Wednesday, 30 December 2015

Sure-Fire Businesses for 2016

Below is a small list of business oportunities for S.M.Es for 2016. It's from an E-book written by John-Paul Iwuoha, who is an impact entrepreneur, SME Business Coach, and founder of Smallstarter Africa. He works with entrepreneurs and investors to start up and grow businesses in Africa. He is also the co-author of ‘101 Ways To Make Money in Africa‘, the widely-acclaimed book which reveals several interesting business ideas, market opportunities, and inspiring entrepreneur success stories across Africa. Twitter;@smallstarters


.  Online Services
Business ideas for 2016 - Printivo
The guys in the picture above are the founders of Printivo, a small business located in the Yaba area of Lagos. In October 2015, this young business received over $100,000 in funding from foreign investors.
Printivo is actually built on a simple business idea. It designs and prints corporate business cards, letterheads and notepads for all kinds of companies. The only difference is Printivo is a full-scale online service, customers can make their orders over the internet.
Printivo’s service is fast, convenient and very affordable. It’s no surprise the business has become very successful in a short time.
Just in case you haven’t noticed, online business models are taking over Nigeria. Products and services which used to only be available through physical and traditional channels are going online.
You can now buy phones, electronics and household appliances online (eg. Konga and Jumia). You can also buy food products online (eg. Supermart.ng and Gloo.ng).
If you’re looking for the latest job vacancies, Jobberman is surely the place to go. If you want to watch the best Nigerian movies, IrokoTV is the village square. If you’re looking for hotel accommodation options anywhere in Nigeria, Hotels.ng will easily do the magic!
So, as the days go by, more products and services are moving to the internet in Nigeria. But there are still many more that haven’t gone online yet.
Car spare parts, handicrafts and art work, personal and home care services (like nannies, drivers, chefs etc.). All of these and more are still unavailable online in Nigeria.
In 2016, more smart Nigerians are going to bring some of these online.
Will you be one of them?

Sunday, 27 December 2015

TWO VERY IMPORTANT LESSONS TO LEARN FROM DR SID'S KABIYESI VIDEO


In this very hilarious and creatively shot musical video (I strongly believe <adasa cookey> is a genius), the son of the late great Justice Esiri shows us that the apple never really falls far from the tree.
Anyways, this highly entertaining video curiously teaches us two major things about achieving our goals when we deal with people

How To Develop an Allergy to Average (by addicted2success.com )

There are many ways to define success. Entrepreneurs and business people spend years focusing on that often ever-elusive goal, continually searching for the magic solution or answer: that “thing” which will help them achieve the success they so desire. Admittedly, we all want to be successful in our lives. No matter what our career or personal aspirations may be, we all hope to attain an element of prestige, achievement, and fulfilment.
A major part of success involves never settling for less. I’d say it goes even further to include NEVER SETTLING. Great success depends on the will and drive of the person involved. No matter how much you believe luck and circumstances affect one’s chance at “making it”, this is far from the truth. I firmly believe we make our own luck, and we create our own destiny. The person most in charge of your success is YOU. Conversely, YOU are also the biggest obstacle preventing you from achieving that success.
So how does one reach the pinnacle? How can I become everything I desire in my life? How can I reach all my career and personal goals, and even go beyond my wildest dreams?
Simple. You must become allergic to the idea of being average. Mediocre “success”, satisfactory work, and substandard results CANNOT be enough for you. If they are, retrain your brain right now. You need to develop an allergy to average. Success depends on being extraordinary and outstanding. In a word full of mediocrity and “just enough” you must become exceptional. You must be and want MORE than enough.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

FUNKE SHEBI THIS IS THE CAR YOU SAID YOU WANT FOR THE NEW YEAR,ABI?! (LOL!)

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DON'T JUST AIM TO BE RICH. AIM TO ENJOY YOUR WEALTH

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Benjamin Franklin got it right! Wealth is not just for the having, but also for the enjoyment of it.





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The Chelsea Boss and his Super-Yacht
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DON'T BE AFRAID OF MAKING MISTAKES ON YOUR WAY UP

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Never Forget this nugget of advice; the Wealthy and Super-Rich are never afraid of making mistakes.

They are more afraid of not understanding lessons from their mistakes.

