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Home Blog Page 6514

Seeking Guest Lecturers for The Mini-MBA Program

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We are looking for Guest Lecturers. These lecturers will coordinate and lead a week delivery. If you are interested to be considered, send your LinkedIn page to my team (on click).

The theme of this program is “Innovation, Growth & Digital Execution – Techniques for Building Category-King Companies” and our focus is to take participants into practical excursions on the mechanics of market systems and how digital systems can unlock growth opportunities across market segments and sectors. This is what a typical week interaction would look like (besides other components like webinars I will host):. 

  • Discovery Material:
    • Must include two Flash Cases (one foreign and one African): discuss with two firms.
    • Video (max 15 mins) with slides (we will give you access to an online video tool to use).
  • Discovery Challenge: These challenges are not graded. The purpose is to develop a “challenge assignment” which will push the participants to innovate on their functional roles within their firms, and improve their firms. Our desire is that at the end of the program, some of the ideas could help participants and their institutions advance in markets.
    • Sample Challenge: You have read the Framework for Building Modern Digital Companies (attached). A critical component of the framework is that growth serves as the high priest on the altar of business success. Growth solves most problems and the only solution to lack of growth is to make growth happen. Focusing on the fundamental premise that sustainable growth happens when companies build products and services  customers love (not just spending on big media push), develop a product or service roadmap for your company, encapsulating all core pillars in the framework. Think how you can stimulate new demand nexus through customer perception, to pioneer, and dominate the product category.

Oluponna: the Tide must change in fighting the challenges of Higher Education in Nigeria

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Fountain University, Osogbo recently concluded the activities marking her 9th convocation ceremony. The convocation, which saw a total number of 307 students graduating from the two colleges of the institution, was heralded by an 8-day programme of activities. As part of the convocation activities was the convocation lecture usually held a day before the grand finale. The lecture, as was done in the past, was an avenue for the university to have erudite men and women contribute to discourse of national importance. It has become a tradition to bring important personalities to come give their voice to issues bordering on national development.

Like its 8th Convocation edition delivered by Prof. Toyin Falola, the Jacob and Frances Sanger Mossiker Chair in the Humanities at the University of Texas at Austin, this year’s lecture was delivered by another big Nigerian giant in the Diaspora, Prof. Jacob Kehinde Olupona. He is a professor of African Religious Traditions, Harvard Divinity School and Professor of African and African American Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University. He came to speak on “Shifting the Tide: The Promises and Challenges of Higher Education in Nigeria.”

In his close to one and a half hours lecture, Prof. Olupona held the audience spell bound with his insightful, educating and revealing talk. He threw fresh perspectives on issues affecting the Nigerian educational system and proferred solutions to the myriads of problems facing higher education in Nigeria. He did not only speak to the problems but also offered solutions to those issues hindering Nigerian youths from reaching their potentials through the country’s educational system. In specific terms, Prof. Olupona spoke to the following in his speech :

#Educational excellence and the roles of Nigerians in Diaspora. The Harvard professor charged the Nigerian system to place a premium on the input of Nigerians sojourning out of the country. He argued that well celebrated Nigerian professionals and scholars scattered all over the world should be identified and their input sought to make Nigerian educational system more robust. He decried a situation where the Nigerian system places higher value on foreigners at the expense of her own. He decried the fact that Nigeria is “still a nation where a prophet has no honour in his hometown.” He charged the Nigerian government to “integrate Nigerian diaspora with the homegrown Nigerian professionals and scholars as it is this kind of mutual interplay that has contributed to the rapid development of nations like China, Korea and India.” In closing his appeal, Olupona emphasized that “remittances coming into the nation from the diaspora supersedes oil revenues… we must take the diaspora seriously and incorporate its energy into our nation building project.”

