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2015 Election: Nairaland – 2nd most African Website and Nigerian Campaigns Town Halls

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Obama has declared his re-election bid as the leader of the free world.

And a day after the declaration of this bid, he is back to the place that got him to White House.  Internet. This time, he is going to the heart of it, Facebook, to hold Town Hall meeting with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. You can submit questions on economy and innovations and other issues.

That is an American thing and what Obama does must not necessarily concern a man in Opopo. My interest is when the big politicians in our nation will do such. Visit iconic institutions and tap the energy of the networks and people. I am seeing Nairaland right now. Nigeria’s Internet giant, Nairaland has a date with destiny. We need to grow it so that it will afford our presidential candidates the opportunities to declare right in its Lagos headquarters. Of course our current President has done well with his Internet savvy.  But he will be out then.

From the visionary Seun Osewa, the Founder of Nairaland, his business is the second most African website. Pretty commendable! And who knows what the next four years will bring to him.

At Ibadan, Cook Your Food With Slaughterhouse Cow Waste

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Imagine this. We hate to see the cow waste. Yes, those slaughterhouse wastes smell bad.  But our Dr. Joseph Adelegan has won many awards over trying to get energy from these wastes. He called it  Cows to Kilowatts.  The Cows to Kilowatts initiative started as a solution to the pressing issue of slaughterhouse water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. He does many interesting engineering by employing powerful anaerobic reactor to process animal waste and blood into quality biogas. He designed the stuff in Ibadan. The captured methane biogas can be used as cooking gas, fuel for household gas generators, and as biofuel for transportation. Any remaining sludge is used as fertilizer. What a bright man!

Imagine if Doc visits the slaughterhouse in your town or city and gives you fuel from that. The slaughterhouse waste problem is common in many Nigerian cities and we could be lucky if this reactor is affordable.

I do not know the commercial viability because it looks very huge. Yet, with government support, he could improve it.

But there is a major progress. The Cows to Kilowatts partnership built its first plant in Ibadan to treat slaughterhouse waste with a $500,000 grant from the U.N. Development Program. The company then raised an additional $200,000 from a World Bank competition and used it to build a bioreactor to generate electricity from cassava waste in the Nigerian city of Ilorin.

The Ibadan plant, which generates around 1,800 cubic meters of biogas per day, already provides affordable cooking gas to 5,400 homes. The initiative is also reducing pollution inside the homes of poor families because the cooking gas it sells is cleaner than commonly used fuels.

Hope someone called Vision 2020. We have got our own refinery. And it is refining, not crude oil, but cow wastes.

 

Internet Power for Presidential Task Force on Power. Good Website for Great Power in Nigeria

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We know that the news is good – the FG is close to securing World Bank’s guarantee for power investors.  Yes, the Federal Government is close to securing a World Bank Partial Risk Guarantee for the Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading Plc, which will assure investors in power generating plants that they will always be paid for power supplied to the distribution companies.

We checked on the site after this news and met a very clean and neatly designed site. Congratulations Presidential Task Force on Power. Your website rocks. That is impressive.

Also we noted they have a Facebook website! What a functioning system on the web. We are confident that this will translate to more Watts for businesses and families. Awesome!

These are the focus from the website:

 

Distribution

 

Distribution can be described as the “downstream” sector of the electric power industry.  It involves delivering power directly to homes and industries. Lines and transformers of much lower capacity (ranging from 33KV/415V to 11 KV/415 V) are used in the distribution sector. The distribution aspect of electricity also directly involves dealing with the consumer and overseeing such functions as meter installation, billing for power consumed and revenue collection.

 

Nigeria’s Power Reform

 

Nigerians are among the people most deprived of grid-based electricity in the world with a per capita consumption that is far lower than many other African countries’.  A South African is provided 97 per cent more electricity than a Nigerian while a Brazilian enjoys 93 per cent more. With a population of 150 million, Nigeria’s generation capacity is around 3,600 Megawatts.

 

 

Google Translator Could Have Made Gaddafi a Better English Writer

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The message is out. The tough man of Libya sent a “love” letter to U.S. President Obama, asking for all the bombings to stop. He has had enough and just wanted the American to stop the bombings. Yes, Obama could tell NATO to stop and they will.

But I have a problem with the letter.  I am not interested in the content; just focusing on spellings and grammar. The letter is horrible. I write the same way most times, but for a President, this is too bad. He has no English translator indeed – I cannot afford one, but Libya can. Maybe a high school student might have volunteered in the bunker to get the letter out. The son the British gave PhD must have missed that one.

Read this from Associated Press:

“Our dear son, Excellency, Baraka Hussein Abu oumama, your intervention is the name of the U.S.A. is a must, so that Nato (NATO) would withdraw finally from the Libyan affair,” Gadhafi wrote. “Libya should be left to Libyans within the African union frame.”

