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Tim Denning Shared How to Move from Losing a Job and Depression to Being Relevant and Productive.

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Nobody loves being fired, but when it happens, life must continue.

I came across a story on Facebook about a man that got himself killed because he lost his job. The fear of uncertainties pushed him. Was he stupid? No! He wasn’t at all.

Life can be tough at times, leaving you with no option. Suicidal should never be the solution to this.

That’s why I delved into this aspect of life. How can we deal with the shock of getting fired? My guest, Tim Denning from Australia will be sharing his journey with us.

It is great to have you here, Tim. Can you tell us more about yourself?

I’m from Australia and write for a living. This has been a journey that started back in 2014 and has completely changed my life. My goal is to inspire the world through entrepreneurship and personal development.

LinkedIn has been a big part of that journey and has allowed me to reach many more people than I could ever imagine. Writing on social media can change your life and I wish to see everyone take up that opportunity.

You are a man who has dealt with a lot in life. You have moved on from losing your job and dealing with mental illness many years ago, but here you are still standing, what has actually kept you going?

The kindness of complete strangers. When I lost my job, people I barely knew helped me find new opportunities and gave me the advice and feedback to keep going.

When your goal is to inspire others every day, when you hit your own rough patch, people will be there for you. It’s not the struggle you face but the decision you make about what it means that determines the outcome.

Never ever give up. Losing your job or dealing with mental illness can happen to anyone. Once you overcome immense challenges in life and in business, it gives you thick skin that you can use to tackle even bigger problems and perhaps help even more people.  

Losing your job. What impact (positive or negative) has that had on you?

Whenever I face other people who are in a similar situation or become part of a hiring process, I have a completely different level of empathy. It has brought be closer to understanding other people and shown me how anyone can fall from glory.

Anyone can be laid off or work for a company that goes through financial hardship. It’s not necessarily your fault.

I learned through the process that there were many personal traits I had adopted over the years that weren’t serving me. It was an opportunity to see some of my flaws and actively work on fixing them. The process of unemployment lasted longer than I thought and it gave me plenty of time to reflect.

My friends on LinkedIn were invaluable and if it wasn’t for them, things could have been different. Always be humble. Always be kind. See a little bit of yourself in other people’s problems.

How were you able to move on from the awful experience?

It wasn’t awful looking back. I couldn’t truly be a leader unless I’d experienced both sides of the working world. Every day people are getting laid off or losing their jobs and I could never understand that predicament.

The quickest way to move on is to get out there, back yourself and start looking for your next career. Don’t get stuck in the situation or the delicious temptation to seek revenge. Also, when you’re ready, forgive that bad boss or those colleagues who may have wronged you. That’s the hardest part of the whole process and that’s the true test of humanity.

What significant things did you learn from the experience?

I learned true humility. The situation required me to explain what had happened to potential new employers. The best way was to put a positive spin on it. I compared losing my job to starting businesses. When you start a business, it often takes many failures before you have the one idea or product that goes on to be a raging success.

I explained to hiring managers that if after seven years, you decide to change careers, it’s highly likely that the first time around is not going to work out. It’s normal.

By demonstrating that I could deal with failure and use it to build a new career, I showed my resilience. Employers love seeing how strong you can be in tough times. No one wants to hire somebody who gives up easily or can’t deal with problems. Business is about dealing with problems every day and losing your job is the ultimate test.

In a way, I wish everybody could lose their job at least once to get the benefit of the experience and understand what it’s like to be humbled by life.

Losing a job is not always the best feeling, what would you advise anyone to do in those moments?

Remember that you are enough and all you can do is start again. Staying at home is the worst thing you can do. Get out there and have coffee with people. Network with strangers. Get on LinkedIn and approach people that can help you through direct messages.

In my case, I used my unique skills on social media and my hobby of writing to get the attention of leaders and even barter with companies to get job interviews in return for some free advice on social media. I did the same with recruiters. I helped recruiters with their LinkedIn strategy in return for them helping me find my next gig.

Use whatever talents you have to inspire people to help you during your toughest career moments.

When you landed a new role, was there a point where you felt haunted by the previous experience?

Not really. The only time you feel haunted is when you let your past define your future. What’s done is done and the best strategy is to start again and try even harder this time around.

Do you still feel pressured to do more in order to avoid the previous experience?