 

#University Reforms and the Quest for Excellence.  The professor of African Religious Traditions made a case for the Nigerian educational system to be reformed. He advised that Nigerian universities need to create more conducive environment for students to engage in intellectual engagements of contemporary issues including their professors’ researches. Olupona charged the National Universities Commission to devolve its monitoring of tertiary education to the regions. This, he argued, would make the monitoring of the implementation of educational policies more effective. He called on the traditional rulers to use their connections and positions as Chancellors of many public universities to influence the reforms in the Nigerian university system.

#Internationalizing Nigerian Universities.  As a Nigerian scholar in diaspora, Prof. Olupona alluded to modern parameters used in determining whether a university is internationalised. By internationalisation, Olupona meant to make a university have global relevance. He said, “ internationalized universities engaged in cutting edge research in all the fields of learning, including science, technology, humanities and social sciences.” He then asked some rhetorical questions charging Nigerian tertiary institutions to wake up from their slumber. “How many Nigerian universities engage in the pursuit of issues of global importance, such as research in global warming, poverty alleviation, sustainability, and social, economic, and cultural development?”, He queried. “How often do our students, both undergraduate and postgraduate, have access to membership in international student clubs and guilds?”, He sought to know.

#TETFUND and the Exclusion of Private Universities. Olupona first identified the yeoman’s job TETFUND is doing in supporting research, infrastructural and manpower development in Nigerian universities. He frowned at the exclusion of private universities from accessing TETFUND grants. He said the act is “not only undemocratic, but also self-defeating”. He wondered why private institutions would not benefit from TETFUND monies despite being subjected to the rigorous exercise of accreditation like their public counterparts. He concluded that “No nation can aspire to greatness by deliberately discriminating against citizens who have legitimately and legally invested their resources in the promotion of knowledge for the benefit  of the nation.”

#Gender Disparity in Higher Education. Prof. Olupona lamented the dearth of women in the Nigerian academia. He posited that the ratio of women to men lecturers on Nigerian campuses is nothing to write home about. He identified a highly patriarchal national culture prevalent in the country as a major contributor to this status of underrepresentation enjoyed by women in the Nigerian educational sector. He charged the Ministry of Education and Governing Councils to come up with deliberate policies to combat this.  

#Faith-Oriented Universities and Acquisition of Knowledge. Before concluding the lecture, the erudite teacher briefly recognized the roles of religious organizations in the process of knowledge. He made reference to a “productive interactions between faith, knowledge acquisition and character formation. However, he lamented the prevalent culture of neglecting the poor and the needy in the Nigerian society despite some manifestation of “deep religious convictions”. He asked, “how could we claim to love God so dearly and yet neglect the cardinal principle of our faith, that we love our neighbours as we love ourselves.”

 

Prof. Olupona did not leave the podium without some pieces of advice for the Nigerian leaders. He advised that as a nation, there is a need to rethink our values and philosophies. He prayed the Nigerian leaders to stop paying lip service to programmes and projects that would uplift the country.

 

4.0 – Perception in Business

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4.1 Marketing

Customer perception affects not only those consumers who purchase your products or services, but also anyone who sees your product or service without engaging in a transaction. That’s why it’s important for all entrepreneurs to understand how their ideal customer––as well as the general public––might perceive their company. With both audiences in mind, small business owners can then craft a brand to move potential customers to action and encourage non-customers to share their perception with others who may be searching for a company just like yours.

What defines Customer Perception

A number of factors affect your customers’ perception of your business, including advertising, social media, customer service, reviews and critiques, and public relations. Involved in all of these factors are four primary functions that create a response in your audience. First, your audience reacts to a sensation (how does your product or service stimulate the customer’s senses), which leads to capturing their attention (how effective is your campaign when using selective or subliminal perception marketing), which leads to initiating an interpretation (how your brand makes them feel), which leads to branding retention (how your product or service will stay in your audience’s mind long after they have moved on from your marketing campaign or proximity to your business).

Customer perception theory takes a closer look at what motivates your audience to engage with your company and take action. Examining that motivation can help small business owners determine how to approach their advertising, customer feedback, public relations, social media marketing, and customer service policies.

