Category Archives: My Ideas for Making Nigeria Better

If you’re In Nigeria’s Delta State or Environs, DO NOT Miss This Life Changing Learning Event (on Sat 25th June 2016) Hosted by Efe Ohwofasa – a Former Street Hawker Turned UK Based International Business Coach!

UK based Nigerian born Business Growth Coach, Professional Speaker and Marketing Consultant – Efe Ohwofasa.

is rolling out the maiden edition of his “Launch Your Lifestyle Business” Conference with the theme: “Make Money Doing What You Love”

 

Date: Saturday 25th June 2016

 

Time: 10am – 4pm

 

Venue: Peemos Place, Sapele-Delta state, Nigeria.

 

The page below offers full details about it:

<a href=”http://efeohwofasa.com/lsb/” target=”blank”>Click here</a>

 

To this end, he arrives Nigeria next week.

 

<blockquote>But before then, tommorrow – 16th June 2016 – to be specific, he (in response to an invitation by Bournemouth University’s Institute of Directors,UK) will do a presentation titled…”Passion 2 Profits”- How To Discover Your Entrepreneurial Potential And Achieve Your Career Success” at Bournemouth University, UK (See details: <a href=”http://www.efeohwofasa.com/uploads/efe-lsb2.JPG” target=”blank”>Click here</a>)

</blockquote>

 

Download a print-ready PRESS RELEASE! published for this event, for media houses and journalists from;

 

<a href=”http://www.efeohwofasa.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/efe-pr.png” target=”blank”>Click here</a>

 

Efe is rolling out the Lifestyle Business Conference as a way of giving back to society, to help others discover their purpose and succeed in life, inspite of their circumstances – just like he rose from hawking groceries on the streets of Sapele to become a respected Business Coach in the UK.

 

Initial plans are being worked on by his contacts in Sapele, to roll out the conference. But the vision is to continue across 7 Nigerian states, and ultimately the entire country.

 

Learn more at <a href=”http://efeohwofasa.com/lsb/” target=”blank”>Click here</a>

 

[PRESS RELEASE] UK Based Coach Who Once Hawked Groceries to Survive Launches Life Changing Lifestyle Business Conference in Nigeria

EFE OHWOFASA [FOCUS GURU™]’s Lifestyle Business Academy

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 2016

Contact: Efe Ohwofasa
Phone: +447944426005
Email: efe at efeohwofasa dot com
Web: www.efeohwofasa.com

Life Changing One Day Lifestyle Business Conference Debuts in Nigeria’s Sapele

Bournemouth UK based business coach,
professional speaker and marketing consultant, who grew up in Sapele hawking garri, yam, pure water, plantain etc, to pay his way through school, launches his Lifestyle Business Conference.

BOURNEMOUTH, UK – All is now set for the maiden edition of Efe Ohwofasa’s Lifestyle Business Conference, with the theme “Make Money Doing What You Love”.

This event will give job seekers, career persons, the self-employed and even retirees an exciting opportunity to learn how to make their dreams come true, by learning from a man whose life story has touched many for years within and outside the UK.

Efe, whose new book “UNLEASH YOURSELF” tells his amazing rags to riches story of going from hawking groceries for years as a teenager in his home country of Nigeria, to become a respected international business coach in the UK, will be launching this event across 7 different Nigerian cities, in line with a vision to help many find their own purpose in life.

“The question is: what steps are you taking to ensure that for the rest of your life, you do not die in poverty, or unfulfilled, BUT end your journey as an accomplished personality getting highly paid for doing what you love and making a difference in the world?” – Efe Ohwofasa, Focus Guru™

The maiden Lifestyle Business Conference will hold as follows:

Date: Saturday 25th June 2016

Time: 10am – 4pm

Venue: Peemos Place, Sapele-Delta state, Nigeria.

To learn more about the event and how to attend, or to partner with Efe’s Lifestyle Business Academy in the roll out, go to http://efeohwofasa.com/lsb/ to read a special message and signup to watch the video.

