Two more days and we will begin the academic excursion into the mechanics of market systems at Tekedia Mini-MBA. This edition which begins June 7 is the best yet. And it remains the same price. Click, register and co-learn with us. Registration closes soon.
Nigeria Orders Telcos (MTN, Airtel, Glo, etc) To Suspend Twitter
The Nigerian government has ordered telecommunication companies to suspend Twitter in Nigeria. The companies have complied: “ALTON (Association of Licensed Telecommunication Operators of Nigeria) has also conducted a robust assessment of the request in accordance with internationally accepted principles. Based on national interest provisions in the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003, and within the licence terms under which the industry operates; our members have acted in compliance with the directives of NCC. We will continue to engage all relevant authorities and stakeholders and will act as may be further directed by the NCC.”
People, there is no problem, go here and join Tekedia Hub https://school.tekedia.com/support/hub/ . There is a good local solution. We have web and Android versions.
Sure, we did not create Tekedia Hub as another social media. It is mainly to ensure our Tekedia programs do not have any shocks like this. So, if you are worried about a possibility which just happened, consider it.
Can Nigeria go all the way? Suspend Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram. Lol. Hahaha. If that happens, just go to hub.tekedia.com.
Statement from ALTON President, Gbenga Adebayo
“ALTON has also conducted a robust assessment of the request in accordance with internationally accepted principles.
“Based on national interest provisions in the Nigerian Communications Act, 2003, and within the licence terms under which the industry operates; our members have acted in compliance with the directives of NCC.
“We will continue to engage all relevant authorities and stakeholders and will act as may be further directed by the NCC, ” Mr Adebayo said.
Facebook Rules: Donald Trump Suspended for Two Years
Facebook has ruled on the “case” of former US President Donald Trump. The verdict has a mixed feeling: Donald Trump is suspended for two years from the platforms of the social media giant. With this, the case comes to a conclusion! That is how powerful Mark Zuckerberg has become. The Nigerian president experienced the same power when its post, threatening with civil war playbooks, was deleted.
Facebook said it would extend its ban of former President Donald Trump to two years, retroactive to Jan. 7, following his incendiary comments during the Capitol insurrection. Trump would be eligible for reinstatement in January 2023, but the social-media giant said he would only be reinstated if the risk to public safety was deemed to have receded. Going forward, suspensions of public figures in times of unrest would be time-bound, the company announced. Facebook also said it would hold politicians accountable to its hate speech rules.
As I have written here many times, the empires of the future would be run by those who control demand, not supply. Trump saw that in action when it gave up on its own social media platform. The greatest feature in Facebook is this: it has many people there. Forget the technology; anyone can build those features and clone Facebook 100% but without the users, you have no chance.
What will Trump do? Unfortunately, he has limited options from his base. If you check the ranking of American universities, in the top 20, liberal states host more than 80% of them. If you look at the largest cities and per capita income, liberal states run the list. If you look at the formation of great companies, liberal states win. So, if you are hoping for a major conservative social media platform that can give Trump space in the next two years, forget it.
But do not worry: If Nigeria has its ways, you will not miss this suspension since possibly Nigeria will add Facebook on its suspension list, after Twitter!
Forty Goal Setting Quotes to Inspire You to Success
More than 52 years after American activist Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, his quotes have continued to inspire lovers of justice globally. His famous 1963 “I have a dream” speech created goal setting quotes for racial justice that echoed through the minds and hearts of people, who thus are inspired to fight the cause of justice for themselves and others. It is believed to have birthed movements like Black Lives Matter (BLM), an organization founded in 2013 to fight racial injustice.
In May 2020, George Floyd, a Black American man was murdered by the police, opening an old wound from the racial injustice that took the life of King Jr. Floyd’s death spurred an unprecedented global quest for justice which about a year later, paid off when the killer-cop was convicted. It thus marks a significant shift in the status quo that has characterized life in the United States even years after King Jr.’s death.
In the wake of the Black Lives Matter demonstrations following Floyd’s death, a 1967 speech by King Jr. at Stanford University became increasingly resonant. “A riot is the language of the unheard.” He had said that to point out that “as long as America postpones justice,” there will be “recurrences of violence and riots over and over again.”
On Monday June 1, 2021, the US President Joe Biden became the first sitting president to visit Tulsa, Oklahoma, a Black race town known as Black Wall Street that was destroyed by a racist mob on May 31 and June 1, 1921. Biden’s visit was to mark the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre, a part of efforts to address systemic racism. Biden made racial justice a pillar of his presidential campaign, a message he intensified after the killing of George Floyd. But it all started with the goal setting quotes made by King Jr. over 50 years ago.
Nevertheless, racial justice is not the only area King Jr.’s goal setting quotes have caused a change, they have been practical in many other areas of human endeavors – leadership, sports, business, financial planning etc.
