Category Archives: My Ideas for Making Nigeria Better

[Recommended] Opinion: Raising Africa’s middle class – howwemadeitinafrica.com

Preview: We already know that we do not know enough about African growth. This was revealed by the extent of upward revisions to estimates of GDP during recent rebasings – anywhere from up 25% in the case of Kenya, to up 89% in the case of Nigeria. Africa has been growing faster than we thought all along. We were not adequately equipped to measure this growth while it was happening.

The news on Africa’s middle class has also been mixed. When a well-known multinational in the consumer goods sector, Nestle, announced that it was disappointed by the scale and growth of Africa’s middle class and the return on its investment, and that it would be cutting its regional workforce by 15%, the news dominated headlines. What went relatively unnoticed?

Continue reading…

https://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/opinion-raising-africas-middle-class/57312/

PII 056: Resisting Use of Barter Exchange Can Cost You Business Success [Based on True Stories]

The message in this week’s issue of my Performance Improvement Ideas (PII) newsletter is based on transcripts excerpts from an audio podcast I recorded, to explain how business persons can explore alternative ways to get paid for what they do or what they sell.

Whether you’re a service provider, or manufacturer or producer of anything whatsoever, there are so many alternatives to getting paid in conventional ways that you can pursue, which will enable you to achieve the desired ends you want as a business owner.

However, in our part of the world – Africa, Nigeria especially – people remain very fixed in their thinking about how they should get paid, and even how they should pay people.

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Tayo Solagbade's Performance Improvement IDEAS(PI Squared) Newsletter

Tayo Solagbade’s
Performance Improvement
IDEAS
(PI Squared) Newsletter

Monday 6th March 2017

Logo - Tayo Solagbade's Self-Development Academy


NB: This PI Squared newsletter will be published weekly, on Mondays, in place of the Speaking/Web Marketing IDEAS newsletter, starting from today – 15th February 2016.
I’m reinventing my Monday newsletter content and theme, to accommodate my vision of serving the growing audience of serious minded individuals and organizations reaching out to me, with information, education. news and research findings designed to help them do what they do better.

************

View Tayo Solagbade's video tutorials and demonstrations on Facebook Productivity Tips, Web Marketing, and for his Custom MS Excel-VB driven software applicationsJoin the SD Nuggets community on Facebook.comConnect with Tayo on Twitter.comConnect with Tayo on Google PlusConnect with Tayo on LinkedIn.com

PII 056: Resisting Use of Barter Exchange Can Cost You Business Success [Based on True Stories]

The message in this week’s issue of my Performance Improvement Ideas (PII) newsletter is based on transcripts excerpts from an audio podcast I recorded, to explain how business persons can explore alternative ways to get paid for what they do or what they sell.

Whether you’re a service provider, or manufacturer or producer of anything whatsoever, there are so many alternatives to getting paid in conventional ways that you can pursue, which will enable you to achieve the desired ends you want as a business owner.

However, in our part of the world – Africa, Nigeria especially – people remain very fixed in their thinking about how they should get paid, and even how they should pay people.

NB: There are certain groups, in Nigeria, that I’ve noticed actively use a lot of barter, though. E.g the relationship between journalists/media houses and outfits like hotels, restaurant/bars as well as conference/event centres. They do a lot of bartering with one another. The rest of us can learn a lot from them

People are so focused on getting cash. And if they can’t get cash, they close their minds to any possibility of doing business with the other party.

Unfortunately, the rest of the world continues to evolve and move on, because people in those societies are willing to accept that payment does not necessarily have to happen in cash.

What is important is achieving the benefit for which payment is desired.

What do I mean? I’ll give an example…

In 2009, I connected with a company in the Anifowoshe area of Lagos’s Ikeja. It was an IT company. They were into telecommunication, VSAT installations, fibre optics. They did projects all over the state and even beyond.

However they were going through a bit of a cash crunch when they engaged me to help them develop a Web Marketing System.

Now being a multiprenur, I do a variety of things – like building software, websites etc.

But this was a time when I was not yet operating from home, 100% online. I was still doing pavement pounding, driving my car all over the place, hunting for clients

Back then most of those I approached were generally not keen to pay for software or services, especially when dealing with an individual. So, one had to look for ways to make payment one requested not appear to be too big, in the eyes of the client.

So, one of the things that I learned was from studying the works of Burt Dubin. Through his Speaking Success System, over the past 3 decades, he has taught expert speakers, who are basically service providers that they should not deny themselves of opportunities to grow their brands, by being fixated on only getting paid with money.

Using the phrase “Barter is Smarter”, Burt emphasizes that you have to consider “Barter Exchange”.

You must be open-minded about how you market yourself, and how you get paid. If you don’t, you may lose opportunities in the immediate period as well as possibly miss those that could open up to you in the future, if you were more flexible in your thinking.

Let me give an example of the company I served in 2009.

I gave the MD a bill of N150k to develop a web Marketing System for them. He was a pastor with a popular Pentecostal church movement.

He wanted to pay N50k and I told him that THAT would simply not work. Instead I proposed that they pay N100k, with 50% of that being via a Barter Exchange.

In that regard, I told them about my Eyo Masquerade graphics design which I wanted printed on T-Shirts that I could give out as gifts or sell.

Since they had a new company division that specialized in transfer printing technology, I suggested they produce N50k worth of such printed T-Shirts for me. Long story short: he agreed.

And by the time I delivered their completed WMS to them 20 working days later, I got 75 nicely printed T-shirts handed to me as agreed, based on the costing we’d done.

It was a win-win outcome!

I have other true stories of how I used Barter Exchange to get paid what I wanted (see articles at the end of this piece).

Many times, the willingness to explore this kind of alternative payment option will enable you keep going even during hard times, when clients are hard to find and/or money is not easy to get from them e.g. due to harsh economic times arising due to recession etc.

And this is where I see lots of people sabotaging themselves effectively. When you want to buy something from somebody, even if the person is not proposing it to you – YOU propose it to the person!

Why?

Because it is in YOUR interest to spend as little cash as possible, to buy what you want to buy. So, cash is an option: YES! But even if you have the cash, you can still think of a better way to pay the person.

Find out what the person wants. What is the person trying to achieve? Try and interact with people. Go beyond what is immediately of interest to YOU in terms of what you want to get from the person.

Find out what the person’s purpose in life is. What are the passions of the person? What are the interests of this person?

Find out what they are , and based on what you discover, begin to look for how you can provide a solution for that person to achieve those things you know are important to him/her.

You can also find out how you can create a solution that the person would appreciate or value towards achieving those goals that are important to him/her.

Now, when you do that, it effectively puts you in a position where without cash, you can give the person something s/he considers valuable enough to pay money for.