PII 016: How Long Should Good, Lasting Change to Prosperity Take to Implement in a Badly Abused, Nearly Crippled Socio-Economic Entity? [Real Life Case Study of a Struggling Multinational Manufacturer That Turned Its Fortunes Around vs Prospects for a Nation’s Economic Revival]

We all have a right to voice our opinions on any issue, but we also have a responsibility to make such contributions from well informed and objective perspectives.

What you’re about to read is a true personal story. The education and information I offer through this article can help many – if they keep an open mind.

You see, most of us have known the manufacturing multinational the story below is about, for most of our lives.

Most of us drink their products without sparing a thought for how they keep their operations running profitably to pay salaries and declare dividends to shareholders. This, despite their having to deal with the erratic and harsh climate in Nigeria’s socio-economic environment – that we all complain about!

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

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

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

How Long Should Good, Lasting Change to Prosperity Take to Implement in a Badly Abused, Nearly Crippled Socio-Economic Entity? [Real Life Case Study of a Struggling Multinational Manufacturer That Turned Its Fortunes Around vs Prospects for a Nation’s Economic Revival]

We all have a right to voice our opinions on any issue, but we also have a responsibility to make such contributions from well informed and objective perspectives.

What you’re about to read is a true personal story. The education and information I offer through this article can help many – if they keep an open mind.

You see, most of us have known the manufacturing multinational the story below is about, for most of our lives.

Most of us drink their products without sparing a thought for how they keep their operations running profitably to pay salaries and declare dividends to shareholders. This, despite their having to deal with the erratic and harsh climate in Nigeria’s socio-economic environment – that we all complain about!

Despite all that goes wrong in Nigeria, companies like this one I served in continue to forge ahead, doing what they do.

Few of us however ever stop to wonder:

How do they do it, when our governments struggle? How do they recover when things go wrong for them?

I have been a part of those processes in such companies, and that is why I know we can all learn a lot from those who run those organisations and keep them going for decades like they do.

In the rest of this piece, I share my insights based a true story from the first 4 years of my stay (between the ages of 24 and 28) in that company.

If you keep an open mind, I guarantee you will come away with useful insights.

I once had the unique privilege of participating in a major change implementation process involving turning around the fortunes of the Nigerian arm of multinational socio-economic entity run by European expatriates in collaboration with Nigerian colleagues.

That experience is what equips me to see what most others miss (or simply refuse to see). It gives me an advantage of a superior perspective.

For that reason I feel obligated to share my insights, with reference ti a bigger socio-economic entity like Nigeria, especially in light of the uninformed conclusions I see many drawing, in a bid to assess the current government after its first year in office.

I was recruited as a Graduate Management Trainee (Technical Function) in October 1994 along with 11 others.

The organisation was limping badly – operationally and financially, following the devastating ban on wheat importation, and as a result of poor management, that had necessitated appointment of the new leadership that welcomed us.

They told us we were to be trained as a new generation of managers, in the drive to get the company fully back on its feet, to achieve improved output and profits over time.

The changes that had to implemented were varied, harsh, and sometimes not popular. Cost cutting was commonplace, and in production it manifested in form of frequent Variable Cost Reduction trials.

To implement needed changes, the parent company had sent in “PH” (his initials) – a reputed no nonesense turnaround specialist with an intimidating track record of getting desired results.

Sources in the grapevine had it that he’d risen through the ranks, right from the shop floor, and so knew the business inside out. He wasted no time in asserting himself, and soon began pushing belt tightening Best Practice initiatives requiring smart repair and maintenance of decades old machines considered spent, with a view to producing output rivalling that from new plants!

Some old (Nigerian) hands in senior positions kicked against the proposed changes and new philosophy openly and behind closed doors.

PH and his team took note but kept pushing. We the new breed were soon inducted, trained and redeployed to different sites.

Periodic restructuring, retrenching and retraining of other staff also happened as time went on.

PH left at a point I cannot recall, but not before the needed initial strategic changes had been set in motion. People willing to ACCEPT the new ways of doing things had been retained, while those assessed to be unwilling or unable to adjust, had been let go.

I’ll never forget the phrase “a lean and fit organisation”.

That phrase was drummed repeatedly into our heads. That was what the new company envisioned was to evolve into.

By 1998, a new workplace philosophy and culture had been entrenched, and many of us had been assigned key roles to play – some (like me) getting trained by the company’s corporate Best Practice Champions to facilitate workplace organisation changes in our breweries.

