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Home Blog Page 6840

Anything is Nothing When Looking for a Job

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By Jude Odika

In the last few months I have received requests from friends and acquaintances asking me to assist them in their search for a job. Most of them presume that I know someone directly or someone working/affiliated to a company somewhere that can employ them. Their presumption may or may not be correct, but that’s not the point. The point is that whenever I get such requests, the first question I usually ask is: “What type of job do you want?” And the answer I typically get is: “Anything, just anything to get my foot in the door”.

I have been thinking about this a lot, and I think it is very sad that this is the reality of a lot of unemployed graduates, and even some working professionals. Now, I can go on and on about why it should be just as much being intentional about the type of door you choose to get in, as it is with actually getting in, but that would be a discussion for another day. Right now, I seek to help graduates who are in the job-seeking phase realize that, and hopefully understand why, asking for recommendations or job hunting generally without having a clear picture of their career path, or at the very least some sense of direction, is a bad idea and a very poor strategy. If you already have a job please read on, there might be a thing or two in it for you too.

Reaching out to a potential employer or some other person you know, and asking for a job opportunity without being clear on the career path you want to pursue is a very long shot; and the odds of landing a job that way, are largely not in your favour. A little caveat here though – you might start out in your career and then realize down the line that you need to switch; that is totally fine, as long as your decision gets you closer to your long-term goal. The point I am trying to make here is that you cannot afford to start out thinking that anything would do just fine.

Anything is nothing in this context, and even if you do get and accept ‘anything’ you just might be setting yourself up on a path of constant frustration in your career. If you already got and accepted ‘anything’, please do something about it fast and align yourself to something greater than just having a job. I believe that doing this will serve you well in your career journey. Here are some of the reasons why I think asking for ‘anything’ is a bad idea.

First, it does not speak well of your ability to prioritize and focus – key qualities that employers look out for when making hiring decisions. If you engage an employer from the context of ‘anything’, it immediately casts some doubt on your ability to add value to their organization by prioritizing and focusing on high-value tasks. And with that doubt, no matter how little, lingering in their minds, you would very likely not get their attention.

Second, it makes it difficult for people to assist you in your job search. I find that most people are usually happy to assist in this area, but only if you make it easy for them. People already have a lot going on in their professional and personal lives, so if you reach out to them looking for ‘anything’, they are most likely to be at a loss for how to assist you. But if you declare a specific area of interest and even the role level you are looking to get in from, it immediately makes it easier for them to effectively channel whatever energy they can spare towards helping you achieve your goal.

Third, you would most likely get lesser compensation than the industry rate. This is true because, asking for ‘anything’ inevitably sends a signal that you are desperate; and some opportunistic employers could leverage on that to acquire cheap labour.

The last and probably the most important reason is that, it is not healthy for your professional self-esteem. When you get and accept ‘anything’, you would most likely be asked to work on tasks that you do not particularly enjoy, or at least are not enthusiastic enough to learn. This lack of excitement can affect your performance in a negative way; and if you are not performing well, you could hardly get promoted. And if the promotion is not coming, that means slow or no career growth for you. Hence, you would probably go through your career journey as an average employee at best, or a frustrated one with a battered self-esteem at the worst.

For the working professionals, I do not think it is wise to accept ‘anything’ in the form of a promotion or a new job offer. Before you accept that promotion or switch jobs, you need to seriously consider the content of the role you are being promoted or switching to, and clearly outline how it aligns to your long-term goals. Yes, you would get additional compensation, but will it be worth it when you look back and see how you have derailed from your career path? If you are lucky that you come to the realization on time, you could immediately realign yourself; and if not, you could get carried away in the ocean of activities and tasks that do not help your cause, therefore resulting in the inevitable end of a stunted career growth.

I maintain that it is a lot smarter and useful to be very intentional and specific about your career journey from the onset. I very well understand that figuring out your career path and coming up with a plan can be very difficult – trust me, I have been there done that. But in the end, I know that the process would turn out to be very much worth it; because if you do it well, it will take you through depths of self-discovery and uncover areas you did not know of or have forgotten. And the things you would discover would not only help you come up with a good career plan, but it will also make up an arsenal that you can rely on to ace any interview, and get that job or promotion that helps your cause.

If you haven’t already, please start the process of figuring out your career journey today. Ask for help when and where necessary; a lot of professionals have gone through the same exact phase you are going through now. Seek them out on LinkedIn or whatever professional network you have access to. And when you get their advice, don’t just get it, use it!

Here’s to your success.

Ndubuisi Ekekwe Is Vanguard’s Midweek Personality

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The Vanguard has run the interview.

