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Tekedia Career Week “Nurturing Innovators” Will Hold Nov 2-6 2020

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It should be one of the largest gatherings of HR leaders and experts in Africa. And they are here to educate us on career planning, helping us to advance our missions. They come from different backgrounds, industries and domains. They are Tekedia Institute Faculty. Nov 2-6 is Career Week. Yes, now that we have prepared our members on management, innovation, growth, and digital execution systems, we also want to ensure they are prepared personally. Admission is FREE but only our members can ask questions. 

Tekedia Mini-MBA Career Week has been scheduled for Nov 2-6 2020.

This career week is not designed for finding jobs. Rather, it is structured to TRANSFORM workers, founders & entrepreneurs into business leaders and champions of innovation in their companies. Yet, if you have no job, by the time you are done with the series, you will have a path to one! The sub-theme is Nurturing Innovators. It will be packaged under the Tekedia Mini-MBA theme of Innovation, Execution & Growth.

Our knowledge experts for the Week include human resources experts and leaders from MNCs and startups, across industries and global regions; they are amazing.

  • Dupe Akinsiun – Head, Leadership & Capabilities Center, Coca Cola HBC
  • Nnenna Jacob-Ogogo – Head, Alpher, Union Bank
  • Precious Ajoonu  – Manager, Jobberman
  • John Wesey – CEO, Psyntech
  • Dr Akanimo Odon – CEO,  Envirofly Consulting UK 
  • Dapo akinloye – COO, Emerald Zone
  • Dr. Fatai Olajobi – Partner, Neo-Neurons Concept
  • Dotun Jegede, Senior Partner, Dee Bee Consulting
  • Elizabeth (Ayeni) Nyah, Human Resources Business Partner, VDT Communications 
  • Capt. Ola Olubowale – Manager, Viva Energy Australia
  • Abraham Owoseni.com – Principal Consultant, MindMould

We are making is FREE. But only past and current Tekedia Mini-MBA graduates will be in the zones to ask questions.  We will communicate mechanisms as the date draws closer.

This is a large gathering of HR directors, experts and leaders. They would share insights on how students and professionals can build their careers. They have already produced course materials and some would be speaking live.

 

 – Coca Cola HBC
Nnenna Jacob-Ogogo – Union Bank
Precious Ajoonu – Jobberman
John Wesey – Psyntech
Dr. Akanimo Odon – Envirofly Consulting UK
oladapo akinloye – Emerald Zone
Fatai Olajobi – Neo-Neurons Concept
Elizabeth Nyah, ACIPM, GPHR, VDT Communications
Capt Ola Olubowale – Viva Energy Australia
Abraham Owoseni – MindMould
Dr. Dotun Moses Jegede – OD Consultant

The Shoprite Challenge As It Exits Kenya, After Nigeria

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If you were born in Cape Town or Johannesburg, you need to step out of those two cities to actually visit “Africa”. Yes, Cape Town is as amazing as San Francisco. Living and working in Cape Town does not really mean that you are working in Africa because there is nothing sub-Saharan Africa there, except the geography. That explains why a playbook perfected in Cape Town or Johannesburg may struggle outside those domains.

Shoprite is leaving Nigeria (sure, a court said it cannot leave yet). Now, it has added Kenya in the list. While you can blame Kenya or Nigeria, the fact is this: Shoprite is not selling a market-fit product in these countries. With open markets everywhere, the competition is exceedingly high for these highly structured and expensive retail chains to thrive in sub-Saharan Africa.

That is the challenge for Shoprite, and it may be the reason while it is retreating back to South Africa. It needs to update its playbook because what it has now is not selling.

 South Africa’s Shoprite Holdings said on Tuesday it expected to close or dispose of its remaining two stores in Kenya in the year ahead, leaving the East African country after opening its first store there more than two years ago.

The supermarket chain has been reviewing its long-term options in Africa as currency devaluations, supply issues and low consumer spending in Angola, Nigeria and Zambia have weighed on earnings.

“Kenya has continued to underperform relative to our return requirements,” the retailer said, adding its decision to leave had been confirmed by the economic impact of COVID-19.

Shoprite opened its first supermarket in Kenya at Westgate Mall, Nairobi, in December 2018, hoping to take advantage of disarray in Kenya’s grocery sector after the collapse of Uchumi Supermarkets and Nakumatt, two of the country’s top three retailers.

The decision to leave comes a month after Shoprite said it was considering reducing or selling all of its stake in its Nigerian subsidiary.

Shoprite, with more than 2,300 stores across Africa, reported a 6.4% rise in sales for the year ended June 28, with like-for-like sales up by 4.4% as customers spent more on groceries at its discount Usave and mid-to-upper end Checkers stores.

There is abundance in the future

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There is abundance in the future. The possibilities of the future are limited by the finite knowledge of today. Fill your mind with optimism, and a great energy to achieve will come. Greatness comes with awareness and observation. 

But a mind chained in hopelessness is lost, seeing darkness even in the brightest rays of the sun. I challenge you to LIFE. For that to happen, find a way to LIVE your Life, not your friend’s, classmate’s or anyone. But it must be purpose-driven, not tossed around like a feather in a river.

Blossom! The future is full of abundance.

Fly to the Mountaintop

A Nigerian Court Pauses Shoprite!

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A court in Nigeria placed a mareva injunction on Shoprite a few weeks ago. This week, another has refused to hear the company’s application to lift an injunction barring the South African retail giant from moving its assets out of Nigeria. Mareva injunction  is a legal ordinance that ensures assets are not taken out of a country. 

