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Good People, Thank You for Subscribing To My New eBook

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Ndubuisi Ekekwe

Good people, thank you all. The migration is done to AWS and tekedia loads far better now. We have reduced loading time from 58 seconds to 4 seconds. Team is monitoring all. They will make the call on stability after this migration.

Let me thank those that have subscribed and those waiting for launch. We’re now above $650 pre-launch, excluding the payments in Nigeria, which team will tally after the holiday.

This is how it comes, like this one from Abiodun    

“Hi Ndubuisi, just sent 7000 for your new ebook Africa’s Sakanfo innovation”.

We may not wait for Tue 7am NY time to launch. I will ask team to hit the button once they confirm everything is stable. This is awesome.

As I note in the book Preface (you will read that soon), Tekedia/Linkedin is one of the places I get my real-time perspectives on global events, from real people. Without you all, I would not have done the book. Largely, the insights are shaped by you.

Here is the link for pre-launch and Table of Contents. . I am smiling here. Goodness for me, goodness for you. Have a great weekend.

Pay Fasmicro & Tekedia

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Book Launch Notice – Table of Contents

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My book is ready but team has noted that it will finish Tekedia migration to Amazon Web Services (AWS) tomorrow.  Backup had already been taken. This particular post will possibly be lost after the restoration (we will re-post via a new permalink post-restore); same goes for this and this. I am doing minor post updates until the site is fully migrated.

The decision to migrate to AWS is to ensure the best possible service on a subscription product. The book will go live on Tuesday before 7am New York time. I am very confident that all potential issues on AWS migration will be fixed by then.

The Table of Contents

This is our working Table of Contents. All will be made live on Monday.

Africa’s Sankofa Innovation

 Beginning

  • Preamble
  • About the Author – Ndubuisi Ekekwe, PhD

Overview

  • 1.0       Innovation for Development
  • 1.1       Africa’s Need for Knowledge Creation
  • 1.2       Triple Helix Partnership for Innovation
  • 2.0       Rekindling the Innovation Spirit, Charting a Way Forward
  • 2.1       Evidence in rekindling the innovation spirit
  • 2.2       Charting a Way Forward
  • 2.3       Learning from Other Global Regions

Emerging Pillars

  • 3.0      Why is innovation important for a new African economy?
  • 3.1       Africa’s Need for Innovation
  • 3.1.1    New Innovation Process Africa Can Participate
  • 3.2       Innovation Economy for Africa
  • 3.3       What Can Africa Do To Build Innovation Economy?
  • 4.0       The geography of S&T innovation in Africa
  • 4.1       The Rise of Startups in Africa
  • 4.2       Innovation Spaces in Africa
  • 5.0       Regional innovation competitiveness, Shaping Tomorrow
  • 6.0       The rise of Africa’s Makers
  • 7.0       Case Studies – The African innovation spirit

 Next Frontiers

  • 8.0       Assessing Africa’s opportunities as an innovation-oriented economy
  • 8.1       Africa’s Opportunities as an Innovation-Oriented Economy
  • 8.2       Sustaining an Innovation-Oriented Economy
  • 9.0       Strategies for building innovation ecosystem in Africa
  • 9.1       Building Africa’s Innovation Ecosystems
  • 10.0     Africa’s next innovation frontiers
  • 10.1     Key Elements of Frontier Cities
  • 10.2     Some Upcoming Technology Villages in Africa
  • 10.3     Innovation Frontier Sectors

New Systems

  • 11.0     Emerging technologies for Africa
  • 12.0     Startup Innovation Case Studies

Moving Forward

  • 13.0 – Possible Steps
  • 13.1     General
  • 13.2     Continental-Level Institutions
  • 13.3     Regional Economic Communities
  • 13.4     Private Sector and Investors
  • 13.5     Incubators, Accelerators and Hubs
  • 13.6     African Innovators
  • 13.7     Special Institutions

Exclusive Articles

  • Archives of Regular Exclusive Articles

 

Meanwhile, you can pay now. Here are options

Option A: Pay Transfer if in Nigeria (N7,000 per year)

  • Guaranty Trust Bank (GT Bank) # 0114016493
  • Union Bank Plc  account #: 0011132988
  • United Bank for Africa (UBA): 1019195493

Account owner: First Atlantic Semiconductors & Microelectronics

Also you can pay with GTPay/Interswitch via this link. We own StartCrunch which is integrated for online payment. Payments made via it goes into our GTBank account.

Once you have made payment, please email tekedia@fasmicro.com and provide email for us to create an account for you. 