So, for example if you have a business in which there are certain things that are kind of waste products you produce.

Again, I’ll provide an example.

I once visited a farm in Ibadan, Oyo state in Nigeria, with an old client working as a consultant but looking to retire into farm business – Poultry specifically.

This farm had maggots crawling out en masse on to the floor, from the poultry droppings pits under the battery cages in one of their pens.

The maggots were so many that when we were walking around, we kept hearing the crunching of their bodies as they burst under our weights.

They were having problems removing them as they had to pay extra for that to happen along with the droppings removal.

What the owner eventually did was to invite a worker he had on the farm, who also happened to have a catfish farm business of her own, to pack the maggots away, at zero cost to him.

While we were there, within about 15 minutes she had packed 2 twenty five kilogram bags filled with maggots!

And maggots were still all over the floor. For her however, this was pure protein for her fish – something that would have cost her a hefty sum to provide if she had to buy it. And if she chose to rear them the work involved would have been considerable.

There are many opportunities for barter exchange in the kind of situation described above.

Most people who have fish farms would love to get hold of such maggots and feed to their Catfish or Tilapia.

Some people would go to great lengths (even pay money) to get large number of earthworms to feed their female catfish brood stock preparatory to spawning (reproduction via induced breeding).

So if I owned a poultry farm and a restaurant business, I could think, for instance, as follows:

Can I use the poultry droppings from my farm to generate a bank of maggots that I can then begin to give as alternative payment to somebody who runs a catfish farm and sells fish?

WHY?

Because I want to buy fish for use in preparing dishes for my restaurant. I want certain quantities of fish I want to put in my restaurant freezers. But I don’t want to pay for fish. I want to be able to give him say 10 bags of maggots that will amount to giving them 100% protein to feed his catfish.

And I would get in exchange X kg of that I can use in my restaurant.

With the above opportunity, every month that I have to spend, say N10k to buy fish for the restaurant, I find that I am able to drop that bill to just N2k, because I have someone supplying me LIVE fish in exchange for my providing him/her maggots to feed his/her pond fish.

Begin to think of yourself as a solution provider for the person you are going to buy something FROM!

In other words, apart from giving your money to the person, think of how you can give him something else that will make him decide to either give YOU money or better still, not need to take money FROM you!

Once you can spend less to get what you want, you will be able to retain more of the money you make as profits.

So, if for example, you have a budget today of say N10k, to advertise in a medium. Consider approaching the owner of that medium to propose a workable barter exchange arrangement, that can enable you spend less than N10k, so you have more cash to channel in other areas that may not lend themselves so easily to payment in kind via barter!

Simply put, there are various options you can explore to make use of the ideas proposed here. The most important thing is for you to maintain an open mind like an umbrella.

Otherwise, you risk making yourself lose valuable opportunities to grow your brand, when you don’t have the cash to take them up.

Closing your eyes to the barter alternative can also make you end up missing out on opportunities to connect further with people.

This is because when you close your mind to the option of barter exchange, it means you won’t be able to continue with that person.

No cash? No barter alternative? You will be left with nothing to do but go your separate ways!

But if you are able to use the barter exchange alternative to continue the relationship, you might get to a point when money will now come on either side (yours/his/hers/theirs). And you’d be able to then continue your business dealings using money that you previously lacked as a basis for interaction.

That would only however happen because the relationship continued/was maintained via barter exchange when there was not enough money to keep it going.

Final Words

Based on the above, it becomes apparent that if you give people an option to do business with you through barter exchange, you can create an opportunity for long term potentially profitable relationships to be built and maintained.

I urge you to keep THAT in mind whenever you find yourself in situations similar to any of those I’ve described in this article!

Related Articles

1. Barter Your Digital Products to Make More Money (True Story)

2. No. 175: Why Speakers Who Barter Products and Services Will Make More Money

3. No. 226: Products and Services Bartering Can Make You More Money! [True Stories & Research Proof – from Harvard & Others]

4. No. 194: How A NEW Client Paid For My Website! [Why “Bartering” Can Help You Sell More – True Story]

Excel-VB Driven Ration Formulator

Click to view larger screenshot

1. Click here to learn more about this app – watch demo videos etc

2. Click here to watch a 4 part video in which I demonstrate how to use this app to formulate rations using real life data sent to me by an Algerian PhD student.

Click here to contact me about purchasing this product.

EXCEL-VB DRIVEN POULTRY LAYER FARM MANAGER SOFTWARE

Click here to download a detailed PDF user guide and watch 15 screen shot user guide tutorials of the Monthly Poultry Farm Manager that I now offer Farm CEOs.

Click here to watch a screenshot demonstration of the Excel-VB Driven Poultry Farm Manager I built for a client farm business in Ekiti state, South West Nigeria.

Click here to contact me about purchasing this product.

SDN Blog™

New posts from last week*

Monday:

[Wednesday]:

[Thursday]:

Get Novice Proof Custom Automated Spreadsheet Software [Hint: From Tayo K. Solagbade – a Multidisciplinary Provider Guided by a Code of Ethics That Protects YOU!]

[Friday]:

[True Story] Defying Adversity As a Nobody, to Create a Lucrative Niche Market for my Custom Automated Spreadsheet Software in Nigeria

 

[Saturday]:

[Recommended] The Art of Shameless Self-Promotion

[Sunday]:

A Common Misconception About Spreadsheet Programming You Need to Know [Hint: What is Excel-VBA?]

Tayo K. Solagbade*

Self-Development/Performance Improvement Specialist

*Best Practice Farm Business Support Specialist & Founder of the MS Excel Heaven Visual Basic Automation Club and Competition

Mobile: +234-803-302-1263 (in Nigeria) or +229-66-122-136 (in Benin Republic)

http://www.tayosolagbade.com

Tayo K. Solagbade is a Location Independent Performance Improvement

Specialist and Multipreneur (i.e. a highly versatile/multi-skilled entrepreneur), with a bias for delivering Best Practice solutions to Farm Businesses and others.

Since 2002, he has earned multiple streams of income providing individuals and organizations with personal development training and coaching, custom MS Excel-VB solutions, web marketing systems/web hosting, freelance writing services, and best practice extension support services (for farm business owners).

Tayo is the author of the Self-Development (SD) Bible™ and the popular Livestock Feed Formulation Handbook. He is also the developer of its accompanying Excel-VB driven Ration Formulator™ and the Poultry Farm Manager™ software.

He has delivered talks/papers to audiences in various groups and organizations, including the Centre for Management Development, University of Lagos, Christ Baptist Church, Volunteer Corps, Tantalisers Fast Foods and others.

In May 2012 he was the Guest Speaker at the Centre for Entrepreneurship Development’s Annual Semester Entrepreneurial Lecture at Yaba College of Technology in Lagos.