“If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.” It is one of King Jr.’s quotes that have inspired businesses.
But he is not the only one who has inspirational quotes. Men and women from all works of life, who have, in the course of their various activities accumulated experiences, have also shared motivational quotes about goals which have inspired people to success.
“You are old enough to get a job. That’s where money comes from.” That’s the goal setting response that inspired Dave Ramsey to become an entrepreneur. His father had told him that when he was 12, and had asked for money to buy popsicle, and it spurred him to action. At early stage of his life, Ramsey delved into many business ventures and became a millionaire at 26. Although there were mistakes, he learned valuable money lessons from each one of them. Today, Ramsey has an empire of businesses including financial planning services.
What is goal setting?
Goal setting is the process of identifying something that you want to accomplish and establishing measurable goals and timeframes to achieve it, according to YourDictionary.
This definition denotes determination to achieve ones aim, developing the needed discipline to repudiate procrastination, and developing the mettle to face potential challenges.
Why do you need quotes about goal setting?
Goals drive people to accomplish extraordinary tasks and setting them requires motivation. Usually, goal setting quotes come from accomplished individuals who speak through their personal experience. For instance, King Jr. didn’t sit at home telling people about his dream of “a day when Black people will not be judged by the color of their skin.” He was in the streets where he eventually paid the ultimate price, setting the goal for such a day. It has been one of the main reasons people find motivation in his quotes; he walked the talk.
Goal setting quotes come from practical engagements that have yielded results. Thus, they inspire aspiring individuals to action. Thinking about one or two quotes daily can improve the ability to scale goal-hindering hurdles.
“Obstacles are those frightening things that become visible when we take our eyes off our goals,” said Henry Ford
The above quote beams with an example of the sort of encouragement people can derive from goal setting quotes, to push through the challenges they may encounter on their way to achieve their goals.
Entrepreneur and business developer, Dr. Vijay Soni made ‘quotes’ number 5 in his piece: 10 Things Successful People do for Motivation. He said: “Whatever motivational quote you decide on, print it out and tape it to your mirror. Or if you want to get fancy with it, take a marker and write it on the mirror!
“That’ll get you going in the morning!”
As the world develops, technological and scientific advancement is creating opportunities for new business ideas to be developed. Developing such ideas into successful inventions, businesses and requires planning, setting goals, and goal setting quotes for motivation.
Here are forty goal setting quotes that can motivate anyone to climb the hills of success.
- “Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into the visible.” Tony Robbins
- “No desired achievement is gained without any goal setting.” Wayne Chirisa
- “You need a plan to build a house. To build a life, it is even more important to have a plan or goal.” Zig Ziglar
- “If you want to be happy, set a goal that commands your thoughts, liberates your energy and inspires your hopes.” Andrew Carnegie
- “A goal is a dream with a deadline.” Napoleon Hill
- “All who have accomplished great things have had a great aim, have fixed their gaze on a goal which was high, one which sometimes seemed impossible.” Orison Swett Marden
- “Without dreams and goals there is no living, only merely existing, and that is not why we are here.” Mark Twain
- “You have to set goals that are almost out of reach. If you set a goal that is attainable without much work or thought, you are stuck with something below your true talent and potential.” Steve Garvey
- “No desired achievement is gained without any goal setting.” Wayne Chirisa
- “If you want to reach your goals and dreams, you cannot do it without discipline.” Lee Kuan Yew
- “Review your goals twice every day in order to be focused on achieving them.” Les Brown
- “Cut your excuses in half and double your actions around your goals.” Robin S. Sharma
- “The first step to achieving your goal, is to take a moment to respect your goal. Know what it means to you to achieve it.” Dwayne Johnson
- “Without a plan, even the most brilliant business can get lost. You need to have goals, create milestones and have a strategy in place to set yourself up for success.” Yogi Berra
- “A person should set his goals as early as he can and devote all his energy and talent to getting there.” Walt Disney
- “I’m a firm believer in goal setting. Step by step. I can’t see any other way of accomplishing anything.” Michael Jordan
- “Achieve self-mastery over your thoughts, and constantly direct them toward your goals and objectives. Learn to focus your attention on the goals that you want to achieve and on finding ways to achieve those goals.” Napoleon Hill
- “Goals give you more than a reason to get up in the morning; they are an incentive to keep you going all day.” Harvey MacKay
- “Setting goals helps bring your future into your present and the present is the only time we can take action.” Zig Ziglar
- “When a goal matters enough to a person, that person will find a way to accomplish what at first seemed impossible.” Nido R. Qubein
- “My dreams are worthless, my plans are dust, my goals are impossible. All are of no value unless they are followed by action.” Og Mandino
- “Lacking an external focus, the mind turns inward on itself and creates problems to solve, even if the problems are undefined or unimportant. If you find a focus, an ambitious goal that seems impossible and forces you to grow, these doubts disappear.” Tim Ferriss
