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Home Blog Page 7112

Examine That Business Model Again

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business model

As you work hard to make your products better and improve your processes, do not forget that business model could be as catalytic. Yes, business model innovation is one of the most overlooked areas by startups in Nigeria despite the fact that the right model could help you thrive. In one of my companies, we do not serve private companies and individuals, we focus on governments and cooperatives because they PREPAY for our services [we use their monies to serve them!].

Magically, we have zero need of stocking inventory which would have been necessary if we have to serve consumer market. While the model is not perfect, it is a balance to advance the mission, as it has helped us to manage the burden of raising raise capital just to stock the warehouse.

I did note in this Harvard Business Review article that thriving in business goes beyond engineering and technical superiority. Yes, there are many other elements like branding and marketing which must work in a symphonic way to deliver value at scale.

In the tech startup world, technology is important for success, but it does not disproportionately determine winners and losers. Two companies can invent similar technologies; one will win and the other will lose. Focusing on technology supremacy alone is a model for failure. Over the years, I have consistently seen what I call “latent factors” — business features that are generally outside the scope of the core tech team — to be real factors in a company’s success.

As I have noted, Nigeria is a place where one customer can technically prepay you. Do not overlook such customers because they tend to be the best investors. They give you money and wait for you to supply in two months. The customers abound but you must have the credibility and offer real value for them to work with you. Give them symphonic innovation at scale and they would see the differentiation.

To help our clients in the Fasmicro Group, we have come up with what we call Symphonic Innovation. Simply, Symphonic Innovation is innovation that is not domain-specific, but is anchored on a unified and harmonious approach.

Investors are not just venture capitalists or angel investors; your main customers could be your best investors. Take the prototypes to them, ask them to place orders ahead with lead times, and then deliver to them. Do not fall into the temptation that the only path to market is to stock the warehouse and then wait for people to buy.


In Fasmicro Group, we offer many advisory services and innovation presentations to help clients innovate. We would like to have you on board

Stop Sending Those Proposals via Emails

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Proposals handshake

Stop sending proposals via emails. Stop emailing those potential clients. Invest on face-to-face meetings. The people who make decisions in Nigeria do not care about your emails UNLESS they have met you in person! We lost one of the biggest benefits of internet many years ago because of Yahoo Yahoo Boys. Those boys poisoned our web making it harder for people to trust the web. Yes, from ecommerce to business transactions, the suspicions are unprecedented. Nigeria is the only place on earth where you must include account number, expiry date, three digits at the back, PIN, prior-internet use approval, online transaction activation, (password), etc just to use your debit cards on the web. And at the end, we still record failure rates in high double-digit for attempted online transactions.

While today Nigeria is considered a leading ecommerce market, up until a few years ago, this was not the case.  In fact, in the first years of this decade, online payment failure rates were as high as 60-70% of attempted transactions in Nigeria.  Mobile money had only recently begun to gain acceptance, and many Nigerians were wary of cyber fraud, limiting ecommerce acceptance.

Forget what they are writing on TechCrunch and New York Times on the use the digital marketing to grow businesses. Those things are mainly for America: in Nigeria, humans (yes, atoms) move markets. The bytes are supportive but do not build business development purely on it. You need digital marketing, of course, but it can only work for most sectors when you have people who can meet those clients, and close deals. It is very unlikely for many Nigerian decision makers to sign some important deals without shaking hands. That does not mean that digital marketing is not relevant. It is hugely relevant but you cannot forget what works today.

Linda Ikeji is peerless in understanding how social media and blogging work. She is better than any Nigerian including those that work for Google and Facebook. I do not read her works because the focus is not my interests. Yet, I wanted to know why she was successful. Most Nigerian companies put Linda Ikeji on their tags to get traffic. I spent time and saw an interview where she explained her minor secrets.

{…]

When she started blogging more than a decade ago, most people blogged with pseudonyms or simply ‘editors’: Linda used her real name, and went ahead to name the blog after herself. She brought authenticity and connected with people, as they knew who was writing.

In the interview, Linda made it clear that without that real identity, you lose authenticity. She explained that contents have values due to the creator and not just the contents; anyone that wants to do well in connecting with readers must be open. Her other point was self-explanatory. Of course, some do click-bait. Yet, every person must find ways to understand what the audience wants.

That is for a blogger. For people exploring partnerships and deals, the human element is the way to show that authenticity. No clever web design can do it if you want those proposals to have closures. The fact is this: there is no way to have success in the public sector in Nigeria unless you are ready to meet the decision makers and explain what you have articulated in any proposal. Once you do, you can move to your emails to follow-up. But do not waste efforts sending digital contents and proposals to people you have never met in Nigeria, for business. Those marketing strategies rarely work.

Google Launches AI Center in Accra, Hiring Many Positions

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AI Center

If you work in the domain of AI, Google has come to Africa, opening an AI Center in Ghana, and you could be part of the team. If you have AI capabilities, apply. This could be an exciting career for you. This AI center will likely continue this vision of Google even in Africa.

We’ve seen people across Africa do amazing things with the internet and technology—for themselves, their communities and the world. Over the past 10 years in which Google has had offices in Africa, we’ve been excited to be a part of that transformation. Ultimately 10 million Africans will benefit from our digital skills training program with 2 million people having already completed the course, and we’re supporting 100,000 developers and over 60 tech startups through our Launchpad Accelerator Africa. We’re also adapting our products to make it easy for people to discover the best of the internet, even on low-RAM smartphones or unstable network connections.