Monday, 21 December 2015

HOW SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE RECOVER FROM MISTAKES; What Steve Harvey Did Right and Wrong in Big Miss Universe Flop

We all make mistakes. Some are more public than others. One of the most cringe-worthy flubs of recent television history occurred Sunday on stage at the Miss Universe 2015 pageant.
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Comedian and Family Feud host Steve Harvey wrongly crowned Miss Colombia, Ariadna Gutierrez-Arévalo, the winner. Moments later a somber Harvey reappeared on stage to correct the error, announcing that Miss Columbia was actually the runner-up. Miss Philippines, Pia Alonzo-Wurztbach, was the actual winner.
In crisis communication, we recommend several strategies to deal with an honest, but regrettable mistake. Steve Harvey -- a seasoned performer -- did some things well and could have done other things better.  

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Is Hard-work REALLY NECESSARY for the attainment of SUCCESS?

Now what do you think; is Hard-work REALLY NECESSARY for the attainment of SUCCESS?

Below are some thoughts on that:
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And to the man he said, "Since you listened to your wife and ate from the tree whose fruit I commanded you not to eat, the ground is cursed because of you. All your life you will struggle to scratch a living from it...New Living Translation(Genesis 3:17)



Men and women world-wide seem to agree on one thing: "one needs to work hard to make it in life". They want you to "Read Hard" when you're in school, and "Work Hard" to make money, and "Play Hard", when you are off both.

The truth is that all 3 of the above could lead to health complications that arise by doing these things Hard.

Thursday, 17 December 2015

Secrets of The Millionaire Mind (FREE PDF DOWNLOAD)






I have a free PDF file of THE SECRETS OF THE MILLIONAIRE MIND(44 Wealth Principles from T. Harv Eker’s best-selling book)

Just click on the Link below and you'll have your free mini E-Book. ENJOY!


DOWNLOAD FREE MILLIONAIRE MINDSET E-BOOK

Wednesday, 16 December 2015

Attaining your Purpose

The Rich use their mistakes to make themselves richer(part 2)




People who found success despite failures

Colonel Sanders : The founder of KFC. He started his dream at 65 years old! He got a social security check for only $105 and was mad. Instead of complaining he did something about it.

He thought restaurant owners would love his fried chicken recipe, use it, sales would increase, and he’d get a percentage of it. He drove around the country knocking on doors, sleeping in his car, wearing his white suit.

Do you know how many times people said no till he got one yes? 1009 times!

Walt Disney: The man who gave us Disney World and Mickey Mouse. His first animation company went banktrupt. He was fired by a news editor cause he lacked imagination. Legend has it he was turned down 302 times before he got financing for creating Disney World.

Albert Eistein: He didn’t speak till he was four and didn’t read till seven. His parents and teachers thought he was mentally handicapped. He only turned out to win a Nobel prize and be the face of modern physics.

Richard Branson: He’s a billionaire mogul of Virgin but has had his share of failures. Remember Virgin Cola or Virgin credit cards? Probably not. He’s lost hundreds of millions of dollars but has not let failure stop him. When you’re rich like him you can rent his private island for $53,000 a night.

Mark Cuban: The billionaire owner of the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks got rich when he sold his company to Yahoo for $5.9 billion in stock. He admitted he was terrible at his early jobs. His parents wanted him to have a normal job. So he tried carpentry but hated it. He was a short order cook but a terrible one. He waited tables but couldn’t open a bottle of wine. He says of his failures,

“I’ve learned that it doesn’t matter how many times you failed,” Cuban says. “You only have to be right once. I tried to sell powdered milk. I was an idiot lots of times, and I learned from them all.”

Vincent Van Gogh: He only sold one painting in his lifetime!  Just one to a friend. Despite that he kept painting and finished over 800 pieces. Now everyone wants to buy them and his most expensive painting is valued at $142.7 million.

Theodor Seuss Giesel: Dr. Seuss gave us Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham. Books every child reads. At first many didn’t think he would succeed. 27 different publishers rejected Dr. Seuss’s first book To Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street.

John Grisham: The American author first was a lawyer who loved to write. His first book A Time to Kill took three years to write. The book was rejected 28 times until he got one yes for a 5,000 copy print. He’s sold over 250 million total copies of his books.

Steven Spielberg: He applied and was denied two times to the prestigious University of Southern California film school. Instead he went to Cal State University in Long Beach.

He went on to direct some of the biggest movie blockbusters in history. Now he’s worth $2.7 billion and in 1994 got an honorary degree from the film school that rejected him twice.

Stephen King: His first book Carrie was rejected 30 times and he threw it in the trash. His wife retrieved it out of the trash and encouraged him to resubmit it. The rest is history. He has sold more than 350 million copies of his books. (He’s also made many adults fear clowns too.)

Stephenie Meyer: The author of the crazy Twilight series said the inspiration from the book came from a dream. She finished it in three months but never intended to publish it until a friend suggested she should.