Option B: PayPal ($20 per year)

Simply follow this link and make a payment of $20 to Fasmicro USA


eBook and Excl. Articles


 

 

Bulk Pay

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Two ways:

  • Use your Paypal to pay
  • Use your credit/debit card (Visa, MasterCard, Discover, Amex) to pay via PayPal

 


License Range




Your Business AKI, A Competitive Weapon

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The world is being redesigned. Information and communication technologies are changing the structure and composition of global commerce and industry. This is a new economy anchored on the powers of microprocessors.

Today, the theories of factors of production and comparative advantages of nations are still relevant. However, a new concept has evolved to diminish their impacts in international market.

As we globalize and Internet penetrates across the world, factors of production can be fused with ease using technology in what I will call ‘knowledge cluster’. That has been the business philosophy of outsourcing. You can buy any knowledge irrespective of distance and integrate it locally in your process.

Likewise, the sources of fund have become global and local capital is not that very consequential. So, local unavailability of capital may not be a limitation to a bright business idea.

If you are looking for labor, you can easily access a pool anywhere on earth through the internet. Land has since diminished to be a major factor in location and localization of firms since many firms are knowledge firms and do not need land to exist.

Salesforce displaced GM in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Google has since disrupted old established industries, primarily by competing with Algorithms, Knowledge, and Information (AKI). It matters not that they may not have large land mass. With AKI, they can win any battle because that is what matters.

Algorithm provides the intellectual base to compete. Information helps firms to stay focused on what customers want, especially for web based firms. The algorithms provide the means to process the information. When the information is available, knowledge is built to develop strategies in the market place.

Today, we have grid computing and cloud businesses and progressively transitioning to physical asset-less enterprises. Certainly, we will still have businesses that support the computer powers that power firms, but it is possible that major firms can exist virtually in this age.

This observation advances the notion made in old classical economics theories. For the fact that the world is more accessible, the notion of comparative advantage while important is not potent as it used to be. In the old days when some of the theories were formulated, manufacturing dominated with minimal service industry.

Instead of obsession on comparative advantage, firms must focus on core competence. The latter is internal while the former in most cases is external. You do not have to focus on making chocolate because your country produces cocoa, but you must develop a better production system that makes your chocolate production lean and nimble to be competitive, irrespective of your location.

In all these dynamics, what is changing the concepts is knowledge as a factor of production. Knowledge redesigns the mix and opens up new issues in business strategy and marketing.

Without being a knowledge economy, Angola cannot focus on developing oil drilling technologies despite the need for them. Whereas Japan could develop the technologies and sell to it, though, it has minimal local needs for those technologies. As Japan modernizes its technologies, it understands that its competition is not coming from Angola, but say Germany.

So, it is important to understand that some of the theories developed in the agrarian and industrial age are not relevant today. The textbooks must be modernized and students must be brought up to date accordingly.

Competition today has assumed more amorphous forms owing to the drastic impacts of technology in shaping the tastes of consumers. And one thing that is central to this taste is information.

This information changes everything. Unlike the saying: ‘you cannot eat your cake and have it’; I know that information is non-rival. In other words, the consumption of information does not exclude another person from consuming it. That you read a story online does not prevent another person from reading it.

This concept is a key fundamental change to the old marketing and sales strategies. When you sell your cocoa to one customer, it prevents you from selling the same cocoa to another customer. But in this area, that whole concept has since been diminished.

A newspaper can make its online content free and anyone can read it. While not selling it directly, someone reading that article brings revenue through a third party arrangement based on how many people visit that site. The focus is to get more people to consume more information on the site because it creates value for them.

But there is another caveat to this: while information is non-rival, it has time content. That is why information is physical since it costs something to produce it. In other words, information is not free and it has an element of time. Think about it: does it matter today if a newspaper has a heading that says: Obama wins the Presidency.

Sure, that information is not useful because it is not timely. This becomes more interesting when you trade on stocks. A piece of information can make someone rich (say, insider trading) and that is why SEC will pursue people that partake in insider trading because the value of that information becomes so useful than when it is in public domain. The difference between the same information is time. When everyone has the information, it becomes less valuable. This clearly shows the physical nature of information as it can lose value with time.

As technologies transform the global economy, knowledge will become so important. After all, this is a knowledge century. The transformative value of commercial assets which for some firms is information will continue to change marketing and competitive strategies. Understanding these changes will make a firm adapt, evolve and survive this innovation economy.

Businesses run on algorithms, knowledge and information. To thrive today, you must understand those constructs. Your algorithm could be simple, but refining it to be sure that it is still relevant, in this age of change is strategic. Your knowledge of the people, processes and tools will help you drive strategy. The data (yes, information) that powers all must be valid and reliable. Your business AKI must be understandable for you to make progress. There is no other greater weapon that you can compete with in this era.