On 1st April 2013, Tayo (who reads, write and speaks the French language) relocated to Cotonou, Benin Republic to begin slowly traveling across the West African region.

His key purpose is to deliver talks, seminars and workshops on his key areas of focus and interest to interested audiences (Email tayo at tksola dot com for details).

In a previous life, before leaving to become self-employed, Tayo served for seven years (October 1994 to December 2001) as a high performing manager in Guinness Nigeria. He rose from Shift Brewer to Training & Technical Development Manager, and later acted in senior roles as Production Manager and Technical Manager.

In addition to constantly challenging the status quo and influencing positive work changes, he built a reputation for using self-taught spreadsheet programming skills (starting with Lotus 1-2-3, and later moving to Excel Visual Basic) – in his spare time – to develop Automated Spreadsheet Applications to computerize manual report generation processes in the departments he worked. Over four(4) of his applications were adopted for brewery level reporting.

Tayo holds a B.Sc degree in Agricultural Extension Services from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, having graduated top of his class – with Second Class Upper Division honors – in 1992. He is an Associate Member of the UK Institute & Guild of Brewing, a 1997 National Finalist of the Nigerian Institute of Management’s(NIM) Young Managers’ competition, a Certified Psychometric Test Administrator for Psytech UK, innovator of Spontaneous Coaching for Self-Development™ (SCfS-D™), and Founder of the Self-Development Academy (SDAc).

When he’s not amazing clients with his superhuman skills (wink), Tayo works as the creative force behind his Daily Self-Development Nuggets blog – on which he also publishes The Farm CEO Weekly Newspaper (sent via email to paid subscribers) and his Weekly Performance Improvement IDEAS newsletter.

You can connect with him on Twitter @tksola.com and Facebook.

Visit Tayo Solagbade Dot Com, to download over over 10 performance improvement resources to boost your personal and work related productivity.

====
[IMPORTANT NOTE:====

On 4th May 2014, Tayo’s 9 year old domain (Spontaneousdevelopment dot com), which hosted his website, was taken over by Aplus.net.

Within a few days however, Tayo used his advanced self-taught web development skills to build a SUPERIOR “reincarnation” of it the website http://www.tayosolagbade.com.

But updates are still ongoing to URLs bearing the old domain name in most of the over 1,000 web pages, and blog posts he’s published.

If you experience any difficulties finding a page or document, email Tayo at tksola dot com.

Click “Tayo, What Happened to SpontaneousDevelopmentDotCom ?” to read a detailed narrative about how the above event occurred :-))

Here’s an article Tayo wrote, to inspire others to defy adversity, and bounce back to even greater reckoning at what they do EVERY time:

Succeed by Emerging from Adversity Like a Phoenix

(TayoSolagbade.com launches extra Hosting plan with FREE Web Marketing!)

And he wrote the one below, to explain why losing a domain name, no matter how old, NO LONGER determines your online success or otherwise:

A Proven Strategy to Find Profitable Buyers Regardless of Your Domain Name
==================

View Tayo Solagbade's video tutorials and demonstrations on Facebook Productivity Tips, Web Marketing, and for his Custom MS Excel-VB driven software applicationsJoin the SD Nuggets community on Facebook.comConnect with Tayo on Twitter.comConnect with Tayo on Google PlusConnect with Tayo on LinkedIn.com

Home |About | Contact | SD Nuggets™ | Speaking/Web Marketing IDEAS | Web Marketing Systems | Freelance Writing | MS Excel® Heaven™ | Cost-Saving Farm Biz Ideas

Get Novice Proof Custom Automated Spreadsheet Software [Hint: From Tayo K. Solagbade – a Multidisciplinary Provider Guided by a Code of Ethics That Protects YOU!]

Today, I enjoy the privilege/benefit of being able to win buyers for my custom Excel-VB driven software from within and outside Africa.

Working 100% online to get found using a unique Web Marketing System I developed for myself, I continue to convince total strangers to send me payment for my custom automated workbook applications.

It’s however been a long – and difficult – journey getting where I am now – especially starting-up a software solutions development business, as a complete NOBODY, in a Nigerian market notorious for reckless software piracy and abuse of intellectual property: a VERY hostile environment indeed.

Yet I did it. Though it took lots of hard work and endurance.

What I did and why I did it, is explained in the special report I will publish on my SD (Self-Development) Multidisciplinary Nuggets blog tomorrow – 3rd March 2017.

Go to www.tinyurl.com/tksxlvbNigeriaStory from 6p.m or 3/3/2017 (That URL will NOT be active until then).

I outline 10 elements of my code of ethics below – noting that anyone, including YOU, can successfully adapt them for use in paid or self-employment/business.

In my case, this code has guided for YEARS me in relating successfully with ALL clients I provide my multidisciplinary range of solutions.

Purpose: I aspire to provide flawless service that will make my clients feel good about investing in me, and even brag to others about what I’ve done for them.

To do the above, I ALWAYS strive to be as flexible – and response – as humanly possible to the needs and circumstances of EACH client – in line with the following code of ethics:

Article 1: The well informed – and profitable – client is always right.

Article 2: If the client is not well informed, I haven’t done my job.

Article 3: The services/products I provide answer to the needs of the client.

Article 4: I don’t do “miracles” and I know when to say “NO”.

Article 5: I haven’t been hired to prove that I am smart, but to be useful.

Article 6: My services/products enable the client master the use of computer and/or Internet technology to run his/her business operations, and not the other way round (i.e. my solutions do NOT overwhelm or intimidate my clients!)

Article 7: If the client feels stupid or thinks I am “God” there is something very wrong going on.

Article 8: What I do, the client could do, if s/he had the time and training.

Article 9: My services/products are public and I have no secrets.

Article 10: When I leave, the client who is interested is empowered.

*Adapted from Code of Ethics developed by Pierre Le Clerc, Excel-VB Developer

tks-xlvb-code-ethics-flyer

Email: tayo at tksola.com

Tel: +234-803-302-1263 (in Nigeria) or +229-66-122-136 (in Benin Republic)

Twitter: @tksola

Facebook: www.tayosolagbade.com/fbk

Excel-VB Club: Facebook.com/groups/736287616508718/

Tayo Solagbade | Best Practice Farm Business Support Specialist; Founder of the Excel Heaven Visual Basic Automation Club and Competition; Creator of the 9 Component Customisable Web Marketing System (WMS)

Related Articles

1. [TRUE STORY] He was NOT smiling when we met, face to face, for the first time, today – because of My Excel-VB Poultry Farm Mgr!