She wrote 15 letters to literary agencies. Five didn’t reply. Nine rejected. One gave her a chance. Then eight publishers auctioned for the right to publish Twilight. She got a three book deal worth $750,000. In 2010, Forbes reported she earned $40 million.

Tim Ferris: The man behind the 4 Hour Workweek, who changed how many people view work and life, was rejected by 26 publishers before one gave him a chance. It’s been on the bestseller’s list for years, sold all over the world, and last year published The 4 Hour Body that went to #1 on the New York Times bestsellers list.

The Beatles: They were rejected by many record labels. In a famous rejection, the label said, “”guitar groups are on the way out” and “the Beatles have no future in show business”.

After that the Beatles signed with EMI, brought Beatlemania to the United States, and became the greatest band in history.

Michael Jordan: He’s famous for being cut from his high school basketball team. He turned out to be the greatest basketball player but never let failure deter him. I love this quote…

“I have missed more than 9,000 shots in my career. I have lost almost 300 games. On 26 occasions I have been entrusted to take the game winning shot, and I missed. I have failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”

Thomas Edison: No list of success from failures would be complete without the man who gave us many inventions including the light bulb. He knew failure wouldn’t stop him.

If I find 10,000 ways something won’t work, I haven’t failed. I am not discouraged, because every wrong attempt discarded is another step forward.

There is no success without failure

Decide what is important to you and take huge steps everyday even though it doesn’t seem like it’s working. Success doesn’t happen without failures. It’s reality.

Deal with it.

How bad do you want to achieve your goal? It better be so bad that rejection won’t derail you.

How much do you believe in what you’re doing? Colonel Sanders did despite 1009 rejections!

“Fall down seven times, get up eight.” – Japanese proverb



Let these examples inspire you every day.

The Rich use their mistakes to make themselves richer(part 1)



Successful people never again…
1. Return to what hasn’t worked. Whether a job, or a broken relationship that was ended for a good reason, we should never go back to the same thing, expecting different results, without something being different.
2. Do anything that requires them to be someone they are not. In everything we do, we have to ask ourselves, “Why am I doing this? Am I suited for it? Does it fit me? Is it sustainable?” If the answer is no to any of these questions, you better have a very good reason to proceed.
3. Try to change another person. When you realize that you cannot force someone into doing something, you give him or her freedom and allow them to experience the consequences. In doing so, you find your own freedom as well.
4. Believe they can please everyone. Once you get that it truly is impossible to please everyone, you begin to live purposefully, trying to please the right people.
5. Choose short-term comfort over long-term benefit. Once successful people know they want something that requires a painful, time-limited step, they do not mind the painful step because it gets them to a long-term benefit. Living out this principle is one of the most fundamental differences between successful and unsuccessful people, both personally and professionally.
6. Trust someone or something that appears flawless. It’s natural for us to be drawn to things and people that appear "incredible." We love excellence and should always be looking for it. We should pursue people who are great at what they do, employees who are high performers, dates who are exceptional people, friends who have stellar character, and companies that excel. But when someone or something looks too good to be true, he, she, or it is. The world is imperfect. Period. No one and no thing is without flaw, and if they appear that way, hit pause.
7. Take their eyes off the big picture. We function better emotionally and perform better in our lives when we can see the big picture. For successful people, no one event is ever the whole story. Winners remember that – each and every day.
8. Neglect to do due diligence. No matter how good something looks on the outside, it is only by taking a deeper, diligent, and honest look that we will find out what we truly need to know: the reality that we owe ourselves.
9. Fail to ask why they are where they find themselves. One of the biggest differences between successful people and others is that in love and in life, in relationships and in business, successful people always ask themselves, what part am I playing in this situation? Said another way, they do not see themselves only as victims, even when they are.
10. Forget that their inner life determines their outer success. The good life sometimes has little to do with outside circumstances. We are happy and fulfilled mostly by who we are on the inside. Research validates that. And our internal lives largely contribute to producing many of our external circumstances.
And, the converse is true: people who are still trying to find success in various areas of life can almost always point to one or more of these patterns as a reason they are repeating the same mistakes.
Everyone makes mistakes…even the most successful people out there. But, what achievers do better than others is recognize the patterns that are causing those mistakes and never repeat them again. In short, they learn from pain—their own and the pain of others.
A good thing to remember is this: pain is unavoidable, but repeating the same pain twice, when we could choose to learn and do something different, is certainly avoidable. I like to say, “we don’t need new ways to fail….the old ones are working just fine!” Our task, in business and in life, is to observe what they are, and never go back to doing them again

Courtesy of success.com

A definition of an Entrepreneur

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Saturday, 12 December 2015

10 Nigerians Make Forbes Africa’s 50 Rich List, Dangote Remains Continent’s Wealthiest


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Ten Nigerians have been listed among the 50 richest persons on the continent in the Forbes Africa’s 50 Richest 2015.
They are Aliko Dangote, Mike Adenuga, Folorunsho Alakija, Femi Otedola, Abdulsamad Rabiu,  Theophilus Danjuma, Tony Elumelu, Jim Ovia, Mohammed Indimi and Orji Uzor Kalu.

