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Home Blog Page 5960

Tekedia Institute Welcomes Kiakiagas to Tekedia Mini-MBA

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I have just spent a couple of minutes looking at the frictions they are fixing. Kiakiagas.com is your supplier of cooking gas in Nigeria. They offer free delivery of cooking gas to most homes in the major cities within 45minutes. The differentiation is that you can use an app to place the order and they will deliver. I see huge new frameworks they can apply to deepen the business.

At Tekedia Institute, we welcome Kiakiagas to Tekedia Mini-MBA. CEO Emmanuel Uwandu, Jane, and team, we are confident that our program will support your mission of growing this business.

We have many related courses, one delivered by an operating manager from Schlumberger and another by a U.S.-based executive in the pipeline industry. So, besides the business courses, you will get great insights on the business cases of gas and oil business.

Again, welcome to the largest business school in Africa!

Tekedia Institute offers 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.

It is a sector- and firm-agnostic management program comprising videos, flash cases, challenge assignments, labs, written materials, webinars, etc by a global faculty coordinated by Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe. Register here.

Tekedia Academic Programs

The Kano’s $46 Wage Shock

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I do not know how to begin this note. Yes, when the Nigeria Labour Congress was pushing for the evidently deserved raise on workers’ wages, I made a comment that winning the strike and legal battles for workers may not mean that their bank accounts would see the money. Yes, in a nation where population growth is growing faster than economic opportunities, shocks will happen. When you add that Nigeria uses 60% of its revenue to service debts, you get a clear picture that striking for wage raises may not mean much in the long-run. Yes, if there is no money, minimum wage would be frozen.

Kano state has drawn the first blood: “The Kano State Government has reverted to N18,000 (about US$46) minimum wage, …The Special Adviser on Media to Governor Abdullahi Ganduje, Salihu Tanko-Yakasai, confirmed the development in a telephone interview with The PUNCH on Wednesday in Kano.”

“Yes, the state government has stopped the payment of N30,000 minimum wage to its workers with immediate effect,” he said.

Tanko-Yakasai said the reason behind the action was due to the recession occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to him, the state was unable to continue paying N30,000 because what the state was currently getting as a government had reduced.

“The state government has reverted to the initial minimum wage due to the recession.

“What we are getting now as a government has reduced, and we can’t afford to pay the N30,000 minimum wage,” he said.

You read it, and as the official noted, Abuja was not sending us enough money, and that means we cannot pay the old N30,000 ($79) monthly wage. But if you are truly honest with yourself, you would have expected this. When Kano state agreed to pay this minimum wage, there was no clarity on how it would do it without Abuja expanding its size! 

Of course Kano state workers are lucky; Abia state does not even care, even to pay the minimum wage. The state abandoned its college of education when workers went on strike for unpaid wages. Today, that school is permanently closed.

As always, expect some strikes in the next coming weeks. But those will not change the fundamental construct of the root cause which remains that Nigeria needs a drastic redesign on its economic architecture, to become more productive, so that the state workers could generate enough, to pay themselves whatever they want, instead of waiting for handouts from Abuja. 

Abuja may not be helpful these days as it is looking for money to fund its own bureaucracy. Since 1999, Nigeria has scaled wastes, and it seems the party will continue, as they have removed the brake pads in Nigeria’s moving train to nowhere.

Nigeria data

 

Nigeria’s 60% Debt Service to Revenue Ratio And Push To Borrow from Unclaimed Dividends, Dormant Bank Balances

Agile Methodology At Tekedia Institute

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In Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night, Duke Orsino delivered one of the most memorable lines in the book when he said “If music be the food of love, play on”. Shakespeare did not stop there: in a scene in Hamlet, when Lord Polonius asked Hamlet “What do you read, my lord?”; Hamlet responded “Words, words, words”. People, if innovation drives the wealth in firms, DESIGN is the “music” and “words”. So, in Tekedia Mini-MBA, we have been expanding our design courses. I love design because as a microprocessor designer, I understand one thing: good circuits optimize transistors. And great products come with vision, within tradeoffs on resources.

We have added a course on Design Thinking which runs for close to 3 hours from a former Innovation Lead from software powerhouse, SAP. We have also added Packaging Design from a business leader from Nigerian Breweries.