Even the name of the Union he championed – he cannot spell right. This man will surely fail WAEC. Period!

Of course, Gaddafi did not remember to use Google translator. He would have gotten a better value than what the high school student did. Just put the Arabic or whatever language he used and he would get a better deal.

Mr. Gaddafi, next time, you must write a better letter, and stop embarrassing Africa. That letter was not presidential – if you still insist you are one, I mean a President. Hire an English teacher to review this and stop this madness.

The Psychology of a Price Tag

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Marketing is a great profession. The bests in the field understand how to present their product offerings to customers to get them buying. Irrespective of the quality of the product or service, a very poor marketing campaign could be very disastrous. This field is full of psychology. They focus on mastering the behavior of man under his limited scarce resources. He must make choices and bring that concept of opportunity cost in action; and making sure your product wins in this choice makes you a start marketer.

The best marketing strategy begins with pricing. Pricing is such a very huge aspect of microeconomics and the all important topic of demand and supply. Depending on products and markets, a manufacturer could go with price-based pricing or cost-based pricing. In most cases, I prefer the former as the seller could win big provided he understands the potential customers very well.

Under price-basing pricing, you are examining the ability of the customer to pay. So, it opens the door to super high profits or possible losses just to keep your market share. For instance, you want to introduce a new brand in a market and your feasibility studies show that your customers cannot pay more than a certain amount that will enable you to break even. Yet, you move ahead because presence in that market provides future prospects for growth and profitability.

Pharmaceutical companies do that a lot when they are moving into developing economies. The prices they ask for their products are aligned with the power of the patients to pay than what the products cost them. Through that, they increase market share as more patients buy their products. This implies that a drug that sells $200 in Florida could be sold for $1 in Botswana by the same company. Simply, it is using the purchasing power of the market to drive the marketing dynamics.

The other one- cost based pricing- looks at setting price that will give you a certain profit level. You look at your fixed and variable costs and based on those arrive on the price of the product. This method may not be ideal in most cases and I think it is weaker strategy. Marketing is a behavioral science and having rigidity could hurt you in the market. It is better to know your break even point and possibly ascertain if you can take advantage of the purchasing power of your customers.

In a commodity market where differentiation is very limited, cost-based pricing could win. Irrespective of your pricing technique, it is vital you know your production cost before you map how to market your products. Some markets command great mark-ups while some do not. If your product is elastic, you must approach the market understanding the behavior of price to your customers.

Similarly, for high entry barrier markets like pharmaceuticals, cost-based pricing will never win. The products are so important that consumers rarely have choices than to buy within the industry. That is why the Big Pharma could make profits in excess of 2000%.

Now, how do the marketers get you into the business of buying? They work your brain. Look at it this way with basic examples. You visit a grocery store and see a big markdown in price; say 60% off. The reality is that there may not be a markdown. The seller simply understands that you will think of a bargain when you see big markdowns and then open your wallets.

In short the propensity to pay $20 for a trouser after the original price was marked down by 80% is higher than paying $18 for a very similar trouser without a markdown. The latter does not communicate winning in our brain, while the former gives a feeling of success and win. But in reality, you lost, financially, in the former by $2. Have you ever wondered why a grocer is stocking a product for the first time and immediately marking it down by 30%? They also try to give a relative time stamped pricing like “was $200, now $50” or they yanked a product very high, mark it down immediately and use that old price to give an impression that price was cut.

That brings another point where some airlines will tell you that bags could be transported free and then charge high ticket fees to cover that cost of bag. Others will charge for bags, but their ticket fees are lower. Which one is better? It depends if you carry checked bags when you travel. The one that charges for bags could be more efficient as the price is not shared by all customers. So if you carry checked bag, you pay for it, otherwise, no worries. The other one distributes and subsidies the costs of the bags for those that carry bags and then make ticket fees more expensive for those that don’t. However, you may be stuck with the theme that your bags were not paid in one without realizing that your ticket fee was higher.

Psychology of pricing is in everything we do. Government wants out taxes to be withheld and then at the end of the year, they send us tax refunds. Though this is really a very inefficient system to us the payers since the government is not paying interest on the money we have “loaned” them, we tend to think we made a gain. Simply, any time you get a tax refund, it means you have not invested your money very well. You gave government free loan accumulated over one year; that money might have yielded some interests if invested.

But what can you do? Nothing, because it is government and in most cases, it can be designed to look like government just did you a great deal while in reality they used your money for free and not paying any interest.

Pricing is very important and making customers to feel like winners is very important. If you know how to do that, you will have a great career. That is why understanding your customer matters. So, if you think it is easy to be a marketing director, try to become a psychologist first as those price tags you see in Wal-Mart, Giants, Sears, etc are not just the works of accountants; many things are into them.

Author: Ndubuisi Ekekwe