How to Use Customer Perception to Improve Sales

The general public and your ideal customer are equally influenced by your brand, and it is your brand that drives customer perception. As a small business owner, influencing your customers’ perception of your company in a positive way often translates into more customers acting on their perception by either purchasing your product or service or by recommending your business to someone in search of it.

Here are a few recommendations on how to engage your customers and strengthen your brand, which will, in turn, affect their perception of your business.

1. Social Media Marketing

Social media is a valuable and relatively inexpensive marketing tool that can deliver significant ROI when managed well. But it’s important not to spread your focus too thin and try to market on every social media platform. Instead, examine which platforms serve your business the best.

Social media platform options available today are varied, with new networks popping up regularly, so you need to be discerning when it comes to choosing the right social media platforms for your business. Some platforms are better suited for fast customer service and public relations responses, while others are better for powerful short visual campaigns that illustrate your product or services succinctly. Develop a strategy to craft a perception that meets your ideal customers’ needs, and implement it where they like to chat, share and engage.

2. Customer Service

There’s an old anecdote about how a satisfied customer will tell 2 or 3 people about their experience with a company, but a dissatisfied customer will tell 8 to 10 people. What’s the lesson? Every interaction can make or break your business, so never take any customer interaction for granted. However, it’s also important to remember that quality customer service also includes setting boundaries on what customers can expect from you in a timely manner, as well as incorporating their feedback before larger problems arise.

3. Community Engagement

A common complaint shared among consumers today is how businesses that do not interact with a specific community for the majority of the year will suddenly seem to appear with massive advertising campaigns and higher visibility when it’s financially or socially convenient. (For example, large banks, and tech companies during annual Pride parades in June.) To avoid being labeled a fair-weather friend, be visible in your community and in your customers’ social circle throughout the year. Launch new campaigns and support community events “out of season” to show your audience that you share their values, beliefs, and attitudes all year-round.

4. Selective Perception Marketing

It’s virtually impossible for customers to pay attention to all the advertising they’re bombarded with every day, so most people filter out the messages for products or services that don’t interest them at that time. Companies who tailor their marketing strategy to gget their product in front of the potential customers who aren’t filtering out their industry are utilizing selective perception marketing, and the results are often effective. For example, placing ads for bookkeeping or small business accounting services in local coffee shops and co-working spaces to be seen by young entrepreneurs who may need your services is more cost-effective than placing an ad in a local newspaper.

5. Your Unique Selling Proposition

One of the smartest ways to cultivate a positive customer perception is to accentuate and promote what makes your business different from the competition. Your audience is constantly inundated with advertising, making it hard to break through the wall of sensory overload surrounding them daily. But it doesn’t always take a larger budget or viral marketing campaigns to reach your ideal customer. Sometimes all you need is to know what you can offer that your potential customer wants, but your competitor does not, i.e., your unique selling proposition.

For some businesses like independent bookstores, the answer can be as simple as personalized recommendations, a sense of community and a display of awareness of what your customer needs in times of change and adversity.

Although seemingly obvious to many entrepreneurs starting a new business, customer perception can be a difficult field to navigate. Logic tells us that a great idea coupled with a strong business plan, expert functionality, and efficient customer service should be enough to lead us on the path of entrepreneurial success. Yet reality teaches us that there’s a reason why 50 percent of businesses fail in the first 5 years, and customer perception often plays in a role in that unfortunate outcome. But with careful examination of your audience’s response to your business’s marketing and customer engagement, you may be savvy enough to see your company succeed where others fail.

4.2 Corporate Imaging

Business organizations are always faced also with the issues of imaging. There are cases where people do business with some organizations and leave out others even at lower prices. There must be a solid strategy to build a corporate image and identity that will endure.

4.3 Continuous Improvement on Image

This image must be continuously improved upon existing images both offline and digital. Digital imaging is so important in our days because of the advent of the internet especially social media. There must be a social media strategy for your company and to set a target with respect to that.