2. PII 055: To Succeed Even When Things Go Wrong, You Need Mastery of Your Craft – Part 1 of 2 | Based on a True Story

3. Tayo Solagbade’s Excel-VB Poultry Farm Manager – Video Interview With Lagos Farm CEO After Problem Resolution [PII 055: To Succeed Even When Things Go Wrong, You Need Mastery of Your Craft – Part 2 of 2 | Based on a True Story]

 

Equip Your Kids to Deal With Abuse of Any kind and Excel [Hint: TV Talk Show Relationship Expert Psychiatrist/Author Answers Question by Male Caller Claiming to be Abused by His Wife]

If you have (or plan to have) kids that go on to have empowering and fulfilling relationships in their personal and work lives, I recommend you STOP and read this article. It’s based on text transcript excerpts I prepared from a TV Talk show on Domestic Violence, featuring a Psychotherapist specializing in domestic abuse.

[A word of caution before you begin reading or acting on what you read or watch in the rest of this piece: This is another in my Best Practice Parenting series. The information offered is to guide your efforts in parenting your kids.

However, only an adult who is competent in handling him/herself in relationships, can be reasonably expected to be able to empower his/her kids to do the same.

So, if you struggle with the abuse issues raised here (be you the abuser, or the abused), I recommend you follow the tips offered by the expert (and others) to help yourself, so you can be better enabled to help your kids.

As the saying goes, “You cannot give what you don’t have!“]. Now read on….!

The real life male caller to this show was somebody’s son – and he apparently had been suffering in a marital relationship, because he did NOT know what to do.

TV show on Domestic Violence, featuring a Psychiatrist specializing in domestic abuse

I do NOT want my child to ever have to wait to call in on a TV show, to get help to get free from abuse of any kind. What if no such show even exists where s/he lives?

In my adult life, I have both witnessed and experienced abuse – including vicious verbal, emotional as well as physical kinds. So I KNOW how damaging it can be. What has saved me from being ruined by my exposure to those potentially traumatizing experiences has been the powerful physical and mental stamina I developed and nurtured all through my adult life.

It is what has always protected me, and kept me from ever going under, till I freed myself from the abuser.

That’s why as a parent, I am DETERMINED to coach my kids to develop their own mental toughness as well.

They will learn to do so, with regard to making the right choices of friends, and partners to relate with, and how to MANAGE those relationships to experience the healthiest physical, and emotional existence possible.

You owe yourself and your kids a similar obligation – and this TV show’s message provides a useful starting point.

Text transcript of excerpts from the show

Janelle So [Kababayan@la18.tv, 8/10/2010 4:46:07 PM]: All your questions about domestic violence being addressed today, on the show, with Dr. Jill Marie – a psychotherapist. She’s written a lot of books about domestic violence and we’ll talk a little bit about that also today.

But for now, let’s go to the phone lines, because the phone lines are burning. So many people want to call.

It’s okay if you want to call anonymously, we’ll still get your phone call.

Ehm. we have an anonymous call – a male caller. Hello and welcome to the show!

Anonymous male caller: Yes, hello, ehm…I would like to speak to a doctor(indistinct)

Janelle So: Yes, go ahead

Anonymous male caller: Okay, my name is Kotey, and I am in relationship, and er, my wife, sometime(s) she tell(s) me very mean thing(s), and sometime(s) she beat(s) me and she tell(s) me mean thing(s) like I have big nose and she make fun of my english. And she says if I report her to the authorities that she (will) take away my children. So I, I, I (don’t) know what to do.

Janelle So: Thank you

Dr. Jill Marie (Psychotherapist/Author): Well I’m really glad he called because we really shouldn’t think that this is all males abusing females. Females can be very abusive to men. They can be abusive physically and they can be abusive emotionally. And Janelle, these threats that this gentleman just talked about, that his wife is making, are emotional and verbal abuse.

And so….

…The title of my 3rd book is “But He Never Hit Me”, and I want people to understand that it is not “just” emotional abuse, or “just” verbal abuse. Those are crippling, crippling, abuses. A lot of times people ask me, what’s worse? Emotional Abuse or Physical Abuse? As if one is okay, which they are not. If I had to choose, I would say…

Watch the video below to for the full responses and advice given by the psychotherapist guest on the show.

Do this for YOUR own sake, and especially for YOUR kids, and other loved ones who may benefit from getting the powerful insights provided by this expert.

It is my considered opinion that ALL adults MUST make the effort to equip themselves, as well as male and female kids they have, with the know-how to DEAL effectively with, and protect themselves against ANY form of abuse by others, be they members of the same or opposite sex.

I’m working on a new service to be offered via TayoSolagbade.com in which I will offer a monthly updated compilation of informative, and educative resources on “Protecting Yourself from and Succeeding In Spite of Domestic Abuse” from various sources that I will diligently research.

Click here to contact me if you wish to be notified when this new service goes LIVE.

[Recommended] Why Nigerians Hate Igbo – by Chinua Achebe

When I saw the thought provoking Facebook post/query (shown below) by Joe Ibekwe, I instantly recalled the words of Chinua Achebe in the last book he gifted us before passing on.

joe-igbos-hate

However, a quick check in my travel bag soon revealed, to my dismay, that I’d left my well read Copy of Achebe’s “There Was a Country” back in Cotonou.

Out of desperation, I Googled to find reviews or commentaries on the book that may have highlighted the sentiments expressed by Achebe, that I felt held the answers Joe (and others seeking insights) would appreciate.

I was not disappointed: I found EVERYTHING I needed – and even more…bless the Google team for making and keeping this search engine so powerful!

So much so, that I have NO need to add anything else.

Instead, I simply invite any persons interested in getting accurate answers to the excellent poser by Joe, to read Chinua’s words on the pages linked below:

Why Nigerians hate Igbo, by Chinua Achebe.

Let me note here that I’m Yoruba, but my LOVE for the positive attributes of the average Igbo person has NEVER been hidden.

Articles (like this one) on this blog provide verifiable proof of the fact that I admire those qualities in them and admonish other Nigerians and indeed Africans to emulate them.

Yet, even I have noticed certain shortcomings that characterize majority of them.

My respect for Chinua Achebe’s honesty and his capacity for balanced reasoning grew exponentially, when I read his words below, in which he identified certain Igbo tendencies that often make others despise them – in spite of their many positive attributes.

Here’s how Nigeria’s The Nation newspaper captured it in “Why Nigerians Hate Igbo – by Chinua Achebe”:

Achebe, however, saved some criticisms for his kinsmen. He criticised them for what he described as “hubris, overweening pride and thoughtlessness, which invite envy and hatred or even worse that can obsess the mind with material success and dispose it to all kinds of crude showiness.”

He added that “contemporary Igbo behavior(that) cab offend by its noisy exhibitionism and disregard for humility and quietness.”

Judging from my personal experiences as a conscious thinking adult over the past 30 years in paid and self-employment, I believe Achebe’s criticisms are spot on!