I am so excited that everything has come together. A scrum master and agile coach, Bola Adesope. ITIL, PMP, PRINCE2, CBAP, CSSBB, CSM, PSM, CSPO, ICP-ACC has prepared an amazing course on Agile Methodology. It is a beauty and you cannot afford to miss it.

See the complete Tekedia Mini-MBA curriculum here.

Register for Tekedia Mini-MBA – We Have Extended The Early Bird

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I invite you to accelerate your leadership ascent by joining Tekedia Mini-MBA which begins Feb 8 to end May 3. Registration continues and we just extended the early bird registrations. We have more than 90 Faculty across all domains of commerce and industry. Learn from the best, innovate and drive business growth. Be a Champion, co-learn with us. Begin here and register.

 

 

Norway Attains 54% Use of Electric Vehicles, But It’s Volkswagen not Tesla, Leading the Market

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As the push for cleaner energy continues, electric vehicles (EVs) have become the focus of many countries. In Europe, Norway is setting the pace. Last year, the northern European country recorded 54% electric vehicles in all vehicles sold. Thus, it became the first country in the world where electric vehicles accounted for more than half of all cars in the world.

And that’s good news for electric vehicles manufacturers who have been battling to win market shares in Europe. The 54% means huge revenue for everyone who plays the car market game well. And it’s Volkswagen, not Tesla winning the market this time.

Volkswagen’s luxury brand Audi led the market in 2020 with 9,227 of its e-tron vehicles in Norway, while Tesla, who led the 2019 market with its Model 3 was pushed into second place, with 7,770 vehicles, according to data from Norwegian Road Federation (OFV).

Norway introduced huge tax incentives to encourage the use of EVs as it aims to meet its 2025 target of zero-emission vehicles. The goal is to use the incentive to ensure that every new van and car purchased in the country is electric vehicle. It thus spurred the surge that has put the country ahead globally.

The CEO of OFV, Oyvind Solberg Thorsen said the record shows Norway is now ahead of schedule in meeting the 2025 target. Data published by OFV on Tuesday shows there is a 12% increase from the sales of electric vehicles in Norway in 2019. The surge has decreased combined market share of petrol and diesel vehicles which accounted for 71% in 2015, to just 17% in 2020.

Norway is the largest oil producer in Europe and has used the proceeds of its oil economy to develop a cleaner energy framework that will bring the country closer to its zero-emission target in the shortest time. Oil revenue helped build Norway’s $1.3 trillion Sovereign Wealth Fund which it has used to push the cause of renewable energy and gradually dumping fossil fuel.

The tax incentive introduced by Norway helps buyers get a huge discount when they buy electric vehicles and it has put the country in the leading position in the fight against vehicle emission. Other countries in Europe who set zero-emission targets are struggling to catch up with Norway. The United Kingdom has reviewed its 2035 target to ban the sale of new cars running on fossil fuel downward, setting a new date of 2030, five years earlier than the previous target. The review is believed to be as a result of Norway’s surprising success.

The Norwegian Electric Vehicle Association said besides the electric vehicle purchase subsidy, buyers enjoy other incentives including use of bus lanes, and reduced fees on state ferries and toll roads.

The Association said the country has 10,000 publicly available charging points, which eliminates the concern of many potential buyers of EVs. It thus throws the market open for a supremacy battle between Volkswagen and Tesla.

Norway on Wednesday, in the 2021 fiscal spending plan, extended its policy of zero tax on full-electric cars, providing a predictable market for automakers. Volkswagen thus predicts it will hit 90% EV sales next year.

“This allows us to be confident in saying we can hit 90 percent electric car sales next year,” said Harald A. Moeller, the Norwegian importer of VW Group cars, including the Audi, Skoda and Seat brands.

“Customers will have access to an even greater selection of electric cars in most segments in 2021,” he added.

This means, Tesla will need to work harder to win more market share in 2021 in Europe. But that seems far fetched as proximity appears to be working in Volkswagen’s favor. Tesla is yet to commence work in its giga-factory in Germany, which will provide distribution advantage for the American company in Europe.