I don’t feel pressured but I’m definitely more determined. Nobody is going to stop me and if I fail this time around, it’s going to be on my terms.  The only way you guarantee yourself to repeat failure is by not giving it everything you’ve got. Hard work pays off and so does the discipline that comes with it.

What advice do you have for anyone who has been beaten down by life?

Get around people who will build you up. Don’t kick the can down the road and hang out with people who refuse to try again.

Go to Meetups, attend Toastmasters or get on Eventbrite and go to some business events. Find people who want more out of life and won’t settle for second best. Become comfortable with being the dumbest person in the room and look for those opportunities.

Thank you, Tim. I really appreciate your time and valuable insights.

Love ya man and thanks for all your support. It means so much to me :)

The ECOWAS Implications As CFA franc Disconnects From France

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The president of the Republic of Benin, Patrice Talon, has announced that West African countries will be withdrawing their foreign reserve CFA franc, from France. Talon said in an interview with France24 that it is a unanimous decision by user-countries in the West African region to withdraw the fund.

“We unanimously agree on this, to end this model,” he said.

“The Central banks of African countries of WAMU (West African Monetary Union) will manage all these foreign currency reserves and will distribute them to the various central banks partners in the world,” he added.

Since 1945, the West and Central African Francophone countries have been tied to CFA Franc, which reserve is in France. The situation has technically tied the economies of the West African countries to France and by extension, the European Union (EU), which means, EU economic policies affect Francophone West African countries.

In January, Liugi Di Maio, an Italian deputy prime minister blamed France for contributing to the immigration crisis in Europe through its financial activities in Africa. He said France has been exploiting former West African colonies through CFA franc, currently being used by 14 countries in Western and Central Africa. According to ANSA, the Italian news agency, Maio said of the French president, Emmanuel Macron; “first he lectures us, then continues to finance public debt with the money with which he exploits Africa,” he said.

When the CFA franc was created in 1945, it was pegged to the French currency then, the French Franc (FF). The CFA franc continued to be used until recently when members of the Francophone region decided to create something that will represent freedom from colonialism. There are now two different versions of it: the CFA franc of the West African Economic and Monetary Union (WAEMU), which has eight member countries, and the one for Central African Monetary and Economic Community, which has six members.

However, both versions of CFA are still pegged to the Euro and tied to the French economy. France holds 50 percent of the foreign exchange reserves of the countries using CFA, 14 of them in all. Recently, there has been a loud call for the CFA franc countries to assert their total independence from what has been described as neocolonialism that has left countries without control of their own currency.

In August 2017, a protest erupted in Dakar, the Senegalese capital over the continuous use of the CFA by African countries. Led by Kemi Seba, the infamous activist who burnt a 5,000 CFA note in defiance, it was a wakeup call to all francophone countries that still use the currency to create their own and demonstrate their total freedom from colonialism.

Pro-democracy youth movements in West Africa such as Y’en a Mare in Senegal and le Balai Citiyen in Burkina Faso have recently made the scraping of CFA their focal point. They say it’s time to end the obvious influence that France is still exercising on Africa.

These movements and protests have the complement of Liberate Africa from Monetary Slavery: Who Profits from the CFA Franc? A book published in 2016, by a group of African and European economists. The book criticizes the CFA as a means of post-colonial exploitation by France. Though France has always maintained that the participation of member countries has been out of their willingness, and the CFA reserve initiative has been to help stabilize the currency of her former colonies, using Guinea as an example, economists disagree. Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria all broke away from the CFA to issue their own currencies, which when compared to countries in CFA are significantly stable.

The argument has been that the CFA is a good currency for those who benefit from it. Talk of the major French and overseas corporations, the executives of the zone’s central banks, the elites wishing to repatriate wealth, heads of states who are not ready to step on the toes of the colonial masters yet.

France has evidently been the highest beneficiary of the CFA, a fact clear by their attitude toward African leaders who oppose the arrangement and those who support it. African leaders who support the CFA franc have enjoyed quid pro quo from France, in the form of a total support for them no matter what they do, while those who showed signs of dissent were fiercely opposed by the French government.

France holds a de facto veto on the boards of the two central banks within the CFA franc zone. Since 2010, when the Central Bank of West African States (BCEAO), was reformed, the conduct of monetary policy has been assigned to monetary policy committee. The French representative is a voting member of the committee, while the president of WAEMU commission attends only in an advisory capacity. Moreover, the European Central Bank also dictates the monetary and exchange rate policies CFA franc zones.

