the police agency must be reoriented and the fact that they should not get involved in civil disputes painted in their spirit, soul and body and written in there hearts and minds.

Let it be clear that when a police officer engages in civil matter, he can be sued; likely to be sued for breach of fundamental human rights and cautioned by the court and sanctioned to pay damages for acting far above his functions as provided by the police act and the constitution of the federal republic of Nigeria.