The President of the Dangote Group, Aliko Dangote, retained his spot as the richest African for the fifth year in a row, with a $16.7 billion net worth. However, his net worth was about $5 billion lower than a year ago, a result of a drop in the stock price at his Dangote Cement and the depreciation of the naira.

Also, while the Chairman of Globacom Chairman, Chief Mike Adenuga, was listed as the seventh richest Africa, with net worth of $3.5 billion, another Nigerian, Alakija, with a net worth of $1.7 billion was 13th on the list; Femi Otedola, with a net worth of $1.6 billion was the 16th richest African and Abdulsamad Rabiu , who with a $1 billion net worth was adjudged the 23rd richest African.
Other Nigerians who featured on the Forbes 2015 Africa’s Richest list included Gen. Theophilus Danjuma (rtd) who with a $750 million net worth was named the 30th richest African; Tony Elumelu with a $700 million net worth at number 31; Jim Ovia with a net worth of $550  million emerged the 37th richest African; Mohammed Indimi, with a $500 million net worth was 39th on the list and Orji Uzor Kalu, was placed 49th with a net worth of $330 million.

However, the report by Forbes on Wednesday revealed that after several years of steady growth in Africa, some sectors on the continent hit a wall.
“Lower prices for oil and other commodities led to a smaller number of African billionaires than a year ago on Forbes new list of Africa’s 50 richest – 23 billionaires this year, down from 28. As a group, the continent’s wealthiest 50 are worth $95.6 billion, a decline of $15 billion from a year ago,” the report added.
Meanwhile, the second richest person in Africa on the list was Nicky Oppenheimer, whose estimated $6.6 billion fortune stems from the stake he inherited in diamond miner and marketer DeBeers. In 2012, Oppenheimer sold the DeBeers stake to mining giant Anglo American for $5.1 billion in cash. He moves up the ranks from the number three spot in 2014.

Seven members of the 2014 list dropped off, including mining mogul, Desmond Sacco of South Africa, and telecoms tycoon Strive Masiyiwa of Zimbabwe. Six previous list members returned to the list after dropping off, including South Africans Michiel Le Roux, CEO of Capitec Bank, and Raymond Ackerman, founder of retailer Pick N Pay Holdings. The minimum net worth required to make the list this year was $330 million, down from $510 million a year ago.
“South Africans made the best showing on the Africa’s richest list this year, occupying 16 spots, up from 11 last year. Nigerians had a smaller representation, with 10 members of the list, down from 13. Eight members hail from Morocco, seven from Egypt, three from Tanzania and three from Kenya. There was one each from Algeria, Angola and Uganda.
“The one newcomer on the list this year is Kenya’s Narendra Raval, with a net worth estimated at $400 million. A former assistant priest at a Swaminarayan temple – a Hindu sect –Raval was expelled from the sect when he married a Kenyan. He then got a job in the steelmaking business and later started Devki Group, which makes cement, reinforcement bars, and barbed wire.
“There are once again two women list members: Isabel dos Santos of Angola and Folorunsho Alakija of Nigeria. Dos Santos, the eldest daughter of Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, sparked four members of the European Parliament to request an investigation in October into her investments in Portugal following a purchase in Dos Santos made in May 2015 of a roughly $200 million stake in Portuguese equipment supplier Efacec Power Solutions. The members of Parliament point to what appears to be the use of Angolan government funds for the purchase. A spokesperson for Dos Santos did not reply to a request for comment.
“The oldest African tycoon on the list is Miloud Chaabi of Morocco, age 86. His Ynna Holding develops real estate, operates hotels and supermarkets, and is the majority owner of SNEP, a chemical manufacturer in Morocco. The youngest is Mohammed Dewji of Tanzania, age 40. Dewji is CEO of METL, a Tanzanian conglomerate his father founded in the 1970s. It is active in textile manufacturing, flour milling, beverages and edible oils,” it added.

Courtesy ThisDay