- “Our goal is to find an outstanding business at a sensible price, not a mediocre business at a bargain price.” Warren Buffett
- “I don’t focus on what I’m up against. I focus on my goals and I try to ignore the rest.” Venus Williams
- “People with goals succeed because they know where they’re going.” Earl Nightingale
- “It must be borne in mind that the tragedy of life doesn’t lie in not reaching your goal. The tragedy lies in having no goals to reach.” Benjamin E. Mays
- “One way to keep momentum going is to have constantly greater goals.” Michael Korda
- “The trouble with not having a goal is that you can spend your life running up and down the field and never score.” – Bill Copeland
- “Goals. There is no telling what you can do when you get inspired by them. There is no telling what you can do when you believe in them. And there’s no telling what will happen when you act upon them.” – Jim Rohn
- “All who have accomplished great things have had a great aim, have fixed their gaze on a goal which was high, one which sometimes seemed impossible.” – Orison Swett Marden
- “Life is short, fragile and does not wait for anyone. There will NEVER be a perfect time to pursue your dreams and goals. ” – Unknown
- “My philosophy of life is that if we make up our mind what we are going to make of our lives, then work hard toward that goal, we never lose – somehow we always win out.” – Ronald Reagan
- “Aim at the sun, and you may not reach it; but your arrow will fly far higher than if aimed at an object on a level with yourself.” – J. Howes
- “Most “impossible” goals can be met simply by breaking them down into bite size chunks, writing them down, believing them, and then going full speed ahead as if they were routine.” – Don Lancaster
- “Our goals can only be reached through a vehicle of a plan, in which we must fervently believe, and upon which we must vigorously act. There is no other route to success.” Pablo Picasso
- “Our plans miscarry because they have no aim. When a man does not know what harbor he is making for, no wind is the right wind.” Seneca
- “It is not enough to take steps which may someday lead to a goal; each step must be itself a goal and a step likewise.” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- “We should set our goals; then learn to control our appetites. Otherwise, we will lose ourselves in the confusion of the world.” Hark Herald Sarmiento
- “On the way to your goal, you can always stop, rest, go the opposite way for a while; but after a reasonable time you must set off again towards your goal!”? Mehmet Murat ildan
- “Writing and achieving your goals is not failure, not having a goal to write in the first place is the start of failure.” – Onyi Anyado
For decades, quotes have been documented to motivate and inspire people to achieve their goals. Goals touch all aspects of life and setting them requires motivation. The best type of motivation comes from those who have walked their talk, making their words an accelerator of action for people who want to tow the path of success.
Many successful people have been inspired by goal setting quotes, and many who have dreams are still going to be inspired. Goals are co-travelers in the journey to success and everyone wishing to be successful needs to set a goal. The above listed goal setting quotes were put together to motivate people who have dreams and visions, and to inspire them on their way to success.
How Nigerians Embraced Unity Discourse and Dissociated from Name Change
Since independence, Nigeria has witnessed and still experiencing a mix of positive and negative growth in socioeconomic and political indicators. On several occasions, people and organisations have reiterated the need to address some of the challenges in the country through collective and sustainable approaches. However, the inability of the political leaders to address the challenges such as insecurity, growing unemployment rate, corruption among others have been used and still being considered by citizens to say that “this is not the best time to be Nigerians.”
The returned to democratic governance is over 20 years. Throughout the years, restructuring, resource control, state police, adjustment to revenue sharing and secession dominated socioeconomic and political discourse space. National conferences have been held with a view of finding lasting solutions to the problems. Various plans, programmes and initiatives have been drawn and executed towards accelerated economic growth and sustainable political institutions.
Still, to citizens, social critics and political analysts, the outcomes are not enough to ensure peace and unity across the country. To them, social, economic and political injustice remain high.
Like the previous national political dialogue meetings, the current National Assembly called for the review of the 1999 Constitution, which has been described as the enabler of various socioeconomic and political crises since 1999. This has largely been linked to the hurried production of the instrument by the then Military Government to return the country to democratic governance as promised in 1998.
At one of the constitutional review sittings across the six geo-political zones, Adeleye Jokotoye, a tax consultant, submitted a proposal with the argument that the current name [Nigeria] was an imposition of its past colonial masters and should be changed. He believes that changing Nigeria to the United African Republic would physically and psychologically reflect a new beginning. His proposal was blown by the news media and vehemently discussed on social networking sites as at the time of writing this piece. One of the foreign news media reported that If Nigeria becomes the United African Republic, it means the country will join some African countries that changed their names after independence.
