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Tekedia Institute Has Scholarships for Tekedia Mini-MBA

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Good People, just a note that Tekedia Institute General Scholarship Fund continues to do well. At the moment, we are directing general scholarships to professionals working in orphanages, NGOs serving those with physical challenges and teachers (pre-K, primary and secondary) in rural parts of sub-Saharan Africa. Just ask your principal or head of the NGO to write our team. Our team will do some verifications.

(For private scholarships, they are directed based on donors’ instructions.)

I want to thank the donors including the person who wired N400,000 this morning with instruction “anonymous”. We copied loud and clear. Take this as our Thank You since we cannot even write to you.

Meanwhile, registration continues for Tekedia Mini-MBA (Feb 8 – May 3, 2021): online, self-paced, $140 (or N50,000 naira). Click and register by tomorrow for early benefits.

Sample certificate to be issued to co-learners

What Happened To Nigeria?

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War is evil and do not pray for it for your enemy. As I continue reading New York Times archives to understand Nigeria in the 1960s, I see pictures that push me to ask “What happened to Nigeria? How did we miss it as a nation?” You read of bravery and uncommon creativity. Stories of the palm oil, rubber, etc yield-improving innovations.

On Biafra war, the story of how a recruiter would go to workshops, recruit young men and put them in weapons development programs, and within months those men will create extremely sophisticated tools for warfare will put a chill. In most cases, none of the men had entered a secondary school as it was a luxury then.

They used pencils and created maps with young people, usually below 23, leading ambushes, carrying the mortar, trekking miles from the factory to installation! The women used local herbs to make food last longer before spoiling!

They innovated on silos, irrigation, etc, building better ways to preserve groundnuts. The kola nuts and cocoa flourished. They created local vaccines, etc. Practically, Nigeria was like the America we admire today.

What happened? Where are the children of these Nigerians? Did crude oil take our brains?

Comment on LinkedIn Feed

Comment #1: We stopped thinking Prof Ndubuisi. We wanted ready made resources. We switched to plan B and deprived plan A of our resources, energy and thinking cap. The young started sleeping and lazying away as that generation aged away. May we not wait for problems (war) to bring out the innovative spirit in us.

The Outliers in Liberal Democracy – Trump, Kagame, Biya, Museveni

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I was in a hotel in Kampala fourteen months ago. I saw his picture with the inscription General Yoweri Museveni. Yes, the Ugandan President is also a general! They said he has “won” the recent presidential election, and will keep an office he assumed in January 1986. While you may be offended by that outcome in the age of Facebook, remember that Paul Biya of Cameroon has been in the presidential palace since 1982. Paul Kagame of Rwanda is also there, since April 2000.

Those things do not look right. But look deeper. The fact is this: in a world that is becoming more democratic, it is easier to have such outliers, simply because no military general will dream of a coup as it is certain that the world will reject it. So, the only playbook is this: do a jamboree of an election, and with that hold on to power.  The United Nations will issue its press release. The AU, US, EU, etc will do their versions. And after 7 days, the world moves on. You keep the palace.

That was what happened in the United States before Twitter and Big Tech decided to “act” government and “regulators” by banning politicians, disconnecting corrosive websites, etc. Largely, in a world which is attaining a steady state of liberal democracy*, the orthodox democratic institutions are evidently unable to deal with outliers. U.S. institutions struggled to manage Trump’s statements because they were not designed for outliers like Donald J Trump. 

Likewise, African Union, UN, etc, cannot change the course of Uganda because they are not designed for such. That explains why Museveni, Biya and Kagame will continue to hold power, since from all angles they are running democratic states, and the institutions have no processes to curtail their ambitions.

Bobi Wine lost before the voting; he simply provided a cover for the “democratic” dictator to continue his records.  His country will need a “Twitter effect” to normalize the equilibrium. If not, another player will continue and juice the party for Museveni. Interestingly, the Twitter Effect may not come from governments!


*This is what Liberal Democracy means which some of these countries may claim they are practicing as there are elections in the process.

 It is characterised by elections between multiple distinct political parties, a separation of powers into different branches of government, the rule of law in everyday life as part of an open society, a market economy with private property, and the equal protection of human rights, civil rights, civil liberties and political freedoms for all people. To define the system in practice, liberal democracies often draw upon a constitution, either codified (such as in the United States) or uncodified (such as in the United Kingdom), to delineate the powers of government and enshrine the social contract. After a period of sustained expansion throughout the 20th century, liberal democracy became the predominant political system in the world (wikipedia)

Left to Right: These Nigerian Facilities Management Companies Won’t Exist in Next 5 Years

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Facilities Management Industry is one of the emerging industries in Nigeria. For more than 10 years, private and public stakeholders have been struggling to make the industry well known and appreciated by the facilities users. Asking the meaning and essence of facilities management would reveal a number of surprising answers from people and business owners, who have not seen the need for the industry. Some are equating facilities management with estate management and project management.

Previous analyses carried out by our analyst established that practitioners need continuous knowledge and skills acquisition towards inclusive value creation and growth. These analyses have also pinpointed areas that players, especially those at the upstream [players with a clear solution delineation and constant innovation] of value capturing, need to work on in order to increase the chance of those at the downstream [players with undefined solution and low in developing innovative solutions].

From left [downstream players] to right [upstream players], the industry is having an unhealthy competition. Unhealthy competition, according to a number of sources, is not appropriate for an emerging industry. Our analysis of the industry in the last few years has indicated this competition permeates most in Lagos, where many players locate their headquarters.