4.4 It’s in your Hand

With this piece we have dealt exhaustively with the subject matter. Please go use the knowledge and information you have acquired because your life is in your hand!


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3.0 – Communication of Images

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3.1 Reverberation of Image

Every individual is a broadcasting station. We are sending and receiving signals continuously every second of the day. Consequently, you are communicating 24/7 even when you are not talking.

There are mainly four ways we communicate;

  • Your countenance
  • Your dressing
  • Your gestures
  • Your voice

You must make sure the all of these are in congruence with your thoughts and intended purpose. The seat of interaction is the mind. So these four channels are channels through which you communicate your thoughts.

3.2 Influence of Images

I have personally come to acknowledge that the signals you are exhuming does not only affect you but primarily other people in your environment  and that’s why the resentment. If you put on a positive outlook and look nice and have good social skills and well articulate speech you wont lack commendation. Negative images are so detrimental to the people around you. So its not all about you. At least for the sake of others, put up a positive image.

3.3 Imprinting of Images

Its wisdom to concentrate on your strength and work on improving your weakness. Now that you have a great image please keep perpetuating it unto perfection. Keep working on the images better; it may require that you put up a smile throughout the day at work or get new set of clothing you are comfortable with, maintain a professional posture, be a team player or take a language program of public speaking course to enable to gasp the intricacies of the language of use.

3.4 Communication of New Image

Make the change obvious to all; before you know it people will start commending you because of the noticeable changes they have seen in you. Do you know the importance of that? It builds in you a positive self image and confidence to do more, its your feedback system so treasure it. Let everybody notice that you are making effort to change and see how some will be willing to help you change and some may them be bold enough to let you know how they struggle to let you know but couldn’t communicate it to you. Those words are soul soothing and will help you do more.

Wrong appearance connotes from research that you

  • Disorganized
  • Cant multi task
  • Un intelligent
  • Can’t work under pressure
  • Poor self manager and should not be given more responsibilities

For obvious reasons work on your appearances!


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2.4 – Recording of New Images

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For those who really struggle with self-image, there are many types of therapy that can help them improve their self-image and align it more closely with reality.

Therapy modalities that can help include:

  • Traditional psychoanalysis: A long-term form of treatment that focuses on changing problematic behaviors, feelings, and thoughts by discovering their unconscious meanings and motivations.
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT): a form of therapy that combines cognitive therapy (focusing on what people think and how to change the way they think) with behavioral therapy (an approach that focuses on changing people’s behavior more than their thoughts) to try to change both thoughts and behaviors.
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT): a five-component form of CBT that emphasizes the learning of new skills and strategies for a healthy, happy life.
  • Client-Centered Therapy: a type of therapy in which the client—not the therapist—is considered the “expert” on their own life and the therapist focuses on providing interest, concern, care, and respect (APA, n.d.).

Depending on the diagnosis you have (if any), your regular treatment can also help with developing a healthy self-image.

Words to Note

Meditations can be incredibly helpful in boosting your self-esteem and helping you build and maintain a healthy sense of self. Give these meditations a try when you have a few minutes to spare:

“Self-esteem is like a battery. When the battery is charged, the person is positive; when the battery is low, the individual is negative.” Lilly Harry

“A strong, positive self-image is the best possible preparation for success.” Joyce Brothers

“The ‘self-image’ is the key to human personality and human behavior. Change the self-image and you change the personality and the behavior.” Maxwell Maltz

“It’s like everyone tells a story about themselves inside their own head. Always. all the time. That story makes you what you are. We build ourselves out of that story.” Patrick Rothfuss

“Human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but … life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.” Gabriel García Márquez

“Seeing, feeling, thinking, believing—these are the stages of how we change our style on the outside and our self-image on the inside.” Stacey London

“Too many people overvalue what they are not and undervalue what they are.” Malcolm S. Forbes

“Remember always that you not only have the right to be an individual, you have an obligation to be one.” Eleanor Roosevelt


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