Around this period, the desired results had began to emerge in form of consistently improved outputs and sales.

The Variable Costs Reduction initiatives enabled us evolve ways to lower operating costs without losing output or damaging product quality.

The result was that profit margins grew without the company needing to raise selling prices. I saw this happen and it excited me greatly. This is why today I keep telling my Farm CEO clients to find ways to increase their profits without raising prices, as a means of mitigating the harsh impact of the rising input prices they face.

At a point, we had done so well – with those same old machines previously considered “spent” – that money made from sales had been enough to purchase a brand new bottling line, reportedly one of the fastest in Africa at the time!

Suddenly, all those wise “senior managers with many years on the job” who’d complained about the futility and needless hardship of producing with such old, leaky and rickety machines looked silly – on hindsight!

At least to me they did, because I’d been opportuned to witness the BEFORE and AFTER realities of the “changes” that had been implemented during the 2 to 4 year period that had passed!

I went on to play more active roles in influencing many more positive workplace changes (using my self-taught spreadsheet automation skills) by drawing inspiration from what I’d witnessed and participated in with regard to improving production operations in the company.

What I knew gave me the conviction to push my ideas, initiatives and solutions forward, even when supposedly wiser/more experienced senior colleagues scoffed or raised objections often to preserve the status quo.

I kept pushing knowing that I could over time develop my approach or strategy in a way that would deliver results they would welcome.

Guess what?

I did!

In fact, by the time I quit the company to go into self-employment building and selling custom spreadsheet apps for a living (as I’ve been doing for 14 years now), I’d gained companywide recognition for using my spreadsheet automation skills to develop apps that replaced paper based data handling and report generation in the departments I worked. Click here to read details in my resume.

So much so, that other departmental and sectional heads approached me to help them develop similar solutions for use by their team members.

Over 4 of the custom apps I built were adopted for formal brewery level reporting. The best part of my story was that I did all that in my spare time while still working full time in the company as a brewer/manager.

I got no extra pay, neither was I given time off from work (I should add that it never occurred to me to ask, because I enjoyed doing it)!

As a result, I tended to literally live in the brewery – leaving late (sometimes past midnight) and arriving early (often before 5a.m).

So you see, I had it tough during those early “change” years in that company, but the results that I saw accrue to the company and to us, the individuals in it, (though they took 2 to 4 years to arrive), taught me that real lasting change from a bad socio-economic situation to one that is close to the ideal one desires, will often not happen quickly or without prolonged pains/hardship.

To think otherwise would be foolhardy.

What matters is having the right leadership driving the change.

The decision makers in the company I worked for ensured that happened, and success came as a result.

Now, coming back to Nigeria…

I believe Nigerians chose the right leader – in Muhammadu Buhari, during the last (2015) presidential elections – to drive the needed change.

However, compared to the company I worked for, Nigeria is a much larger socio economic entity.

At the risk of stating the obvious, it is an entire country with multiple nationalities of people numbering a quarter of a billion people!

In addition, Nigeria has suffered myriad forms of abuse at the hands of a series of leaders.

On top of that she has detractors (actively working to create difficult conditions for progressive governance), who unlike the CEO of my company, the nation’s president cannot simply layoff or ask to “leave”!

All of the above, and more, make any suggestion that Nigeria’s fortunes should have improved within one year of a new leadership in power, too much of an irresponsible joke.

It took the company I worked in close to 4 solid years to regain any semblance of the stability it desired, despite the times not being as harsh as they are today.

This is why I believe that to expect Nigeria to get back on its feet faster, or to judge the new government incompetent after only one year in office, following extensive bastardisation of the nation’s resources that happened before it took over, makes no sense whatsoever.

As far as I’m concerned, I only expect to begin seeing tangible fruits of this new government’s current labours from 2 full years after it has been in power.

And I’ll only be prepared to pass any form of judgement on their performance at the end of their 4th year in office.

So times are hard, but they are the result of preceding years of mismanagement which this new government has to start with. Like it happened with the company I worked for, tough decisions and changes will have to be taken, made and endured by everyone involved.

