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Fixing Tekedia – Patience Please. Will Be Fully Up Soon.

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Thanks for all the notes and InMails. Yes, my blog Tekedia continues to have problems. We spoke with Amazon AWS engineers yesterday but it was evident they need more training.

We have activated Plan B. All the productivity sites are up and running. We just rebuilt. The good news is that we have real-time backups. Once the server was great, it took minutes to restore. Team is doing same on Tekedia. We expect it to be stabilized in hours.

The confusion was the expectation that Amazon could assist. But it was evident that a company that charges $30 per month for support does not even have a service. We got them to speak but the guy could have arrived from a beach with no clue on solutions (He did confirm server issue).

He preferred email so that he could reply every 5-10 hours. If you do that in Nigeria, it would be called FRAUD. But Amazon is getting away with it. We just pay the tax to AWS. It is a SHAME.

You see, leaving Amazon is hard. We have some solutions we have used its primitives to create: from satellite to voice processing. We sell cybersecurity etc courses with lab primitives. Unbundling those is hard.

Again, thanks for the patience. www.tekedia.com will be fully back today. Zenvus, facyber, reconcia, … all fine.

Why Airtel Nigeria is Growing

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By Q4 2018, Airtel Nigeria will jump ahead Glo as the second largest telecom operator in Nigeria, behind MTN. There is a reason for that: Airtel has moved fully asset-light. Yes, it is now fully-outsourced, shifting infrastructure risks to partners and freeing up cash to invest in customer service and experience.

Glo remains a brand that is largely for the bottom of the pyramid. 9Mobile has lost the premium old Etisalat Nigeria image which was built for the upper middle class in Nigeria. MTN cuts across social strata but Airtel is evolving better as a competitor for the ‘everybody network”. Airtel is growing well faster than Glo. MTN is larger and certainly has lesser room but on pure subscriber count, Airtel does better.

Many quarters ago, Airtel was seen as a company that would abandon Nigeria. In the depth of the recession, the company struggled: it had so many underperforming assets. As the nation exited recession, Airtel upgraded its business model. Today, Airtel is leaving the infrastructure business, outsourcing all to partners across Nigeria. Typically, such enables companies to conserve cash. The impact is now visible in the subscriber numbers. Provided Airtel continues to find partners, it would continue to grow at a faster rate than its peers.

Telecom equipment leasing and outsourcing of critical infrastructure pose risks – your quality is determined by the capabilities of the partners. Most people like to be in charge of their destinies. But today, it is working for Airtel since the services are largely matured with very competent players who can deliver them.

The future of rural telephone and broadband services will move faster for Airtel in Nigeria since doing such will just require signing contracts with partners. The gestation period between investment and revenue is largely out because it does not have to worry about community negotiations, fees and other issues which make simple things hard in Nigeria. Airtel partners would have to deal with many of those issues.

I do believe that Airtel is well positioned at the moment to unlock more values in Nigerian telecom sector. Its business model is certainly better provided it can have quality technical partners to depend upon.

Source: Asoka Insight

Working or Living Abroad, Pillars to Build Thriving Business in Nigeria

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You live in London or New York or anywhere for that matter. You have accumulated capabilities and want to start a business in Nigeria. But you do not want to return to Nigeria to run that business. For most people, when they follow through and invest back home, the outcomes do not usually turn out well. The cases of people cheating people, people paid but not working hard and sustained erosion of assets abound.

Yet, there are stories where things have worked. The interesting thing here is really the foundation you have built for that business. From my personal experience, the most important thing is Structure. That means how you have structured that company to give those workers a sense of belonging, as they say in Nigeria.

As I noted in a piece on my experiences in the Johns Hopkins University, you can indeed build a business in Nigeria while living in diaspora. The same applies to those that have jobs but also want to invest by founding a company by the side. It is not absolutely necessary that you must be the executor of a burning business vision you have.

Then I graduated, but I was very unhappy to be leaving. It was tough as there was no practical way to delay it as my advisor has noted that I was “ready” to depart having demonstrated scholarship in my area. I was making good money from fellowships and the extra went into funding Fasmicro in Nigeria. I had started it in Hopkins, hiring 13 bright young Nigerians remotely. In the day, I was a Hopkins student; in the night, I was a startup founder in Nigeria.

From my experience, here are 8 Pillars to consider:

  1. Structure: When I started Fasmicro, I did not want my team to work for me. I wanted them to work for themselves and their families. I did a very simple thing: I gave team members part of the company. I explained to them that if we do well, we would have great Christmas. But if we do not, everyone goes for Christmas with nylon bags. With that decision, I made them part-owners with correlated and aligned interests in the business. I knew they would do all to make sure we do well because if the company wins, they win.
  2. Bonus: I instituted a bonus system which ensures that a certain percentage of our income is shared among our teams. The implication is that everyone has an idea that a good year would be a good Christmas. That bonus remains till today and is a key motivator to my teams making decisions to do more with less. A graduate reminded another that wasting printer ink was an attack on his bonus – he wanted it stopped! The reasoning is that any money saved by the company is money that comes back at the end of the year.
  3. Leadership: Make someone a boss and clearly a leader. Do not try to micro-manage these graduates. If you do, you would struggle because you would cage their capacities to innovate and execute. Give them a little freedom. You would not regret it. Make sure you have someone that is answerable because that will help you to ascertain progress and improve things. We had an invitation few years ago from a major foreign oil company. We sent a 23-year old graduate to make the presentation. The MD of the firm noted that he was the youngest ever presenter he has seen in his position. We do allow guys opportunities to fail and win. We got the job. The temptation would have been to show presence because you may think only you can deliver.
  4. Execution Roadmap: Because you would not be around to run the day-to-day operations of the business, it is very important you articulate the mission and follow it with an operational manual on how to execute it. This is not a business plan. This is simply downloading your vision in a way that your leadership can easily interpret and execute it. Sure, you need to give them flexibility but setting up the stage makes things very easier. This will save you time and give you the peace of mind to continue to focus on your other things.
  5. Evolve the Mission: As you receive data during business reviews, look for things which are working. Then move deeper into those things and expand them where necessary. This means that where necessary, you can depart from the original business and move into something new. We have done that many times. When we noticed that making apps was doomed in Nigeria, we immediately pivoted to building solutions that solve real frictions in the market.
  6. Beyond Lagos: Everyone wants to be in Lagos. That is fine depending on the business you run. But some businesses do not need to be in Lagos. There is a very huge advantage outside Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt in Nigeria. A 3-bedroom flat in a choice area in Owerri goes for N350k while a similar one in Lagos runs into millions of Naira. When men and women start planning to raise families, those things matter. In Lagos, you need to pay more to compensate for the differences on house rents. So, based purely on housing, you can attract higher quality people because places like Owerri offer better value to whatever you pay them compared with Lagos and Abuja. Again, this depends on your business – there are some sectors you must be present in the big cities to thrive. We started with an office in Ikeja but moved to Owerri as our business does not require being in Lagos.
  7. Networks: When we started, we had business development managers in major Nigerian cities. They worked from their laptops. That helped us to save costs and made it possible to have the capacity to send a team member to client across major cities in the country. The saving we got from not opening branch offices went into paying people better. There was trust that team members would actually work. We measured things by asking for daily practical updates/reports.
  8. Invest in Training: The biggest challenge is that most team members may not be ready when they resume. We were one of the earliest companies that started making Android apps when everyone was for BlackBerry in Nigeria. We invested on all kinds of materials to help our team to acquire the skills. We also developed strong partnerships with Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO) and Imo State University.

Largely, you can build a thriving business in Nigeria even when not physically present in that office. You can live in diaspora and execute a mission back home. And you can be working in a bank and found an IT firm. The key is making sure that people come to work for themselves and their families and not just you. Yes, share the fun and people will connect to execute the mission.

Agtech Opportunity to Relocate to Switzerland with CHF 30,000

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Zenvus was invited to apply for this – apply to move to Switzerland. We do get a lot of it. Of course, no one is moving it out of Nigeria. Buy hey, there may be people interested to get CHF 30,000 and move to Switzerland. It is mainly for companies in the agriculture technology, agriculture, food and biomass categories.


Are you a competitive company or start-up in the food, agriculture or biomass sector? Have a look at our 2 programs and choose your preferred option!

If you are you looking to set up business in Switzerland, then the Relocation Program is for you! Winners receive a cash prize of CHF 30 000, as well as access to free agricultural land, a new experimental greenhouse and state-of-the-art laboratories in Fribourg. Welcome to Switzerland!

If you are looking to expand your operations in Switzerland and strike up new partnerships with Swiss institutions and firms, then the Remote Collaboration Program is for you! The winners will enjoy access to an extensive network of professionals with the right contacts and first-rate inside knowledge of their respective industries. The prize also includes a one-week, all-expenses-paid exploratory trip to Switzerland. Swiss companies are lining up to work with you!

This is the link to apply. Deadline is May 31.


Agri & Co challenge is a call for projects initiated by the State of Fribourg, located in the heart of Switzerland. Aiming at fostering collaborations, creating new value chains and enabling innovative initiatives which will in turn contribute to a sustainable economic development, Agri & Co will support 15 promising projects, offering up to 500 000 Swiss francs in total alongside several other benefits. Companies from all over the world can submit their projects through one of our two programs; the “Relocation Program” or the “Remote Collaboration Program, which have been specifically developed to fulfill the needs of different company profiles and thus maximize the innovation and collaboration potential.

Zenvus precision sensors in farms

 

The Greatest Mistake – Attaining PERFECT Product Vision

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The greatest phase to attend in any product vision is PERFECTION. Reaching that point is a huge mistake. Yes, any company that does that dies. And because no great company ever does, they do exist to continue to serve customers. The whole essence of doing business is to perfect product visions on the way of fixing market frictions for clients and customers.

And if you think the product is perfect, it means you would cease to innovate. And doing that creates paralysis because the tastes of customers are not static. In the age of Customer Expectations and Perceptions, pursuing that “perfect product vision” is the element that should keep you working. Never imagine that you have a “perfect product” because if you do indeed think that way, you would lose your market. Why? You would not have iterations and new versions.

In this videocast, I discuss why organizations must focus on developing products and services that go beyond the needs of customers to their expectations and perceptions. Focusing on the needs of customers is a recipe for disaster. The whole desire must be to deliver products and services at the level of customer perception where they are offered products and services which they might not have even imagined would be possible. But the day they see the products they will say wow: That is the thing I have been thinking. This also explains the limitations of focus groups because focus groups are  tethered to what the customers think they need. Perception of customer level  service is offering something which could not have been requested during focus groups, because such products will not come into the imaginations of the people being studied.