Prof Ekekwe is a rare Nigerian tech genius with many incredible world class inventions to his kitty. Among his numerous inventions is the invasive medical robotic, a system which was acquired by US govt. He also led the team that designed generation accelerometer, a major component of iPhone. In this interview, he shares his trajectory from a local village boy to a master in Silicon Valley.

FarmHire, A Farm Equipment Aggregator, Is Recruiting Workers and Partners Across Nigeria

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FarmHire is an AgTech startup company that is fully mechanising agriculture in Nigeria. It works to boost farm productivity through farmer to farmer equipments and job hiring, agro-ads posting and online farmers forum. FarmHire is aggregating farm equipment and inputs in the country and using artificial intelligence to provide farmers with the cheapest and best equipment around.

FarmHire.ng is Nigeria’s number one website providing an online platform for farmer to farmer equipments and job hiring. Equipment owners and government agencies can add their equipments and hiring price to connect with farmers that need to book them. Also, any agricultural related job an be easily posted to get qualified professionals to apply.

JOB DESCRIPTION
We are currently recruiting field officers (agents) to:
1. Source farm equipment and inputs around location for upload.
2. Aggregate demands for farm mechanization services around location and place order
3. Drive engagement of local farmers on the portal
4. Monitor field activities for optimal results

REQUIREMENT
1. An interest in agriculture
2. A good interpersonal relationship

BENEFITS
1. Profit compensation on equipment booking order or referrals
2. Several performance-based bonuses and commissions.
3. A chance to change the world.

HOW TO APPLY
Send your CV and location to careers@farmhire.ng

Great Online Resources To Acquire Technical Skills

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By Ajayi Joel

Few days ago, an online friend reached out to me that he wanted me to mentor him over the next step to take after school. He had graduated a few years ago. So I simply asked where he worked presently and if he sees himself working there in the next 5 years.

He hurriedly said no, and explained that where he worked gave him no chance for his life. It was stressful, boring, not creative, and doesn’t seem to have a spontaneous promise to financial increase. I quite understand.

I mean I listened with rapt attention, and I weighed everything also, and I figured out that quitting his job was the perfect move. Remember I also gave an advice that if you have a job where after working from 8 am to 6pm, you hardly earn anything of value, it is better to start searching for another and quit as soon as possible.

You obviously cannot continue like this all your life because such cycle is difficult to break from. You also don’t have a chance of being promoted to the position of earning well.

So I had to run through some questions with my friend. “Fine, since you are no longer working, what do you intend doing”?

After some questions, I discovered he had a passion since childhood and I know that profession is actually very lucrative. I mean very lucrative. It is part of the most needed skills in this age.

This profession however can never be learnt via reading. It has to be learnt either one on one or via video courses. One on one learning trumps online learning when it comes to the quality of the interaction. However, most people do not know online learning even exists.

We made some rough thoughts about how much it would cost him to learn in a physical location. Well, I know for sure it would cost him a few hundred dollars. That’s huge, and he wouldn’t want to spend that amount seeing he also needs to maintain himself as a young man.

So I recommended that he takes the course online. UDEMY teaches the same course he would learn offline for $1000 for just $10.

$10 is just N3,600 in Nigeria.

Fine, like I said there are lots of differences between online learning and offline learning.

However, purchasing a course for $10, there is so much you can gain and still have money in the pocket. It is a process. A steady learning process and you get to learn from a professional who has prepared the course.

If you have a course you wish to learn and you need to learn from professionals, online is a place to consider.  Don’t hesitate to make best use of the little fund you have. You can acquire great skills through online learning. The following are good online resources:

  • Udemy.com – broad digital and technical programs
  • Facyber.com – cybersecurity and digital forensics
  • Udacity.com – broad digital and technical programs
  • Cousera.com – management, digital and technical programs

The Silent Ears of a Moth

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By Sani Nahuche

More than two thousand years ago, the Roman orator, belletrist, thinker, Stoic, manipulator-politician, and (usually) virtuous gentleman, Marcus Tullius Cicero, presented the following story. One Diagoras, a nonbeliever in the gods, was shown painted tablets bearing the portraits of some worshippers who prayed, then survived a subsequent shipwreck. The implication was that praying protects you from drowning. Diagoras asked, “Where were the pictures of those who prayed, then drowned?”

NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB, The Black Swan (2007).

Nassim Nicholas Taleb, the iconoclastic author of The Black Swan, wants you to spend more time in the graveyard. Not literally, although that wouldn’t also be a bad idea. Nothing scares most men more than a visit to the cemetery. Nothing reminds them more about their morality and how they have less time to accomplish all their dreams than they think.