I honestly believe that if the average Igbo person minimizes display of any of the negative tendencies highlighted by Chinua Achebe, s/he is likely to experience little or no friction with most people from other tribes or cultures s/he encounters.

Let it be known however, that I speak primarily for MYSELF (and maybe others who think like me) and not for the generality of Nigerians, talk less Africans.

Many thanks to Joe Ibekwe for bringing this up. My half-Igbo kids are sure to benefit from the useful insights that this exercise will expose them to (Yep: I’m printing copies for them to read)!

Related Articles

1. “˜There Was a Country’: a review of Chinua Achebe’s Biafran memoir – By Ike Anya

2. Chinua Achebe reflects on Biafra, but for whom?

3. Igbo, Yoruba at war over Chinua Achebe’s criticism of Awolowo in new book

4. Succeeding Through Hard Work, Determination and Persistence: 3 Lessons from Nigeria’s Igbo Traders

One New Skill Modern Extension Professionals Need to Succeed

Findings from a 2013 questionnaire survey I conducted of Farm CEOs in Nigeria, for an international agribusiness paper I was engaged to write revealed 55.6% bought commercial feed (from “2 sources” or “anywhere they can find”).

66.7% of that percentage said their animals’ performances varied noticeably with different sources of feed.

Their farm output tended to fluctuate as a result – and that naturally bothered the CEOs.

Hen Day Percentage (HDP) data auto-charted – in September 2013 – using my Excel- VB Poultry Farm Manager software on a layers farm in South West Nigeria suggested the trend noticed from the survey was accurate.

layers-kpi-charts-1-1024x640

When the two farm managers were asked about a sharp downward slope of charted HDP data, over a one week period (from above 70% to between 55 and 65%), their checks revealed it coincided with their use – due to cash flow problems – of feed from a different supplier!

Customizable Excel-VB driven tools can help such farmers consistently formulate their own feed to specification.

More predictable livestock performance and reduced feeding expenses will occur, and ultimately lead to increased profits. See study’s full survey results in the PDF paper – click here to learn how you can get a FREE copy.

Excel-savvy extension workers can be selected to attend practical Excel-VB training – with deliberate focus on real-life farm solutions development.

It’s not likely that farm CEOs will be able to find the time to learn MS Excel Automation – even though it’s obvious that they readily embrace the flexible, and affordable Excel based solutions that can be had.

This is why I have continued to argue through my writing on Best Practice Farm Business Management, that Extension Professionals will be best placed to deliver the customizable low cost data handling and report generation solutions to farm businesses using MS Excel VBA.

In the agribusiness paper on this subject, I made the following suggestions about what extension workers need to do, to develop this valuable competence, so they can become better able to help Farm CEOs:

1. Each must have sound understanding of feed formulation science

2. Classes and useful text for self-study should be provided for those lacking – and their competence verified.

3. Next, they either learn Excel-VB programming – or engage someone who does. If the latter, we recommend they still learn some Excel-VB, so they can modify the software in future.

4. Step-by-step instructions (with annotated screenshots) should be provided for farmer-users.

5. Tools: PCs, preferably laptops, since battery power makes work possible in absence of continuous power. In Nigeria, where power supply is unreliable, this is important. A farmer may not initially be keen to put on his/her generator, just to see new feed formulation software!

6. Solutions developed must be adapted to suit MS Excel versions on farmers’ PCs. One client refused to replace his Excel 2003 with 2010 version because it looked so different. My Ration Formulator™ is built to be compatible with old and new/future MS Excel versions.

7. Encourage Farmers to Develop Indigenous Knowledge Systems: Years of supporting farm CEOs has revealed one fact: Smallholder farmers are keen to collaborate with “developers” of low cost “easy-to-use” software that can help them.

A phone conversation I had with a Canada based Farm Project Manager – Ronald V. – on 14th November 2013 is instructive with regard to the last point mentioned above.

vba-extension-solution

He’d bought my Ration Formulator via Paypal (sent to my brother-in-law in the UK) some weeks earlier. Findings from a USA university’s study had led him to adopt peas usage in rations fed to pigs that made replacement of Soya bean possible, with no apparent negative impact on performance.

His nutritionist had advised using Soya beans in a feed formulation application built for pigs. But the need to reduce variable costs drove him to test the university’s model. He replaced the data for Soya beans he’d posted in my app, with that for peas. Months after, he was still getting good results!

He ended the call by suggesting my Excel-VB app featured be modified to cater for pigs as well (with regard to their elaborate amino acids balancing needs).

That “suggestion” from him, is a good example of how farm business solutions can evolve based on user feedback for a while, before their features can be considered adequate for most possible scenarios.

My interactions with another farm CEO, this time in Africa, provides another useful illustration:

In Nigeria, an Ibadan, Oyo State – Nigeria based catfish farm owner I spoke with on phone, in the course of gathering information for my paper, explained that he regularly explores use of alternative ingredients.

After careful laboratory analyses, he hads found a way to use noodles waste, and cassava flour (known locally as “Gari”) up to 40% in formulated rations, to reduce the farm’s feeding costs.

According to him, the performance of his fish had not suffered.

Summary: Extension specialists can develop cost-effective customizable Excel-VB solutions to help farmers tackle pressing challenges they face

Discoveries that occur in the process – like those mentioned in the anecdotes narrated above – when shared, can convince other farmers to also adopt the superior Excel solutions.

That’s one of the ways my featured Excel-VB driven Ration Formulator™, and its Excel-VB Poultry Farm Manager™ sibling have been successfully introduced and sold, to Farm CEOs within and outside Africa, over the years.

It is my considered opinion that other extension professionals can do what I’m doing – and the farm business industries we serve, will be better off in the long run!

Related Article: Story: After Resolving Layers Feeding Problems, Selling Increased Eggs Output Became a Headache!

Succeed Even In Economic Recession by Developing Multiple Competencies [Hint: Become a Multipreneur]

When I decided to become – and later begin calling myself – a MULTIPRENEUR in 2004 (2 years after I became a startup), many people criticized me for “doing too many things”.

Some said I was trying to be a “Jack of All Trades” and anytime I had a setback they readily pointed out that THAT was the cause.

But I knew better, and simply ignored them – because my experiences had taught me that if I was to survive the harsh socio-economic environment I had to operate in as an entrepreneur, I needed to function as a multi-skilled entrepreneur aka Multipreneur.

The above is why it was intriguing, if not somewhat amusing for me to come across an article titled “Why entrepreneurs need multiple competencies” – on the website for a Nigerian National newspaper (Business Day).

multiple-competencies

A portion of the article’s abstract (reproduced below) really caught my attention:

“According to experts, multiple competencies save costs, enable entrepreneurs compete better than peers, attract…” Really? According to “experts” – what experts???