The French authorities have kept mum on the recent events regarding CFA franc, and so did African leaders until Talon broke the silence. But during his presidential campaign, Emmanuel Macron was quoted to have said that moving away from the CFA is the decision of African countries.

Since 2015, the 74-year old French legacy has seen increased dissent from around the world. In 2017, Kemi Seba’s protest against the CFA, through his NGO, SOS Pan-Africa (Urgences Panafricanistes) garnered momentum across Africa, Europe and in Haiti. Pan-Africanist, economists and activists all came together to urge the countries in the CFA zone to break away.

The resuscitation of the call to break away from CFA, and move the African funds to other destinations in Europe, is however, highlighting the incredible fact that Africa still lacks the capacity to function independently. One of the economic challenges the continent has faced is a single currency to facilitate easy exchange and intra-African trade.

The proposed currency (Eco) that could have served as an alternative to CFA was due to go into use in 2015, but has been deferred until 2020. So there is no alternative currency for the 14 countries currently on CFA.

Although, Talon didn’t give a timeframe for withdrawal of the fund, 2020 is just around the corner with its uncertainties. If Ecowas fails once again to facilitate the circulation of Eco, the quest to withdraw from CFA will likely mean moving from the influence of one European country to the other.

The Google Bank Plc

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Alphabet Inc’s Google will offer checking accounts to customers starting next year in a finance push, the Wall Street Journal has reported. The project, named Cache, will have accounts by Citigroup Inc and a credit union at Stanford University, according to the report.

“Our approach is going to be to partner deeply with banks and the financial system,” Caesar Sengupta, general manager and vice-president of payments at Google, told the Journal in an interview.

“It may be the slightly longer path, but it’s more sustainable,” Sengupta was quoted as saying in the report.

The search giant will tie the accounts to its Google Pay offering, which already has 100 million users around the globe, a person with knowledge of the project told CBS MoneyWatch.

Now,  which bank in Nigeria will get the blessing of Google? That would be huge in the market as Google takes this mission global.

Jumia Is A Better Payment Company Than Ecommerce As JumiaPay Skyrockets

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In the history of the African commerce, no one has ever succeeded in ecommerce, financially. From Mocality to Kalahari, Konga to Jumia, Efritin to OLX, the end-results have been predictable: massive losses. Unlike in other emerging markets like China, India and Brazil, African ecommerce pioneers did not build double play payment products at inceptions, missing a critical profit engine to fund logistics-related expenses. Alipay powered China’s Alibaba just as PhonePe was helping Flipkart in India.

But that may be changing as Jumia has gone all payments with JumiaPay: “Jumia saw record volume with its payment platform JumiaPay, which reached 2.1 million transactions and 32 million euros in total payment volume, nearly double the year before.”

Looking at the Q3 2019 financials, Jumia is a better payment company than an ecommerce. JumiaPay has better numbers and growing just fine. Indeed, in the real scheme of things, there is nothing like an ecommerce company in Africa when your marginal cost is still all physical with expensive parallel logistics solutions in places with no national postal systems.

Jumia said marketplace revenue on the platform rose 52.1%, to 18.9 million euros, but overall revenue ticked up just 19.1%, to 40.1 million euros, or $44.1 million, as it saw nearly flat growth from its first-party e-commerce business. That was below analyst estimates of $51.9 million.

Jumia saw record volume with its payment platform JumiaPay, which reached 2.1 million transactions and 32 million euros in total payment volume, nearly double the year before. Gross profit in the quarter rose 45%, to 18.1 million euros, but its operating loss continued to expand, widening 34.6%, to 54.6 million euros.

Co-CEOs Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara said:

We are making significant progress in the usage and relevance of our platform for consumers and sellers and are firmly positioning Jumia as the digital destination of choice for everyday needs in Africa. In parallel, we continue to make great strides in our payment and fintech business with JumiaPay showing very strong growth momentum on both volume and transaction metrics.