Although the Author, Taleb, isn’t precisely pointing you in that direction. Hitherto, the author is trying to outline how we as humans like to seek answers and allude evidence to only the achievements or success of people or things. That is, we ignore all the failure, effort and travails of those who came close but never close enough. This is why the graveyard has a remarkable and unmatched silence when compared to the bevvy of noise and applause that is synonymous with award ceremonies.

Furthermore, Taleb tries to point out how dead men get to tell no tales, either about their tribulations or trials. It is only those- the few of us – that somehow manage to hold success by its grip that are celebrated or sought after for advice, guidance and mentorship. Isn’t it ironical that we learn more from our failures, but yet success has the most friends? Therefore, if knowledge is truly what you seek, perhaps you should spend less time at award ceremonies and more time in graveyards – whether or not you choose to interpret this metaphorically of literally is entirely down to you.

Most writers, historians and journalist tend to work with success in reverse. While only highly successful people get to ever have great biographies, documentaries or are more favoured for any form of analysis or study, they often share a specific trait that is said to be at the core of why they rose to the heights that they did. Similarly, it is generally assumed that if you also adopted some of these desirable traits, you too would likely attain the heights that they did.

In Nigeria, we tend to exhibit some of these traits, however, maybe not exactly in the context that Taleb postulated. This could be the reason why we continuously aim to celebrate or commiserate with other nations when they are in joy or grief but hesitate to do so when something similarly befalls us. Could it be that we are drawn to the cheers and jeers in the award ceremonies than the silence and failures that lies in our graveyards?

Are we quick to hide under the guise of religion or ethnicity when it comes to helping or consoling one another? Are those our “failures” that we have refused to identify with? While we are still on the matter of religion, the two major religious groups in Nigeria – Christian and Islam – has never compelled anybody to take up any arms on its behalf or shed any blood for the good or furtherance of it. Both religions clearly state that every man would face the end or judgement as one person and not as a group, tribe, clan or family. We would eventually be judged based on the aggregate of all our actions or inactions while we lived. Therefore, who are we to blindly go to war for either God or Allah? Where have we been instructed to do so?

Our religiousness does not stop us from stealing or killing each other. It hasn’t prevented us from taking advantage of each other and oppressing the poor amongst us. However, we have somehow found inspiration in shedding blood and causing havoc under the religion umbrella. As a people, isn’t it crystal clear that even if we all adopted one religion, we wouldn’t really be any different from what we are now? And that our actions come from our individual thoughts and not necessarily to the groups we belong to.

Nobody explicitly came into this world and picked a group or religion that they wanted to belong to. Nobody chose a country nor tribe in the same country. In the North-West people are being slaughtered, families are being displaced, and the picture is as grotesque as you can think of. Yet, we play the fool and pat a blind eye to all the atrocities that are carried on there on a daily basis, simply because we are not directly affected, or we do not identify with the dominant tribe in the region. This same attitude is exhibited across the board, regardless of the part of the nation in crisis, the other parts seem to pretty much ignore them.

Alas, we are quick to commiserate with happens thousands of miles away from us. While we should also extend our condolences to people suffering in any part of the globe, we should not be hypocritical about it. A saying comes to mind; Charity begins at home. Why are we playing to the gallery, impressing those that are not impressed by our antics? We have to learn to take care of home before impressing the streets.

We also have politicians that are hell-bent on furthering their individual purposes as they shamelessly hop from one political party to the other, brazenly displaying their lack of values and morals. Rogues and charlatans find their way into political offices because we do not seek to elect people with a solid track record and clean reputation. In the end, we all pay the price for our actions or inactions.

Our failure to visit our ‘graveyard’ means that our failures and trials will continue to hunt us. Our love for the noisy ceremonies where real lessons cannot be learnt or taught is pure folly that will eventually lead us nowhere – at least not any place that we would like to be.

Be it as it may, to begin to solve our plethora of problems we must look to those that we have handed our country to and demand that they give a fair account of their stay or time in office. Better still, we must ensure that we hand over the affairs of our country to trusted hands that have demonstrated the pedigree to proudly and intelligently lead people. We must say a big no to senators that will reconvene when they please and not place the interest of the nations first. We must say no to overnight politicians with no track record or those riding to power on the back of political godfathers.

It continues to remain an insult on the intelligence of over 180 million Nigerians that wake up very early in the morning and set out to work many hours for meagre wages that are not enough to sustain 80% of the population. Never again should 180 million individuals seat back and allow a few run the nation like a circus, subjecting every one of us to circus clowns that are merely regarded as objects of entertainment rather than people to serve and defend. We must stand firm and say Never Again to modern slavery. This is the time to retreat to our graveyards and wallow in the silence of our misfortunes, with the goal of avoiding the mistakes of our past. We must awake from our slumber and say good morning to a new dawn!

“God Bless Nigeria”