As people and organisations debate the name change, Jude Abaga, a popular entertainer tweeted that “The narrative that ‘Nigeria hates Igbo people’ is an outdated context that will leave with the old and bitter generation. Today let us stand with our Igbo family and say #IAmIgboToo,” declaring his solidarity for people from the South-Eastern region of Nigeria known as ‘Igbos’. The news media also reported this and passionately being debated on social media platforms.
Reporting and discussing issues of national importance, as noted earlier, are not new in Nigeria. Meanwhile, it has always been a herculean task for the concerned stakeholders to make smart and sustainable decisions from the insights that emanated from the media coverage and discussions held on various platforms. In this regard, our analyst examines the national issues with a view of adding to existing insights from digital community, which has been described by a number of academic scholars and professionals in industries as a place where political leaders need to watch for information and knowledge that would help them advance socioeconomic and political institutions.
Public Curiosity About the Two Issues
Analysis of 24 hours of seeking information about the name change and #IamIgboToo indicates that Nigerians and other nationals developed interest in the name change more than the unity campaign. United African Republic Nigeria, Nigeria, UAR, UAR Nigeria and United African Republic were the phrases deployed for understanding meaning of the new name, the person who proposed it and why is it necessary to change from Nigeria to the United African Republic. Interest was huge in Oyo, Ogun, Rivers and Lagos states, and the Federal Capital Territory during the search period.
While people used these phrases, they equally sought information about Africa, Republic as a form of government, United States of America, United Arab Republic and Central African Republic. Our analyst notes that seeking information about other countries which have ‘United’ as part of their name is an indication that Nigerians and other nationals in the country want to understand how US, UAE and CAR evolved and benefits being accrued to all stakeholders.
Actions and Shots on Twitter
The issues of renaming various policies, programmes and facilities without sustainable performance dominated UAR space, while social, economic and political injustice are vehemently tweeted on IAIT space. To further understand the curiosity, our analyst examines actions and shots of 4,160 Twitter Users regarding the two issues.
The earliest year of creating the handles is 2009 and the latest is 2021. The 2,080 users analysed for the name change have over 5.4 million followers with an average of 2,642 followers per user. Analysis also establishes that 5 million tweets have been tweeted throughout the Twitter Use Life Cycle [from the account creation date till 2021].
The average tweets per user during the TULC is 28, 264 while the maximum is over 806,000. A total of 931 hashtags was used by the users. The highest was 7 in a tweet, while 2 hashtags were more used in the tweets. Over 77% tweets do not have hashtags. Our analyst also discovered that 49% of the tweets could not be classified by the Twitter. Over 42%, 3.7% and 5% were categorised as retweet, reply and tweet respectively. Text [56.7%], photo [37%] and video [6%] were predominantly used for disseminating messages. Surprisingly, all the users are not verified by the Twitter.
The same number of users was analysed for #IamIgboToo. Analysis reveals that the users have over 4 million followers. On average, 2,025 followers are following a user. Over 57 million tweets have been tweeted since the day of creating their handles. The average tweets within the TULC of the accounts is 27, 453, while the maximum is over 15 million. A total of 3,555 hashtags was used. The highest was 15 in a tweet. Over 58% of the tweets contained one hashtag followed by 443 tweets which have 2 hashtags.
Retweeting messages regarding the campaign was more prominent [88.2%] than creating personal messages [9.5%]. Contrary to our expectation, only 2.3% of the tweets received replies. Like the United African Republic, our analysis indicates that the users employed text format [58.9%] more than photo [29.3%] and video [11.7%] for expressing their feelings. Only two accounts [0.1%] were verified.
Further analysis of the two issues reveals that the followers of the UAR and IAIT are connected by 6.9%. Despite this, our analysis establishes that the more users who tweeted about IAIT used hashtags the less those who discussed UAR employed it. According to our analyst, this suggests that users who developed interest in expressing their feelings about the need to unite have the capacity to influence others, articulating and disseminating their thoughts to appropriate publics than those who tweeted about UAR.
The insights from the current analysis aligns with the outcomes of a study conducted by our analyst in collaboration with a University Don. The study was carried out with the intention of understanding how Nigerians used the comment sections of selected Nigerian online newspapers to interact and discuss issues of agitation for secession and farmers-herders crises with a view to determining how the issues got the citizens to speak up or to stay silent. While the readers were more hostile in their engagement of the issues of agitation for secession, which had ethnic-inclination, the current insights largely indicated that Nigerians are ready to speak against statements that could lead to disunity despite sociocultural and political differences.
Exhibit 1: Average Tweets in the Life Cycle versus Number of Hashtags Used
Source: Nigerian Twitter Community, 2021; Infoprations Analysis, 2021