Alleged business shenanigans triggered that on Shoprite’s assets in Nigeria. A Nigerian company, A.I.C. Limited, had secured a $10 million judgment against Shoprite in a breach of contract lawsuit. An appeal upheld that call; Shoprite has appealed at the Supreme Court for a reversal.

It remains debatable if Shoprite would be leaving Nigeria if that call had not gone against it. The case here is a big lesson for everyone: before you hit SEND, remember that once gone, you can never get it back. Shoprite has to create a new product: shop for the right lawyer; yes, Shoprite, shop right!

Nigerian courts are currently on vacation and would resume on September 28. Only cases of “extreme urgency,” arrest of ship, and fundamental rights cases are to be entertained during the vacation, according to a circular by the chief judge on the federal high court, John Tsoho.

In the suit, Shoprite is seeking to overturn a July 14 “mareva injunction” by Justice Mohammed Liman of the federal high court in favour of a Nigerian firm, A.I.C. Limited.

 

Why Shoprite is Leaving Nigeria

 

Nigeria and History Failings

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As I recently listened to a popular sports show on a local Lagos radio station, it was the same day when the Nigerian domestic football fraternity was celebrating the birthday of one of Nigeria’s most under-recognized – at least- players in person of Victor Ezeji. For starters, Victor Ezeji is a retired professional footballer who duly paid his dues in Nigerian football. This was one of those Nigerian footballers who made a tremendous success of his career playing back home in the Nigerian domestic football league. In fact, Ezeji played for 20 solid years on the domestic front, with a very short stint abroad in Tunisia and is regarded by any above average follower of Nigerian league football as a legend of the game when it comes to home-based professional football.

Therefore, back to the initial discussion. As the radio show went on with the anchor eulogizing the former footballer’s achievement, the turning point for me was when he asked a very vital question of whether it was possible to see images or videos or any other material of Ezeji’s debut league game. There is even a big doubt that the player himself can lay hold of anything of material matter relating to that first game, this is not to even talk of other matches played throughout his career. Statistics as simple as the total number of career goals scored by Ezeji in the league is hard to come by.

This then takes us to the crux of this discourse, which is the disposition and almost ultimate disregard for history as a country. At this point, it goes without saying that Nigeria’s culture of data and record keeping is one that is at an abysmal level, which can summarize the general attitude and regard for History and related matters. Not long before listening to that particular radio show, I had been watching a documentary on the creation of Nigeria. Right From pre- and post-amalgamation, to pre and post independence and all the in-betweens, a sober moment during that clip was the civil war period.

What actually struck was the effect the war had on the country during that time right up to the present day and upon reflection to discover that the present generation of younger Nigerians have absolutely next to knowledge or interest in this piece of history that still shapes the country till date. Another important moment of Nigerian history was the June 12 1993 elections. It is widely regarded as the most credible polls held in the Nigerian history, with the late Chief MKO Abiola regarded as the winner. Not a few experts and commentators have dubbed him fittingly as “the president Nigeria never had”. Despite all this, a critical question comes to mind; that is, how many generations of Nigerians born from the start of the new millennium and later genuinely shows interest or can confidently recount what happened at those periods in Nigeria’s lifetime, which then leads to the next issue.

A couple of years ago, it was public knowledge that History as an academic subject was scrapped from the Nigerian school syllabus. A move that seemed preposterous and seriously ill advised which eventually turned out to be counter-productive.

It took tremendous efforts by a combination of experts and scholars in the field, under the Historical Society of Nigeria as a body to reinstate History back to the learning curriculum- a leading figure for this effort was Professor CBN Ogbogbo, Professor of History at the University of Ibadan and other notable experts. The need for a society to understand their history is a fundamental part of its progress. As it is often said, that ‘history repeats itself’ when we fail/refuse to learn from it which is sadly where Nigeria finds herself as an entity. The disregard and poor attitude to history is not only reflected in the manner of the younger generation, it is also seen in the older set of Nigerians. History is a subject that should never be toiled with in the first place. The significance of recognizing this is that it allows for proper context when trying to plan or think of the next course of action. It is crucial for us as individuals and as a nation to acknowledge the past in our present reality in order to be able to project the future.

The effectiveness of historical awareness reveals itself when crucial subjects of national importance are brought to the front burner. An even recent event in the political scene gives us a glimpse into past occurrences. A peripheral instance is the recent probe into the activities of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) – an agency established and saddled with the power to handle affairs of the south south region of Nigeria. This is in addition to the Ministry of the Niger-Delta created recently as 2015. A basic knowledge of Nigerian politics will make you realize that there have been several probes in the past by the National Assembly with nothing tangible to show for them except for the usual drama/shenanigans thrown up by the major actors in them. At the end of the day, we are back to the proverbial square one!

While it is often said that you cannot change the past, we have the power and ability to change the future, but that ability can only be utilized with proper understanding of the past. A critical look at things will indicate that many challenges we face presently as a country would have been avoided if only we had good students of history at the helms of affairs. A former governor of Lagos and current minister of works and housing for the federal Republic of Nigeria, Babatunde Fashola, in a recent meeting with education stakeholders called for a unified version of Nigeria’s history. This means a singular version that can be taught in the various institutions of learning right from the primary level onwards. This suggestion probably represents a good starting point in our quest to correct the misdemeanours of the past in terms of passing on historical knowledge to Nigerians from a tender age and preserve legacies.