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Partner With KreekAfrica And Refer Friends and Associates

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KreekAfrica which our platform has a strong partnership presents a smart way of doing business by putting Freelancers and Clients in Africa on a platform to connect and collaborate.

“We prioritize trust in the way our platform is used for secure and transparent transactions. We respect professionals and businesses from across all fields and encourage collaboration and tolerance to solve individual needs. We also value accountability in how the platform encourages all parties involved to take responsibility for all actions taken” KreekAfrica Team

We understand that the traditional way of hiring can be costly for businesses and a barrier to creative expression for Freelancers. Also, with the growing popularity of remote work on the continent, it makes financial sense, especially during a crisis. We seek to break the limitations of the standard 9-5 work structure to add some flexibility and freedom to your work life.

We have this partnership presented in the image below.

Source: updated from KreekAfrica.com

 

 

Ndubuisi Ekekwe Invests in KreekAfrica To Deepen Value In Tekedia Mini-MBA

 

Broadband Service Delivery – A Tekedia CaseWorks

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The MTN veteran and Group Tech Ops leader in SPGL, Olatunde Olafimihan BSc, MBL, R.Eng MNSE,MIET,SMC, has produced a really amazing playbook for anyone who inspires to go into broadband service delivery.

  • We passed the voice telephony decade of the 2000s.
  • We went through the decade of mobile internet of the 2010s.
  • Now, we are just into the applications utilities decade.

To unlock the elements which will anchor services, from fintech to logistics, broadband is critical. Tunde explains the playbook, using MTN and Comcast.

Learn more at Tekedia CaseWorks.

Tackling The Narcissus Among Us

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Narcissus, a character in Greek mythology, was a very handsome young man, who was so much in love with himself. At a stage, he became self-conceited to the extent he never believed anyone was more handsome than him. He saw his reflection on the river one day and fell in love with the young man staring back at him from the river. One of the accounts had it that Narcissus always visited that young man in the river to confess his love for him. Well, unfortunately for him, that young man that stared back at him from the river could not come out to marry him because he/it was Narcissus too (his reflection). Out of desperation and frustration from being rejected by the only person that is worthy of his love, Narcissus committed suicide and ended his sad life.

Well, I read that story during my university days. Actually, the person that narrates it was a make-up artist for some Hollywood stars, who believed everyone should have a little bit of Narcissus in him or her. But the more I read that story, and other accounts of it, the more I see narcissism destroying lives.

I had always thought narcissism is all about self-love. I had always assumed that the suffix, “-ism”, should not apply to the concept because there can never be anything extreme about self-love. But the more I meet the Narcissuses of our days, the more I realised how extreme and destructive narcissism is. To be sincere, a lot of people are suffering from Narcissism Personality Disorder (NPD). I am not a psychologist, but I live in a community and interact with people that exhibit traits similar to that of the Greek’s Narcissus. Note that many of us might have this disorder without realising so. We might think it is self-love, like I used to do, but a deeper insight will reveal otherwise.

So what are the traits of a narcissist? And where do we find him or her?

According to Healthline, there are 9 official traits of a narcissist. These are:

  1. Unhealthy Sense of Self-Importance: A narcissist always assumes he is too important. It is possible that many of us are guilty of this. That time you felt ‘too big’ to help out, celebrate with someone or be seen in the midst of certain people, it could be the Narcissus in you that is manifesting.
  2. Fantasizes about Unattainable Qualities, Achievements and Successes: Well, some people believe they can get it if they fake it. I don’t know anyway because that ideology never worked for me. As for a Narcissus, he spends most of his or her time fantasizing about an achievement he/she never attained and which might be beyond him; or about special qualities he/she never had. Of course, there is nothing wrong with dreaming big and letting that dream guide us, but if it is not backed up by a feasible plan, that’s the Narcissus in us trying to deceive us.
  3. Discriminatory: I don’t know the right word to use here. What I wanted to describe is that narcissists see themselves as special and so they should only associate with ‘special’ people. Like the Greek Narcissus, they snub people around them and wait for those ‘big men’ to come their way. Some of them are lucky to link up with ‘special people’ while the rest wallow in isolation.
  4. Crave for Admiration/Praises: I believe this explains itself.
  5. Sense of Entitlement: This is what easily gives narcissists away. They might initially play it safe until this trait shoots out of them. And, believe me, this is the reason most of them don’t last in friendships.
  6. Interpersonal Exploitative Attitude: Sorry to say that many narcissists I have encountered always take advantage of others. They don’t care about how their demands or actions affect the person so long as they get what they want.
  7. Lack of Empathy: Remember Narcissus only cared about himself; even the other man he fell in love with was still him. Well, the present day Narcissuses are also like that: they are bent on not understanding the plight of others.
  8. Envy: If a narcissist fails to achieve what others have achieved, there is trouble. They do everything possible to either discredit the person’s achievement or find a way to damage it. It is that bad. In addition, they also think people envy them; even a well-meaning advice or caution may be seen as jealousy.
  9. Arrogance: Remember a Narcissus thinks he is important, special, successful, and what have you; so don’t be surprised when arrogance adds to the number.

As I asked earlier, where do you find Narcissus? Believe me, they live among us. We find them at home, in the offices, on social media, and so on. We can even find them inside us. Believe me, this essay is not for you to evaluate the people around you to determine who is the Narcissus in your life; but rather for you to evaluate yourself to see if YOU ARE ONE. Unlike what I used to think, NPD is actually a mental disorder. This could explain why many narcissists refuse to change despite complaints by people around them. We all should evaluate ourselves and then verify if we need help.

“In October, OPay processed a gross transaction value of $1.4 billion on its platform” in Nigeria

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OPay is Nigeria’s biggest mobile payment solutions and you can call it the fastest growing customer brand in any sector in Nigeria. From Opera Q3 2020 earnings call; Opera holds 13.1% of OPay: “In October, OPay processed a gross transaction value of $1.4 billion on its platform more than three times the level in January.” 

OPay continues to grow and scale its payment offerings. In October, OPay processed a gross transaction value of $1.4 billion on its platform more than three times the level in January. Further, we expect that OPay will be expanding beyond Nigeria soon, and believe it can continue to grow its payments platform at elevated growth rates. StarMaker continues to scale as well growing users roughly 80% year-to-date, and more than doubling revenue year-to-date to an annual run rate of over $100 million.

The OPay’s Invisible Layer Strategy is working at scale.

People, marginal cost of zero has come to the paytech sub-sector of Nigeria’s fintech sector. Yes, OPay is running what I call the Invisible Layer Strategy. The Invisible Layer Strategy is a strategy where a company builds a product utilizing critical infrastructure of another competing company, in the same product line, but finds a way to under-cut that company on cost of services to end users. Today, OPay offers zero fee to customers who use it to pay for DStv services in Nigeria. It utilizes and relies on Nigeria’s banking infrastructure. But if the same customers use banks, directly, they would be charged fees, by banks. Largely, OPay has invented an invisible layer which makes it possible to handle those payments at zero cost that even the banks themselves cannot do. It is important to note that OPay is not absorbing any cost to acquire customers; there is no cost whatsoever in the value chain, and that means even in the long-run, it can process payments in Nigeria at absolute zero fee.

OPay is now well positioned to even battle telcos if they decide to come into the mobile money domain at scale. This company has provided a textbook case study on how to win  consumers in Nigeria: pile losses and keep making losses and keep running losses. One day, everyone will come to your party. Of course, you need reserves, tons of reserves I must note, to run that playbook. Hey, China Unlimited makes everything look easy.

Nigeria is now an OPay nation! By operating at the edges of the smiling curve, they have a promise to capture huge value.