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My Business Webinar Registrants – Access Link Is Coming Tomorrow

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Sample of Certificate for Participants

My team will send the access link for the Tekedia Business Innovation Webinar which is scheduled Friday/Saturday this week. Please be checking your registered emails if you have registered for the webinar. You can still register if you have not – details below (N5,000 or $15 with bonus access to Tekedia exclusive section with my books, frameworks, etc). We have 647 innovaors registered.

I will host a business webinar and Questions/Answers. Everyone is invited. It will be a great one; plan to attend. My desire is that you take action because nothing happens until you take action. The program is largely free – so you have no reason not to attend. Also, we have it on Friday and Saturday to ensure you have choices as you plan your week. Click below and register.

Dates: Friday March 22 2019 (repeat, Saturday March 23, 2019)
Venue: Online.
Time: 10am – 12noon (Webinar); 2.00pm-4.00pm (Questions/Answers). All time Lagos (Nigeria) time
Speaker: Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe, Chairman, Fasmicro Group
Webinar Theme: Winning in Nigeria (and Africa)
Register: There are two ways to register (you need to pay to value my time); please email tekedia@fasmicro.com after payment to set up your account.
  • Use Paypal and pay $15 here
  • Pay into any of the Nigerian bank accounts (N5,000) listed here.
Sample of webinar certificate

Join Ndubuisi Ekekwe for Tekedia Business Innovation Webinar

The Sun Is Always Shining!

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The sun is always shining. Darkness and daylight depend on your timing.

-Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Context from here.

I got the notes and questions: how can you posit that Nigeria is the best place to invest as I noted in the piece on my BBC interview?  My answer: few things work in Nigeria, and that means it has the biggest problems to be solved in the world. Provided that is the state, we can extrapolate that latent opportunities abound in the nation.

Why Nigeria Is The Best Place To INVEST

The Illusion of Dropouts

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Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates did not drop out of school – they upgraded from the common mass educational system to another type that is more premium! But admission into that one requires having a great product vision which makes it harder; getting the cut is not for drop outs but visionaries transiting into a new domain.

Source: click here.

Vibes From My BDBAC Talk: Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg Are Not Dropouts

MySpace Backup Problem Explains Why Competition Is NOT Your Startup Main Enemy

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“As a result of a server migration project, any photos, videos, and audio files you uploaded more than three years ago may no longer be available on or from Myspace. We apologize for the inconvenience.” Myspace.

That reminds me of a story in the Art of Electronics by Paul Horowitz and Winfield Hill, where the authors noted that one company made an electronic product, which became a hit in the market. But when it wanted to upgrade the design, it could not find the original schematic designs. The end-game? Bankruptcy.

As an undergraduate student in FUTO, that narration never left me, even when I had the opportunity to work on the design of a generation iPhone inertial sensors. This blog – tekedia- is backed up in real-time. Sure, traffic can cause troubles, sometimes, but data is never compromised.

Yes – imagine it: MySpace has no reasonable backup strategy. That was the company that was there before Facebook. People said Facebook won the competition. Not true- MySpace might have just died, even without Facebook, because it has no reason to be alive.

It’s not as if the internet needed another cautionary tale about backing up data, but for many artists, this news is heartbreaking nonetheless. Myspace has issued a tersely worded message noting that a huge amount of user-uploaded music has been lost during a server migration.

The once-dominant social network posted a note on its site reading, “As a result of a server migration project, any photos, videos, and audio files you uploaded more than three years ago may no longer be available on or from Myspace. We apologize for the inconvenience.”

Users have been reporting issues with music uploaded between 2003 and 2015 for around a year now. We’ve reached out to Myspace for additional insight into the issue — and whether what could well be millions of tracks are indeed permanently lost in the digital ether. Honestly though, things don’t look too good for Myspace or music uploaders.

As you do your thing – most times, competition does not destroy startups, startups just fail to live – yes, they just kill themselves. It is like that sound by the Fugees with lyrics “killing me softly”; I always jokingly note – it is still a kill even though it is softly! I get it (emotions).