You mean like those who constantly lectured me in my startup years about the need to NOT do too many things, when I chose to use my “multiple competencies” to make more money with less effort, in less time and using fewer resources?

Experts? Huh…what a joke!

If truth be told, without my deliberately nurtured HABIT of developing and using my multiple competencies, I would have quit my business a long time ago, instead of outlasting adversity I’ve faced, by thriving in spite of repeated setbacks and disappointments.

My multipreneurial aptitude kept me going each time, because I always had a new or different skill, knowledge or attitude I could apply to get myself back on track each time I derailed, or to leapfrog to a new level of achievement as the need arose.

Sadly, when I was starting out, it was almost impossible to find people to respect and encourage me for displaying this trait in my society.

Most established entrepreneurs and so called experts frowned seriously at my tendency, and told me it was going to do me more harm than good.

Yet, I kept recalling how my abilities were saving me money, time and effort and so I knew they were wrong. What was more, at a point, I began to use my skills to help those who had cast aspersion on me for using them.

That was when I realized they had no clue what they were talking about when they were criticizing me. So I decided to begin writing about Multipreneuring, sharing true stories from my personal experiences of succeeding with it.

At the bottom of this article, I’ve appended links to some of those articles I’ve written on multipreneuring or what I like to call being a “Jack of Many Trades”

Today I have established a firm reputation as a reliable provider of a complementary mix of multidisciplinary solutions to clients within and outside Africa (see www.tayosolagbade.com, this blog, www.thefarmceo.net, www.excelheaven.biz and www.tksola.com – and relevant links on each site).

Hopefully, more people in this part of the world (Nigeria/Africa) will realize that developing and using multiple competencies is a sure way to boost one’s chances of succeeding in ANY field, regardless of the challenges you may have to face.

Related Articles

1. No. 128: Using Location Independent Multipreneuring to Achieve Public Speaking Success

2. If You Lack Capital, Intelligent Multipreneuring Can Help You Succeed!

3. More Real-Life Proof that Being an Intelligent Jack of Many Trades (aka Multipreneur), Can Make You Succeed More Often

4. You can SUCCEed MORE by being a Multipreneur – A True Story (Hint: New Book Coming Soon)

5.  To Achieve Uncommon Success, Avoid Specializing [Hint: New York Times Article About Steve Martin’s Amazing Success As a Multipreneur]!

6. Being a Jack of All Trades Doesn’t Mean You’re a Master of None – by Melanie Pinola on LifeHacker.com

7.  Knowing a Little of Everything Is Often Better Than Having One Expert Skill – by Adam Dachis on LifeHacker.com

THE FARM CEO (Issue 70): Agricultural Extension Society of Nigeria AESON conference coming up in April 2017 [ Deadline for submission of Abstracts now January 31st, 2017]

In this maiden issue of my Farm CEO newspaper for 2017, I feature a flyer-based description of highlights from the Agricultural Extension Society of Nigeria (AESON)’s 22nd Annual Conference 2017, scheduled to hold at the University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria between 23rd – 26th April, 2017.

Theme: Mainstreaming Entrepreneurship in Agricultural Extension Practice in Nigeria

Highlights:

NB: Deadline for submission of Abstracts now January 31st, 2017

Best Poster Paper Award

Best Paper Presenter Award

Networking & Collaboration Link Initiation

Funding Opportunities Enlightenment

Date: 23rd – 26th April, 2017

Time: 10:00a.m Prompt

Venue: Ebitim Banigo Hall, University of Port Harcourt, Nigeria

Sub-Themes

In contemporary situations, Agricultural Extension is more strategic in the development of the wellbeing of farmers. This is because of the paradigm shift of Agriculture Extension practice will enhance farmers’ resilient capacity for a result-oriented agribusiness

The 2017 AESON conference will address how to mainstream entrepreneurship in Agricultural Extension through the frameworks of ICT, policy, agribusiness and value chain, tertiary institutions, national intervention programmes, health development. The conference is expected to attract stakeholders within various development networks to brainstorm and produce workable outcome for agricultural extension development.

This is going to be discussed under the following sub-themes:

 

aes2017

Download and Install Tayo Solagbade’s FREE Creative Business (CB) Solutions Mobile Phone app [Hint: Get Instant Access to Latest Information, Education, and Offers from TayoSolagbade.com]

The Tayo Solagbade’s Creative Business (CB) Solutions Mobile Phone app is now live! Download it at http://www.tksola.com [Email tayo at tksola dot com if you need help]

Install it on your smartphone and get instant access to latest updates I publish to my Facebook and Twitter pages.

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Compatibility:
iOS
Requires iOS 8 or later.
Compatible with iPhone.
Android
Requires Android 4.4 or later.
Compatible with Android phones.
Other
Requires xHTML mobile browser.
====

In addition, a video display interface presents users with a menu of 4 selected videos of my products, while also offering detailed contact information, including a contact form submission interface to send me a message via email.

This CB Solutions app will continue to evolve as I test and update it with features designed to make it add more value to users (clients and subscribers). 

Below I share 2 sets of images:

  1. Photos taken of a Samsung Galaxy Tablet showing various interfaces in the app, after I installed it.
  2. Screenshots of the various interfaces of the app as they appeared in a Samsung Galaxy Tablet that I installed it on earlier today, in Lagos-Nigeria’s Omole Estate Phase 2.

app-live

1. Photos taken of a Samsung Galaxy Tablet showing various interfaces in the app, after I installed it.

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cbs-mobile-phone-app5

cbs-mobile-phone-app6

2. Screenshots of the various interfaces of the app as they appeared in a Samsung Galaxy Tablet that I installed it on earlier today, in Lagos-Nigeria’s Omole Estate Phase 2.

export_01

export_03-1

 

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PII 047: Sometimes Resourcefulness, NOT MONEY, Is What You Need to Succeed [Hint: A Lack of Ideas Can Hold You Back – A Lack of Money Cannot]

The ability to survive and/or thrive during a period of economic downturn is a function of how creative people can get.

Unfortunately, when things are tough financially, as they tend to be during such periods, most of us tend to focus too much attention on money and our lack (or what we perceive to be our lack) of it.

In other words, I’m saying that a lot of us want to succeed, but the minute we discover that we are limited in our financial means, with regard to achieving our set goals, we tend to get easily demoralized and give up psychologically, leading us to ultimately surrender in physical terms – by quitting.

My message in this maiden issue of my Performance Improvement Ideas (PII) newsletter is therefore that sometimes what you need to succeed is RESOURCEFULNESS and not money.