 

But despite the progress on JumiaPay, it is still a long night for Jumia as TC Daily notes:

JumiaPay has released its financial report for the third quarter of 2019 and it’s a bit of a mixed bag. The good – JumiaPay, its financial service is the company’s fastest-growing category. It represented an equivalent of 11.6% ($35.2 million) of Jumia’s entire GMV during Q3 2019. The bad – Jumia is still losing cash. Its operating loss in Q3 2019 stood at $55 million about $10 million higher than Q3 2018.

The full earnings call transcript is available here.

Jumia stock has lost significant value since its IPO

Is Your Startup Co-Founder Mentally Balanced?

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If you’ve ever stopped abruptly in the middle of a breakfast, a project review or a cofounder’s meeting to wonder what might happen if a colleague puts a bullet in her head, you’re not alone.

For Entrepreneurs working with a cofounder, or more, to start and run a high growth business, employee suicide is just one kind of workplace challenge that they’re vulnerable to; cofounder suicide is another.

As John Arnold, a guest writer at the Entrepreneur writes in Preventing Startup Suicide. Literally, “You would think that depression among entrepreneurs is tied to failure, or perhaps workload and stress. But the truth is that many entrepreneurs struggle with mental health issues in all types of entrepreneurial situations.”

While you might be immune to depression and thoughts of suicide, your cofounder might be wallowing under its grip.

If she’s constantly expressive about killing or harming herself, whether through speech or social media posts; if she constantly compares her current emotional situation to that of suicide victims; if she’s always talking about her death and seems unusually withdrawn, isolative and sad after surviving a traumatic incident; then she might be suicidal.

When you lose a cofounder to suicide, the effects can be very devastating for you, for the mental health of other team members and on your company’s ability to remain competitive.

Your ability to concentrate on work objectives, to perform at an optimal level in the same workspace that you shared without momentary mental distractions on the tragedy or to keep the business running while you’re empathizing with her loved ones or seeking a new cofounder will be severely tested. This can lead to higher stress levels and declining performance.

But that’s not all.

Your team is likely to be emotionally affected too. Your workers and cofounders closest to her might find it hard to keep the fire of entrepreneurship aflame especially if there’s a lot of media attention and scrutiny on the tragedy.

How to help a suicidal cofounder.

If you have fears that a cofounder is suicidal, then you should trust your gut and act. Here are certain tips, which I’ve culled and adapted to fit this situation from a guide on how Managers can respond to suicide warning signs among employees by the Cigna Corporation that you can adopt to help your cofounder.

1. Meet your cofounder and ask her questions to determine the next steps.

  • Once you become aware of the warning signs, find the cofounder and don’t leave her alone.
  • Take her to a quiet, private place to have a conversation to determine next steps.
  • Be direct and let her know what you’ve learned. You might start with, “I’ve heard you say repeatedly, ‘My life is not worth living.'”
  • Ask your cofounder if she’s had thoughts of ending her life. Research shows that most suicidal people feel relief, not distress when asked this question.
  • Give your cofounder a chance to explain. Listening is the most important thing you can do at this time.
  • Let your concern and support shine through your attitude. Be compassionate, even if you feel angry or upset about what she is considering.
  • Don’t challenge her values or minimize their pain. For example, avoid saying things like, “You don’t want to do that,” or “Think about what it would do to your family.”
  • You can offer hope that, with the right help, solutions can be found for the problems that are leading her to feel suicidal. But avoid the urge to question the employee about their problems. Don’t give advice or suggest solutions. Stay in the present.
  • Protect her privacy as far as is practical, but do not promise to keep the matter confidential. Rather, say you’ll do everything you can to protect their privacy and will only share information as necessary for their safety.

2. If your cofounder is telling you that she intends to harm herself.

  • Call the Nigerian suicide prevention initiative helplines: +234 806 210 6493 or +234 809 210 6493. You can also call the police. Her safety should be your priority. Also, never transport her to the hospital yourself. This could be dangerous for both of you.
  • You can say to her, “Given what you’ve told me, I have concerns about your safety. I have a responsibility to make sure you get immediate help. Your safety is the most important thing right now.”
  • When calling for help, give all the details that your cofounder has shared with you and any statements she reportedly made to others.
  • When the emergency responders arrive, they will talk to your cofounder to assess further and determine next steps.
  • You can also call for help in situations where your cofounder works offsite or has not reported to work and is not reachable. If the information you have presents an urgent concern, it’s better to call immediately to do a welfare/safety check than wait another day to see if your cofounder will report to work.