Today, we’re announcing a Google AI research center in Africa, which will open later this year in Accra, Ghana. We’ll bring together top machine learning researchers and engineers in this new center dedicated to AI research and its applications.

AI has great potential to positively impact the world, and more so if the world is well represented in the development of new AI technologies. So it makes sense to us that the world should be well represented in the development of AI. Our new AI center in Accra joins the list of other locations where we focus on AI, including Paris, Zurich, Tokyo, Beijing, Montreal, Toronto, Seattle, Cambridge/Boston, Tel Aviv/Haifa, New York, and our Mountain View/San Francisco headquarters. If you’re a machine learning researcher interested in joining this new center, you can apply as a Research Scientist or a Research Software Engineer. You can also view all our open opportunities on our site.

Will Deliver Special Address in ATIGS, World Trade Center Washington D.C on June 25

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Special address

I will deliver the special address during the 2018 Africa Trade & Investment Global Summit (ATIGS), scheduled on June 24 to 26, 2018 at the World Trade Center Washington D.C. The topic and time are as follows:

– Title           :   Investing Frontiers in Africa’s emerging Exponential Agriculture: Special Address 

– Timing      :   25 June 2018 – 3:00 Pm

As I have noted, for more than 500 years, when technology penetrates into any sector, productivity improves. And when productivity accelerates, human welfare ticks up. The future of Africa is promising because the era where farmers will not need emergency food supplies from government is near. They would become business-people and not just custodians of ancestral ways of living. Yes, when agriculture advances, more than 65% of working Africans will see improvements in their lives and their households.

As a “data farmer” in the continent, providing technologies to farmers, I will use primary data from our operations to explain that exponential yield is around the corner. My talk will explain why agro-millionaires will emerge and how young people are driving African agriculture. And most importantly, I will explain the investing opportunities and the enablers of the sector.

My talk in Upcoming ATIGS USA â?? â??Investing Frontiers for Africaâ??s Emerging Exponential Agricultureâ?

ATIGS is a prestigious biennial business conference and exhibition designed specifically: (1) to promote and facilitate international trade between Americas, Asia, Caribbean, EU, UAE, with Africa, (2) to facilitate foreign direct investment in Africa and, (3) to provide a platform for businesses to expand into new markets. The ATIGS 2018 edition will gather key economic players from more than 70 countries including government delegations, high-profile African leaders, project developers and international investors.

Nigeria’s Minister of Industry, Trade and Investment, Hon Dr Okechukwu Enelamah, and former Nigeria’s Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, will present plenaries. Also, the Vice President of Gambia, Deputy Senate President of Nigeria and hundreds of delegates would attend the event. They also plan to livestream this event (learn here).

Win with Values in Business

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business values

In the last few years, information and communication technology (ICT) has provided opportunities for startups to reach new markets which hitherto would not have been possible.  ICT has redesigned commerce and facilitated social, political and economic developments of countries by offering efficient means of transacting businesses and enabling human collaborations. It has transformed institutions, communities and states into knowledge-based economic structures and data societies with electronically linked interdependent relationships. The result is a networked society where competition is not just local, but global. A Brazilian web developer has to be concerned about a potential threat from Silicon Valley. Consequently, startups pursue talents to stay competitive. And some of these talents become influential and expect the company values diluted for them.

Over the years, I have seen startup founders struggle with managing talented business and tech hires. These people get the job done, but some cherry-pick values they adhere to. Because of their good hard numbers or design expertise, they always get away with things that would have fired others. Too bad, a company that fails to recognize that values matter as much as numbers has its days numbered.

I have been involved in startups. I have seen very bright employees exerting influences with the notion that if anyone tries to call them to order, they will leave.  For them, the immutable rule in business that value is cardinal to the health of any organization does not apply. It is always based on the illusion that what matters is hard-number-performance and when that is good, everything is fine. Founders get into a trap – he executes very well and we just adjust for him.

Unfortunately, if there is anything in a startup that must be constant, it is an environment of integrity and values. This is not the written culture on the office walls; it is the one staff demonstrates – internally and externally. It is what the suppliers, customers and partners know about the company; no one should be exempted from it.

Creating companies like IBM and GE with more than a century of existence can only happen when there is value. When a company has a culture that goes beyond mere words to one that is integrated in the bloodstream of its operation, with consequences for defaulters, it has a chance for the future. If one builds great numbers without value, sooner or later the company will crash. For me, values are more important than the hard numbers. The numbers do not guarantee anything permanent but values will constantly define a company. Great employees are only those with good numbers and good values.

As a business owner, I have let talented hires with poor values go. The last one studied abroad and joined with the mentality that he was supreme, constantly pushing the notion that Africa-educated colleagues were not his “class”. The business depends on people working together, and with his attitude, the risk of breaking team chemistry was evolving. Irrespective of his numbers, I never doubted that those would be temporary. Unable to be mentored and without respect to colleagues, he poses a risk to years of tradition built around teams in our business. He left and I explained to the team that he was gone for not demonstrating company shared values despite having good numbers.

Startups must grow on values which everyone including management must demonstrate. Without strong culture, good governance will not be possible and no company can survive on the long haul. It is risky to sacrifice values for performance numbers because both must never be isolated if sustainable effective systems must be established. This ensures that performance goals are practicable and achievable to avoid pressuring employees into ethical quagmire.  This is important because while we report numbers, companies win on values!