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Get The Early Registration Benefits – Register Now for Tekedia Mini-MBA

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Invent, innovate and drive organizational transformation, performance, and growth. Capture emerging opportunities in changing markets while optimizing innovation and profitability. Digitally evolve your business or functional area, turning digital disruption into a competitive capability and advantage. Master the concepts of building category-king companies, and thrive.

Registration for 4th edition of Tekedia Mini-MBA (Feb 8 – May 3, 2021) continues. Tekedia Mini-MBA, from Tekedia Institute, is 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.

Get the early registration benefits by registering before our early bird deadline.

Tekedia Mini-MBA Edition 4

The Best Banks of The Future

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The world has changed: Square is a better business than Goldman Sachs, investors think! And investors believe on Paypal over Bank of America. It is the same way IBM remains a $111 billion business when Microsoft is well above $1.6 trillion. In The 2021 Outlook, I did explain that where you operate in the smiling curve is more important than even how good you execute. Marginal cost works for Paypal unlike Goldman Sachs. Square plays at the edges unlike US Bancorp. Watch that video if you have not.

The Kenya’s Decentralized Renewable Energy Paradox And The Trap In Nigeria

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One of the biggest challenges which has bedeviled General Electric, for years now, was the acquisition of Alstom’s power and grid business. I called that move a very bad one considering that GE Capital was also evolving at the same time. Large scale grid electricity was passing through a redesign and any company betting on its sustained viability was clearly out-of-phase with reality. Indeed, across all metrics, electricity supply will become increasingly decentralized in communities and industrial regions. Yes, grid power will lose to pockets of small energy suppliers.

That is what is happening in Kenya.  Kenya Power, the national electricity company, is not happy as the national grid is losing some of its best customers to decentralized electricity providers. Yes, customers have moved on and the government cannot sell its products: “Dampened demand growth is further compounded with the increased threats of grid defection by the industrial category as decentralized renewable energy options are becoming more available and cheaper”.

But M-Kopa, which was just four years old at the time, has grown rapidly in that time, reflecting the broader progress in the sector as renewable energy solutions are increasingly adopted as viable workarounds to plug the wide gaps in electrification in Kenya and across the continent. Yet, a half decade later, there are fears that looming regulation in the East African country is signaling a possible shift in the government’s outlook on the sector.

Those fears come in light of the latest annual report by Kenya Power, the national electricity company, which showed local demand growth for electricity lagged below the projected level of 5%. Even more crucial is the reason presented as a suspected cause of stunted demand. “Dampened demand growth is further compounded with the increased threats of grid defection by the industrial category as decentralized renewable energy options are becoming more available and cheaper,” the report stated.

It is what it is: the national grid will get to a state where it cannot find people to buy its products, in most parts of Africa, since the customers are not waiting for them to fix their problems. Companies like Unilever and Dangote Group generate their own power, and those are lost good customers to the national grid. What happens here is unfortunate: we expect the national grid to invest but the reality is that some of their best potential customers have found alternatives, leaving them to service largely not-very-profitable customers. Yes, they serve communities which are not likely to pay them, even as the industrial and commercial customers have moved on. I have made this point here as the biggest challenge in the electricity sector in places like Nigeria. Call it  the Nigerian trap.

Besides, it is very clear in Nigeria that the best electricity customers are already out of the national grid. So, who do you expect (grid) electricity investors to finance production for? Simply, electricity is a special product in a developing nation like Nigeria. That is why a distribution company (DISCO) will choose to provide services to 2,000 homes even though one factory nearby can absorb all the energy and pay higher premium on top. Technically, you cannot serve your “best” customer [someone who is ready to pay highest fee] based on pure monetary revenue due to regulation which also gives you quasi exclusivity in the region. It is far logistically easier for DISCOs to send all the power generated in Lagos to top 30 firms in Lagos instead of working to serve hundreds of thousands of households. But they cannot because electricity is not an ordinary product!

The Revolt of Nigeria’s Electricity DISCOs on Smart Meter Disintermediation

Anthony Oluwafemi Olaseni Joshua Rules With TKO of Kubrat Pulev

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One of his generation’s finest boxers, Anthony Joshua, rose to the mountaintop as he technically knocked out Bulgaria’s Kubrat Pulev on Saturday. I think Tyson Fury would be next though Oleksandr Usyk is a possible stop. Did you see how excited Floyd Mayweather was when AJ ran over to him, after the knockout? AJ is to earn about £10million for that fight.

Then you would wonder the value of those free fights at CMS Bus Stop , between bus drivers and conductors, which you continue to enjoy free. Can you put a ring around them? If you do, that is it!

Highlights below…

The Elon Musk Message On Innovation; Innovation Can Be Learned [Video]

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“There should be more focus on the product or service itself, less time on board meetings, less time on financials…A company has no value in itself. It only has value to the degree that is an effective allocator of resources to create business services that are of a greater value than the costs of the inputs,” Elon Musk, Tesla CEO said.

This thing they call “profit,” Musk added, “should just mean over time that the value of the output is worth more than the inputs..When I go spend time on the factory floor or really using the cars or thinking about the rockets…that’s where things have gone better,” Musk said at the WSJ summit.

Elon Musk is the generation’s finest innovator and the second richest person in the world as market caps of Tesla, and privately held SpaceX, have grown over the last few months.

His message is simple: the only force which can overcome the frictions in the lives of people or processes of firms is a product or service! If you combine factors of production to get good products/services, you capture revenue from demand (i.e. the customers). And if that combination is done very well, such that what the demand is paying for is more than what you had spent in combining those factors of production,  you can pick a “profit” in the process.

LinkedIn brought three core points out of the interviews.

Can innovation be learned? Absolutely, says Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, he reveals three questions budding innovators should answer in order to make your product a winner:

  • Have you tried it? If it doesn’t work for you, then you can’t expect it to shine for others.
  • How can you make it better? Examine negative feedback from colleagues, customers and trusted mentors to improve as best you can.
  • Are you spending too much time in conference rooms? Theory is great, but investigating the actual product and its production process can yield better insights.

Watch his video.

Markets Reward The Generation’s Finest Innovator