Complaining and blaming the current crop of leaders will not help matters. Instead we must join our hearts and hands to support this new team to succeed – for all our sakes!

SDN Blog

New posts from last week*

Monday:

 

[Tuesday]:

[Wednesday]:

[Thursday]:

[Friday]:

Evaluating and improving Your Poultry Layers Farm Performance – Useful Resource URLs (Based on Real Life Correspondence With a Farm CEO)

[Saturday]:

Common Sense Evaluation of ROI from Your Social Media Marketing (Hint: A Busy “EMPS” Driven Facebook or Twitter Page is No Guarantee of Sales)

 

 

[Sunday]:

Protected: Selling Your ExcelVB Solutions – Example of Promotional Strategy: Boost Hospital/Clinics Records Management Using Smart ExcelVB Automation [Hint: Custom MS Excel-VB app built for a Lagos-Nigeria based Medical Clinic]

 

Protected: THE FARM CEO (Issue 47): Meet “IFAMA” – the International Food and Agribusiness Management Association, Mission, Vision and Strategic Plan, Purpose and Mission of IFAMA Regional Chapters, International Food and Agribusiness Management Review

 

Tayo K. Solagbade*

Self-Development/Performance Improvement Specialist

*Creator of the Mastering Adversity for Perpetual Success Achievement Coaching Program

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

 

[Recommended] 5 Alternative Ways To Charge A Mobile Without Electricity [Hint: Why I’m Offering a Solar and Electricity Rechargeable Power Bank Gift to clients who signup for my Web Marketing/BOPMS offers]

Sometimes having a power bank is not enough, because it will periodically need recharging, and if you cannot find an electric power source, your mobile phones will not get charged from it: you’ll be stuck with a dead power bank and mobile,

Lack of regular electricity in Nigeria makes the above scenario a persistent reality, making mockery of people’s efforts to invest in electricity dependent power banks.

In a bid to find a solution, I purchased and have been using a Solar Rechargeable Power Bank for a while now, which can also be recharged using public power supply as well as inside a car.

As you can imagine, my frequent traveling lifestyle makes this kind of multi featured power bank attractive to me.

The good thing is that when I’m recharging this power bank using solar energy, I am still able to connect and charge my Blackberry from its 2A outlet USB port. It’s so effective!

This device has so impressed me with its performance, that I’ve decided to buy and give it out to clients who signup for my WMS and/or BOPMS promo offers.

Why?

Because they will need their phones powered up as long as possible for use in the projects they sign up for.

For those without solar chargers, who find themselves without access to electricity, this recommended article linked below offers 5 alternative ways to charge mobile devices without electricity.

http://trak.in/tags/business/2014/08/07/5-alternative-charge-mobile-without-electricity/.

RECOMMENDED: The Third Most Important Skill in Business (Part 2) – Presentation is Extremely Important [Strive Masiyawa’s Latest World Class “Business School Quality” Lesson]

I still do NOT understand why this wonderful man’s Facebook powered teachings, superior to what business schools offer in terms of real world relevance, are not SYNDICATED by media houses across Africa.

 

Strive Masiyawa dishes out weekly world class entrepreneurship wisdom to African entrepreneurs, and those aspiring, at zero cost – yet I cannot remember ever seeing or hearing him get quoted.

 

This man is a real life Digital Entrepreneurship International Success Story made 100% in Africa, yet most Africans I mention his name to do NOT recognize it(or so they say).

 

But mention Bill Gates and Richard Branson (both of who KNOW Masiyawa) and the same Africans will readily tell you who they are and what they do:

 

What is it with us Africans, that makes most of us so unwilling/unable to acknowledge promote our own to the rest of the world?!

 

Whatever it is, I refuse to let it hold ME back from doing what the spirit of the Creator within me has ALWAYS guided me to do.

 

Even if a person does not know me, for what I do, if I see that telling others about him/her will result in useful benefits, I will do it, as often as necessary, without needing anything from him/her.

 

It is with the above mindset that I share the following preview and link to Strive Masiyawa’s latest “World Class “Business School Quality” Lesson:

 

Title: “The third most important skill in business (Part 2).