Competition is not your main enemy as you build that startup. Your main enemies are the internal elements in your company which could affect flawless execution. Do not fret morning and night about competition because ideally for a Nigerian startup, you do not have many competitors!

Vibes From My BDBAC Talk: Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg Are Not Dropouts

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A blogger captured a brief element of my BDBAC talk earlier in the month – still expecting the full video from the organizers. On the Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates line, I had made it before: Mark and Bill were premium-dropouts because they left boring university teachers they paid money. via tuitions, to join dynamic venture capitalists that paid them money, as investors, and yet offered anything professors could have provided them.

In a way, they replaced mass-training professors in Harvard with private Harvard-quality professors. If you check very well, they got better deals. You cannot have a private Harvard-quality professor and still claim you dropped out!

Now, you can see why a kid in Nigeria must stay in school and stop touting how Mark and Bill dropped out to build Facebook and Microsoft respectively. They did not drop out – they upgraded from the common mass educational system to another type that is more premium! But admission into that one requires having a great product vision which makes it harder; getting the cut is not for drop outs but visionaries transiting into a new domain.

Summary from the blogger:

The Co-Chairman of JPL Financial Group, a California-based financial advisory firm and blogs at Harvard Business Review, Prof. Ndubuisi Ekekwe speaking on Abundance in the Data of Nations said:

“Data analytics knowledge in Nigeria is at infancy stage. But, opportunities abound as there are many aspects of our economy and culture that foreign ideas won’t solve the problems; they require local talents. Start-ups and young entrepreneurs are going to tap into it. For instance, Kobo360 is doing very great in their areas”.

He highlighted the importance of education that reflects the 21st Century learning which does not depend on paper qualifications.

“Education: It is so painful that we deceive ourselves. Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg dropped out of school but didn’t drop out of learning. They left the four walls of the university where professors taught them to the boardroom where venture capitalist taught them and also wrote the cheques.

“Africa needs to build processes; not to prepare the young people for certificates but a life time growth trajectory.

He also called for broadband affordability as key to unleash Big Data and Business Analytics in Africa. “It amazes me that Facebook can be free in Nigeria but most online courses and materials are not free. I believe that with Satellite broadband will bring down the cost of connectivity and most African kids can have access to the internet to learn new courses and improve on their skills”.

NB: Photo – With Emeka Okoye, CEO of Cymantiks, after my talk in BDBAC this month.

LinkedIn Comment on Feed

COMMENT #1: I think we need to redefine the concept of education and its qualifiers, that way – the notion of equating quality education with four walls of classroom in a certain location in the world could become moribund.

If the purpose of education is to liberate minds, then the mind that does not suffer any form of inhibition or distraction is the most educated of course. Schools make it possible to standardise learning and make it robust, reducing biases or tendency for one to only learn about few things that interest him/her. Schools also make it possible for a teacher to not only teach the subject he/she likes or the one that pleases, which could lead to skewed learning outcome.

The greatest institutions remain humans, not the buildings or locations where they are sited. If Harvard or MIT professors come to your village to teach you, obviously you have acquired a Harvard/MIT level of education, but you may not receive a paper certificate bearing those iconic names.

Some of us have been privileged to learn from the finest minds across the globe, without sitting in classrooms to be taught by them. With a lifelong learning mindset, you could be more educated than your professors, only that they have the papers...

COMMENT #2: Interesting fact. And just like young Nigerians keep holding on to the assertion that Mark, Bezos, and co started in a garage and built a world-class business, so they too can start from nothing.

But the bitter truth is that none started from nothing. Mark and Saverin invested a thousand dollars each (approximately N300k then) in 2004 to start Facebook of which within a few months they got a seed capital of $500k from Peter Thiel.

In the same light, according to Bezos recently, he brought together about 20 investors who brought in checks of $50k each raising a seed capital of $1million for Amazon. This is excluding the initial investment he got from his rich parents.

These guys started from their garages but surely didn’t start with just a laptop and an internet connection. Money was invested.

So, thinking they are school dropouts and wanting to “imitate” them might be a big mistake. With these tech gurus, there is more to them than we think. They are the most educated bunch we have seen.

The Mirage of Lagos Dropouts – Mark Zuckerberg and Bill Gates