SCROLL DOWN TO READ FULL ISSUE

Tayo Solagbade's Performance Improvement IDEAS(PI Squared) Newsletter

Tayo Solagbade’s
Performance Improvement
IDEAS
(PI Squared) Newsletter

Monday 2nd January 2017

Logo - Tayo Solagbade's Self-Development Academy


NB: This PI Squared newsletter will be published weekly, on Mondays, in place of the Speaking/Web Marketing IDEAS newsletter, starting from today – 15th February 2016.
I’m reinventing my Monday newsletter content and theme, to accommodate my vision of serving the growing audience of serious minded individuals and organizations reaching out to me, with information, education. news and research findings designed to help them do what they do better.

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View Tayo Solagbade's video tutorials and demonstrations on Facebook Productivity Tips, Web Marketing, and for his Custom MS Excel-VB driven software applicationsJoin the SD Nuggets community on Facebook.comConnect with Tayo on Twitter.comConnect with Tayo on Google PlusConnect with Tayo on LinkedIn.com

PII 047: Sometimes Resourcefulness, NOT MONEY, Is What You Need to Succeed [Hint: A Lack of Ideas Can Hold You Back – A Lack of Money Cannot]

The ability to survive and/or thrive during a period of economic downturn is a function of how creative people can get.

Unfortunately, when things are tough financially, as they tend to be during such periods, most of us tend to focus too much attention on money and our lack (or what we perceive to be our lack) of it.

In other words, I’m saying that a lot of us want to succeed, but the minute we discover that we are limited in our financial means, with regard to achieving our set goals, we tend to get easily demoralized and give up psychologically, leading us to ultimately surrender in physical terms – by quitting.

My message in this maiden issue of my Performance Improvement Ideas (PII) newsletter is therefore that sometimes what you need to succeed is RESOURCEFULNESS and not money.

How are you living your life with regard to achieving your valued goals?

The way you think about the problem you believe you have, especially with regard to achieving your goals using money, will determine how far you can go.

Quite often, you may find it useful to look into historical information available from other societies and cultures outside yours for ideas you can adopt or adapt to suit your unique needs or preferences.

If you keep an open mind, you’ll be shocked to find out that some people from the past you study achieved great success by being resourceful, so that their lack of money could not limit them.

What ideas can you borrow from them?

One big problem I see is that a degree of mis-education is holding many people back. And then there’s some amount of arrogance too, which is always very amusing to me.

I’ve met people who readily conclude the reason why one is emphasizing the need for “resourcefulness” is because you lack money – and not necessarily that you wish to be efficient in your use of money.

What these people do not know is that many wealthy people pay serious attention to making efficient use of their money. They are diligently frugal. Indeed some got wealthy by BEING that way!

That’s why they have wealth that makes them financially independent, such that if they stopped working they could continue living the same lifestyle without worrying about running out of money.

Some people have this mixed up. I’ve heard them say: “But Oga you’re bigger than N100 now. Why don’t you just forget it? No need to insist on collecting that little change.”

So if you insist on having your change, they call you a miser or say that you don’t have money.

I made peace with myself regarding this issue a long time ago, after I read this anecdote about John D. Rockefeller:

One day he made a phone call from a public pay phone after putting several dollar coins into the machine. When he was done, the time he spent indicated the machine was supposed to dispense a one dollar coin ads change, but this did not happen. After trying without success to get the machine to behave, this wealthy man decided to call the operator to file a complaint. But when the operator asked for his name in order to make the entry, it occurred to him that being a millionaire, making this formal complaint about a mere one dollar change would raise many eyebrows and make news he did not need. For that reason, he told her he’d changed his mind and hung up.

 

The moral of the above story is that if a millionaire of Rockefeller’s stature could be that concerned about keeping the small change, the rest of us have no excuse to be careless in handling such denominations.

 

So, one way to be resourceful is to spend prudently, in a manner that gets you maximum value for your money.

 

On the home front, what do you eat or drink? Must you always buy everything? Is it possible for you to make some of your own drinks for instance? What about the snacks you eat?

 

Example: In my home we make great tasting drinks from pineapple peels (based on a concept I developed in 2013, during my first year in Cotonou) along with various home baked products like cakes, cookies, chin-chin, African-style Pizza, bread etc. On each child’s birthday, the others join hands to make food and drinks for the family celebration – including cakes topped with icing.

 

The drinks in particular cost next to nothing because the major raw material is pineapple peels obtained free from fruit sellers in the neighborhood. The kids love it, as does their grandmother who gets sent bottled units most times we make them.

 

Every now and then the kids still buy and eat commercial soft drinks, but most times this homemade drink of ours is what they make, and it saves us money even as it is healthy.

The same thinking can be successfully applied to whatever you do in your business.

For instance, how many things are you currently doing with money to promote your business?

One of the things I say all the time is that today, PC and Internet technology puts so much power in people’s hands, but the lack of resourcefulness of people keep holding them back from using it to excel!

Do you understand how to SAVE some of that money by using the web to promote your products/services to your desired target audience?

If you do, how well are you succeeding? What can you do differently to get even better results?

 

The answers to all those questions relate directly to your ability to be resourceful – not how  much money you have, or are willing to throw at your Internet Marketing efforts.

Indeed, zero cost web marketing is a reality that MANY people live everyday – people like ME. So what I’m saying here is not just wishful thinking. I LIVE this stuff – and my resourcefulness is what makes it possible for me, and similar others to do so.

By the way, just in case you’re one of those who think your kind of business cannot be marketed effectively using the web, let me assure you that NOTHING could be further from the truth.

Only you and your willingness to think creatively – or your willingness to be resourceful in making use of the web – can determine your success, or otherwise!

It does not matter if you sell caskets or (what Yoruba’s in Nigeria call) “Ponmo” (i.e. cooked animal hide/skin) – the web is there for you to use to succeed. It is malleable – you can mould it to suit your unique business marketing needs.

Regardless of what kind of business you run or what part of the planet you are operating from. As long as Internet connectivity is accessible, your use of web marketing is bound to benefit your brand greatly.

The key is to KNOW HOW to use it to get the results you need. And that’s where being RESOURCEFUL becomes necessary.

That is the factor that separates those who get useful lasting results from those who don’t. It’s why people with less money, individuals sometimes, achieve superior marketing success for their brands compared to wealthier others – including organizations.

 

Final Words: A Lack of Ideas Can Hold You Back – A Lack of Money Cannot

Click here to read an article about a special kind of very low cost, but delicious chocolate cake recipe created during the period of economic depression (and called “Depression Cake”).

I came across it last week and the story about how a lack of money drove people living in those times to think up new creative ways to make foods they loved without needing to spend money like they used to, really resonated with me.

The same situation led to the creation of the Depression Sandwich.