__Presentation is extremely important.”

 

In July 1997 I learned about a public tender for a GSM cellular license taking place in the southern African country of Botswana. I decided that we must submit a bid, even though I knew the competition would be fierce.

 

Having purchased the bid documents, I sat down with my team and carefully went through each page, line by line. We must have spent three days, working over 20 hours a day, reviewing this document which was not more than 50 pages long.

 

Continue reading:

<a href=”https://facebook.com/496453373762496/photos/a.500176003390233.1073741828.496453373762496/1058519457555882/?type=3&refid=8&_ft_=qid.6287209558778525874%3Amf_story_key.-1590228484320148675&__tn__=%2As” target=”blank”>Click here</a>

Lagos To Host Food Security Summit In June (Source: Lagos Television)

The 2016 Poultry Summit organized by Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN) recently held at Astra Halls in Ikeja Lagos. The theme was “The Role of Poultry Industry In The Economic Revival of Nigeria”. I’m compiling news and reports highlights for that event, from various sources, into a special FREE edition of The Farm CEO newspaper to be published later this week.

For now, I feature this news report of another event of potential interest to more farm business owners and enthusiasts, being organised by the Lagos State government, called Food Security Summit – to hold In June 2016. Details below…

Lagos To Host Food Security Summit In June
Lagos To Host Food Security Summit In June

 

In line with the present administration’s Sustainable Food Security Initiative, the Lagos State Government, through the Ministry of Agriculture, has concluded plans to host a world-class Food Security Summit in June, 2016.
Mr. Suarau Oluwatoyin Isiaka, State Commissioner for Agriculture disclosed this on Tuesday at the Bagauda Kaltho Press Centre, Alausa, Ikeja, during the 2016 Ministerial Press Briefing of the State Government in commemoration of the first year in office of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode.
He stated that the summit becomes imperative in order to redress the food security challenges in the State, stressing that it is expected to attract organizations that seek to partner with the State in the realization of its Food Security Agenda. – See more at:<a href=”http://www.lagostelevision.com/lagos-to-host-food-security-summit-in-june” target=”blank”>http://www.lagostelevision.com/lagos-to-host-food-security-summit-in-june</a>

Know Your Rights As An Electricity Consumer in Nigeria [Source: Publication by Dr. Anthony Akah,mni, Ag. CEO/Chairman,NERC]

The text of this publication (signed by Dr. Anthony Akah,mni, Ag. CEO/Chairman,NERC) was sent to me by a Farm CEO client. I found the contents worthy of publication on my blog. In light of the suffering and abuse that Nigerian electricity consumers are routinely subjected to, access to this documented enumeration of consumer rights, by the top officer in NERC puts power back where it belongs: in the hands of the consumers!

=Starts=

Many Nigerians do not know that they have certain rights as electricity consumers in the nation.

The Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC), the body empowered to meet the yearnings of Nigerians for stable, adequate and safe electricity supply, has taken the bulll by the horn by releasing to the public, the rights of every electricity consumer.

Read the rights below:

1. All new electricity connections must be done strictly on the basis of metering before connection. That is, no new customer should be connected without meter first being installed.

2. A customer who elects to procure meter under the Credited Advance Payment for Metering Implementation (CAPMI) Scheme must be metered within 60 days, after which the customer will neither be billed nor disconnected by the electricity distribution company.

3. It is the customer’s right to transparent electricity billing. Unmetered customers should be issued with electricity bills strictly based on NERC’s estimated billing methodology.

4. It is the customer’s right to be notified in writing ahead of disconnection of electricity service by the electricity distribution company serving the customer in line with NERC’s guidleines.

5. It is the customer’s right to prompt investigation of complaints arising from the customer’s electricity service disruption

6. It is not the responsibility of electricity customer or community to buy, replace or repair electricity transformers, poles and related equipment used in supply of electricity.

7. It is the customer’s right to contest any electricity bill. Any unmetered customer who is disputing his or her estimated bill has the right not to pay the disputed bill, but pay only the last undisputed bill as the contested bill go through the dispute resolution process of NERC.