The nature of unhealthy competition is better understood within the context of creating and delivering solutions. In our experience, downstream players are competing with upstream players by offering solutions they lack the required strategic capital to execute. They are going head-to-head with the established players by acquiring integrated facilities management solutions that need sophisticated strategic capital. Upstream players are competing with downstream players by getting contracts that downstream players should have for rapid scale up.

Little attention is being paid to knowledge production and codification for existing and future practitioners. Collective efforts towards industry growth are minimal. There is a need for knowledge co-creation and sharing among the practitioners and key executive members of the upstream and downstream players. Players and professionals should take cue from South Africa, Egypt and Kenya, where collective efforts paid off after many years of creating and sharing knowledge.

If this competition continues, our analyst expects extinction of a number of players in the downstream by 2025. The players that would be hit hardest are those who offer soft solutions such as cleaning and procurement. These players hardly innovate and communicate with the prospective clients. Instead of concentrating and massing their strategic resources towards delivering these solutions sustainably, they have been discovered to expend them on solutions that should be offered by those at the upstream of the industry.

Amidst Surge in COVID-19 Cases, Nigerian Governments Move to Reopen NYSC Camps, Schools

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The decision of the Federal Government of Nigeria to reopen schools and the National Youth Service Corp. (NYSC) is facing heavy backlash due to the increasing cases of COVID-19. The second wave of the pandemic which came with more transmission force than the first has stirred concern that if the schools are allowed to open, the spread will be blown out of control and easily overwhelm Nigeria’s fragile healthcare system.

Schools are scheduled to reopen in Lagos State, the epicenter of the pandemic in Nigeria, and Ogun State on Jan. 18 while NYSC orientation camps will reopen on the Jan. 19 against the advice of medical professionals and recommendation made by the Economic Sustainability Committee led by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo. The committee had in June recommended that the three-week orientation program for the National Youth Service Corps be suspended for two years, while the service itself could continue.

“The immediate focus in the education sector is to address the disruption caused by the pandemic and ensure social distancing measures at all levels of education.

“In a similar context, consideration will be given to suspending the National Youth Service Corps orientation camp exercises for at least 24 months while allowing deployment to places of primary assignment. This will ensure that there is no backing in the national service placement pipeline,” the committee recommended.

In a blatant rejection of this recommendation, the federal government is moving ahead with the plan to reopen the camps which were forced to close in November after shortly being reopened, due to resurgence of coronavirus cases.

On Friday Jan. 15, Nigeria had 1,867 new cases; the highest since the pandemic began, putting the total number of cases recorded in Nigeria at 107,345, with 1,413 deaths. The increase spikes concern among health workers who fear that the decision to reopen the NYSC camps and schools will lead to further escalation of infections, a situation Nigeria’s healthcare system lacks the capacity to contain.

“The whole world knows that increased human interactions lead to an increase in COVID-19 infections. Even in the UK and USA, schools have been re-opened and shut at different times but the key thing is to reduce human interaction as much as possible.

“The truth is that re-opening of NYSC camps is avoidable. Corps members could have been given virtual orientation lectures and posted to their places of primary assignment. That was what the Vice-president’s committee recommended. There is no way these camps will not record infections,” a Nigerian health worker said.

Government’s attempt to reopen schools earlier has resulted in infections. There was a report of a secondary school where many students and staff tested positive for the virus in november, which this begs the question; why is the federal government keen on reopening both the schools and NYSC orientation camps.

Punch reported a source in the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development saying that the government succumbed to pressure due to economic considerations. The source said that some persons have been awarded NYSC contracts which need the camps to reopen for them to be executed; otherwise there will be huge losses.

“About 90 percent of the budget of the Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development goes to the NYSC. You can check it. There is no way the government will suspend the orientation programme for two years. The orientation camp is a key component of the NYSC contracts.

“It was just like when the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs insisted on continuing with the school feeding programme even when schools were shut during lockdown,” the source said.

Apparently not a decision he can change, the Director General of Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, responding to the development, said the government could not stop all activities in attempt to quell the pandemic. He said the authorities can only find a way to mitigate the risks as much as possible, adding that measures have been put in place to ensure safety in the NYSC camps.

The director of the NYSC, Brig Gen. Shuaibu Ibrahim, said the orientation camps will continue with the safety protocols established in November which ensures social distancing.

The NYSC Camp Safe Reopening Project Lead, Dr Oyeladun Okunromade disclosed extra measures being taken to ensure safety in the camps. She said there will be no religious gatherings in the camps and corps members will be tested for COVID-19 upon arrival at the orientation camps, and those who test positive will be isolated at approved NCDC health facilities. She explained that a maximum of 200 corps members would resume daily.

Despite these promised safety measures, medical professionals who spoke with Punch said the idea of reopening schools and the youth service orientation camps now will only breed disaster.

“Even the schools they want to open, I am so scared. Just about two or three days ago, we heard about LASUCOM hostel where three students tested positive, they have to close down the medical school, yet we are talking about NYSC camps that would have thousands of young people.

“Why is the government doing this? Indeed, by now, what we should be talking about is total lockdown,” Ogun State Chairman of Nigeria Medical Association, Dr. Oladipo Ogunlaja told Punch.

The federal government had on Friday ruled out the possibility of another lockdown, given the economic considerations of the country. However, the recent upsurge in COVID-19 cases is worrisome and equally poses a danger that bears more economic consequence.

With the government’s plan for vaccines acquisition yet to materialize, federal government’s plan to move on with the decision to reopen NYSC camps and schools, even when affluent countries with access to vaccines are keeping schools closed has been condemned.