In Nigeria, the secessionist Biafrans invented the use of a perennial evergreen weed as a replacement protein ingredient in livestock feed formulation, to survive the potentially crippling effect of the Nigerian government’s embargo. In other words, they had to be resourceful to find a solution to the problem they were faced with.

All of this is proof that the key to succeeding is not having money. Instead it’s about being creative, being resourceful, and being an ideas person!

This is the key to succeeding in any area of endeavor, under any economic situation, in any part of the world, in any culture you may have to operate under.

Once again I refer you to history. Read and you will find that some of the most creative ideas that make the world turn today, came through the efforts of some of the most financially deprived people , who had no financial means to pursue their goals with what privileged others would consider basic necessities.

So they had to learn to be resourceful in using what they had to get what they wanted, and to go where they needed to be!

If YOU want to achieve authentic success, for the long term, in spite of any form of adversity, be it economic recession, or depression, YOU WILL need to adopt a similar mindset!

When you’ve got RESOURCEFULNESS, it boosts your ability to attract what you lack (e.g money), or those who have it, and are willing to give it to you. Take it from me: I LIVE THIS STUFF!

 

Excel-VB Driven Ration Formulator

Click to view larger screenshot

1. Click here to learn more about this app – watch demo videos etc

2. Click here to watch a 4 part video in which I demonstrate how to use this app to formulate rations using real life data sent to me by an Algerian PhD student.

Click here to contact me about purchasing this product.

EXCEL-VB DRIVEN POULTRY LAYER FARM MANAGER SOFTWARE

Click here to download a detailed PDF user guide and watch 15 screen shot user guide tutorials of the Monthly Poultry Farm Manager that I now offer Farm CEOs.

Click here to watch a screenshot demonstration of the Excel-VB Driven Poultry Farm Manager I built for a client farm business in Ekiti state, South West Nigeria.

Click here to contact me about purchasing this product.

SDN Blog™

New posts from last week*

Monday:

[Tuesday]:

[Wednesday]:

[Thursday]:

[Friday]:

[Recommended] Even For the Really Successful, the Price of Success is Perseverance – by Whitney Johnson

[Saturday]:

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[Sunday]:

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Tayo K. Solagbade*

Self-Development/Performance Improvement Specialist

*Best Practice Farm Business Support Specialist & Founder of the MS Excel Heaven Visual Basic Automation Club and Competition

Mobile: +234-803-302-1263 (in Nigeria) or +229-66-122-136 (in Benin Republic)

http://www.tayosolagbade.com

Tayo K. Solagbade is a Location Independent Performance Improvement

Specialist and Multipreneur (i.e. a highly versatile/multi-skilled entrepreneur), with a bias for delivering Best Practice solutions to Farm Businesses and others.

Since 2002, he has earned multiple streams of income providing individuals and organizations with personal development training and coaching, custom MS Excel-VB solutions, web marketing systems/web hosting, freelance writing services, and best practice extension support services (for farm business owners).

Tayo is the author of the Self-Development (SD) Bible™ and the popular Livestock Feed Formulation Handbook. He is also the developer of its accompanying Excel-VB driven Ration Formulator™ and the Poultry Farm Manager™ software.

He has delivered talks/papers to audiences in various groups and organizations, including the Centre for Management Development, University of Lagos, Christ Baptist Church, Volunteer Corps, Tantalisers Fast Foods and others.

In May 2012 he was the Guest Speaker at the Centre for Entrepreneurship Development’s Annual Semester Entrepreneurial Lecture at Yaba College of Technology in Lagos.

On 1st April 2013, Tayo (who reads, write and speaks the French language) relocated to Cotonou, Benin Republic to begin slowly traveling across the West African region.

His key purpose is to deliver talks, seminars and workshops on his key areas of focus and interest to interested audiences (Email tayo at tksola dot com for details).

In a previous life, before leaving to become self-employed, Tayo served for seven years (October 1994 to December 2001) as a high performing manager in Guinness Nigeria. He rose from Shift Brewer to Training & Technical Development Manager, and later acted in senior roles as Production Manager and Technical Manager.

In addition to constantly challenging the status quo and influencing positive work changes, he built a reputation for using self-taught spreadsheet programming skills (starting with Lotus 1-2-3, and later moving to Excel Visual Basic) – in his spare time – to develop Automated Spreadsheet Applications to computerize manual report generation processes in the departments he worked. Over four(4) of his applications were adopted for brewery level reporting.

Tayo holds a B.Sc degree in Agricultural Extension Services from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, having graduated top of his class – with Second Class Upper Division honors – in 1992. He is an Associate Member of the UK Institute & Guild of Brewing, a 1997 National Finalist of the Nigerian Institute of Management’s(NIM) Young Managers’ competition, a Certified Psychometric Test Administrator for Psytech UK, innovator of Spontaneous Coaching for Self-Development™ (SCfS-D™), and Founder of the Self-Development Academy (SDAc).

When he’s not amazing clients with his superhuman skills (wink), Tayo works as the creative force behind his Daily Self-Development Nuggets blog – on which he also publishes The Farm CEO Weekly Newspaper (sent via email to paid subscribers) and his Weekly Performance Improvement IDEAS newsletter.

You can connect with him on Twitter @tksola.com and Facebook.

Visit Tayo Solagbade Dot Com, to download over over 10 performance improvement resources to boost your personal and work related productivity.

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[IMPORTANT NOTE:====

On 4th May 2014, Tayo’s 9 year old domain (Spontaneousdevelopment dot com), which hosted his website, was taken over by Aplus.net.

Within a few days however, Tayo used his advanced self-taught web development skills to build a SUPERIOR “reincarnation” of it the website http://www.tayosolagbade.com.

But updates are still ongoing to URLs bearing the old domain name in most of the over 1,000 web pages, and blog posts

he’s published.

If you experience any difficulties finding a page or document, email Tayo at tksola dot com.

Click “Tayo, What Happened to

SpontaneousDevelopmentDotCom ?” to read a detailed narrative about how the above event occurred :-))

Here’s an article Tayo wrote, to inspire others to defy adversity, and bounce back to even greater reckoning at what they do EVERY time:

Succeed by Emerging from Adversity Like a Phoenix

(TayoSolagbade.com launches extra Hosting plan with FREE Web Marketing!)

And he wrote the one below, to explain why losing a domain name, no matter how old, NO LONGER determines your online success or otherwise:

A Proven Strategy to Find Profitable Buyers Regardless of Your Domain Name
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View Tayo Solagbade's video tutorials and demonstrations on Facebook Productivity Tips, Web Marketing, and for his Custom MS Excel-VB driven software applicationsJoin the SD Nuggets community on Facebook.comConnect with Tayo on Twitter.comConnect with Tayo on Google PlusConnect with Tayo on LinkedIn.com

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