8. All complaints on your electricity supply and other billing issues are to be sent to your nearest business unit of the electricity company serving your premises. If your complaint is not satisfactorily addressed, you can forward your complaint to the NERC Forum Office within the coverage area of your electricity distribution company. Customers also have the right to appeal the decision of the forum at the NERC headquarters in Abuja.

Log into: www.nercng.org for more details or contact:

NERC ZONAL OFFICE CONTACTS:
08164201445 Joseph John southwest; 08130363581 Tony Ray Ene South South; 08062219714 Ekeh Samuel Chukwuemeka Southeast;
07061117416 Hassan GWANDU north west;
07061097132 Mohammed Umar fufore North East;
07036948408 Friday Sule North Central.

Please share this information and help us protect your rights. However,note that you have an obligation to pay your valid electric bills,avoid meter by-pass or stealing of electricity and protect power infrastructure from being vandalized.

Together,by doing our part, we can get the power sector we all desired.

Dr.Anthony Akah,mni
Ag. CEO/Chairman,NERC

PII 014: When Citizens Break Laws at Will, Foreigners Follow Their Lead [Two Real Life Case Studies from Nigeria’s Seme Border With Benin Republic]

The lawless manner in which we conduct our affairs in Nigeria can make foreigners conclude that we have no laws worth abiding by. Two true stories I narrate below illustrate sad instances of the foregoing that I’ve personally witnessed, to my embarrassment as a self respecting citizen of Nigeria.

I share them here, in the hope that others may learn a thing or two.

Case Study 1: Sometime in 2015 I was in a taxi headed for Seme border from Benin Republic’s Cotonou.

At one of the checkpoints, a Beninese gendarme stopped the Taxi and asked each passenger for his/her passport in turn. When it came to a lady seated next to the door on my left, she told the gendarme she did not have a passport because she had never needed it to enter and exit Benin!

SCROLL DOWN TO READ FULL ISSUE

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

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

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 014: When Citizens Break Laws at Will, Foreigners Follow Their Lead [Two Real Life Case Studies from Nigeria’s Seme Border With Benin Republic]

The lawless manner in which we conduct our affairs in Nigeria can make foreigners conclude that we have no laws worth abiding by. Two true stories I narrate below illustrate sad instances of the foregoing that I’ve personally witnessed, to my embarrassment as a self respecting citizen of Nigeria.

I share them here, in the hope that others may learn a thing or two.

Case Study 1: Sometime in 2015 I was in a taxi headed for Seme border from Benin Republic’s Cotonou.

Cars in a holdup at Seme Border during period of ECOWAS corridor construction - Photo taken by Tayo Solagbade on 24th April 2016 at 12:11

At one of the checkpoints, a Beninese gendarme stopped the Taxi and asked each passenger for his/her passport in turn.

When it came to a lady seated next to the door on my left, she told the gendarme she did not have a passport because she had never needed it to enter and exit Benin!

The Francophone officer understood enough of the pidgin English she’d spoken, to get visibly upset and order her out of the vehicle. If the rest of us had not intervened on her behalf, the taxi driver would have been asked to leave her behind.

As we resumed our journey for the border, my curiosity got the better of me and I turned to ask the woman why she’d entered the country without the required travel documents – especially an International Passport and Yellow Vaccination card.

She replied that she always crossed on the bikes that followed a bush path outside the formal route along which the immigration and other posts were located.

According to her, all she had to do was pay the bike rider and he would get her across.

I instantly knew what she was referring to.

The bike guys are part of an intricate network of illegal border crossing facilitators who work hand-in-glove with the men in uniform on both sides of the border, to get money from persons lacking legal papers who wish to enter and exit either country.

I told her that those guys got passengers through by greasing the palms of officers at the checkpoints, so the latter would look away and not ask such passengers for a passport.

“That does not however change the fact that you need to have a passport duly stamped by immigration officials at relevant entry and exit points when you get into a foreign country, even as a West African in a West African country.”. I added.

I went further to note that an alternative to a valid and duly stamped password would be an ECOWAS Travel Certificate.

To my surprise she ASSURED me I was wrong and that one did not need a passport to cross the border from Nigeria into Benin, pointing out that the bike men readily told her and others so, and the fact that they NEVER got stopped by the men in Uniform proved it was true!

At that point I understood her dilemma: She was not aware of the symbiotic relationship between the bike men and the uniformed officers.

The latter got their palms greased each time the former found a willing traveler to take across. It was/is therefore in their interest to let the bike guys stay in business.

In other words, the whole “You don’t need a passport to cross the border idea” is a myth propagated and perpetuated by the bike riders with the silent consent of uniformed officials they have dealings with on a daily basis.

It is in their interest to create that impression because it gets the more willing passengers. This is a money making business for them. To say the opposite would amount to suicide for them!

Many intending Nigerian travelers, especially traders who shuttle between both countries, often lack valid travel papers, and so they naturally find the shortcuts appealing.

I then noted to the woman that what a West African travelling across West Africa does NOT need is a Visa.

That is typically required for travelers from outside the continent.

I ended by warning her that getting caught in another country AFTER crossing over without legal papers may not be so easy to buy one’s way out of.

By the time I finished, I could see that she understood, but the look in her eyes indicated she was still not convinced she needed to get a passport, since the arrangement with the bike men obviously worked well.

This problem remains so pervasive today, and it is not helped by the fact that getting a Nigerian passport is prohibitively expensive.

Last time I checked the price had been raised to about N21,000.0 (Twenty One Thousand Naira).

The ECOWAS alternative went for just about a few thousands less than the International passport, and that made me settle for the latter even though my plans did not include travelling beyond the sub region in the foreseeable future at the time.

This brings me to Case Study 2: A few weeks ago, here in Benin, I met a young Beninese small business owner

His seeming open mindedness intrigued me so much, that I decided to share some insights about making money/selling via Web Marketing with him.

One day, we had a discussion that touched on crossing the border to explore business opportunities and he said something that shocked me.

“As an ECOWAS citizen all you need to cross the border from Benin to Nigeria and back is an identity card. You definitely do not need a passport.”

He had said this in response to a comment I’d made about the incident involving the lady mentioned in Case Study 1 above.

Note that removal of travel restrictions for ECOWAS citizens have been discussed severally over the years, with all kinds of agreements signed.

The reality that confronts a West African traveler on ground however remains in sharp contrast to the ideals proposed!

To illustrate, I pointed out to him that students normally are allowed to travel using approved school issued IDs, but that on a recent trip, due to reported cases of people presenting fake student IDs, I once witnessed a police officer at a border checkpoint order 3 Nigerian students out of a taxi I was coming in from Seme border into Cotonou, when they failed to produce passports like the rest of us.

When they repeatedly showed their student IDs, he angrily retorted that those had been too badly abused by dishonest others, to be accepted on face value. Eventually he let them go

Try as much as I could, this young man simply would not listen.

He vehemently insisted he had visited Nigeria from Benin even when he had no papers and had easily paid his way through, which proved passports were really NOT needed!

This, despite the fact that I told him that before relocating from Lagos to his country on 1st April 2013 (3 years ago), I’d visited the Benin Republic Consulate on Victoria Island in Lagos, to ask for guidance on what I needed to know and do before entering the country.

The officials who met with me on appointment during my second visit, had specifically asked me to ensure I carried with me a valid International Passport as well as my Yellow Vaccination Card.

I did not stop there, but also telephoned the Nigerian embassy in Cotonou, after visiting their website to read up requirements for travel. Again I was told the exact same thing: You need a valid passport and Yellow Card!

The steps I took before traveling for the first time are commonsense precautions that any adult with primary level of education (which is all you need to legally contest for public office in Nigeria) would be expected to take!

Yet I continue to encounter persons schooled up to degree level talking and acting (like this young Beninese chap) at the border.

They often readily offer money everywhere they get stopped, and since that often works, they conclude those documents being requested by the uniformed men are not actually needed, or are just used as a means of getting money from travelers.

It is people like the above who often come in contact with foreigners like my young friend, who they then – proudly -tell about how they cross the border without passports and why it’s completely acceptable to do so!

When it became obvious he would not listen, I told my Beninese friend to use Google to find out the truth, and to go a step further to visit his country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs as well as the Nigerian Embassy here in Cotonou to clear any doubts he had.

We parted laughing at the joke I made that he should never call my number if he ever gets caught in Nigeria without valid papers, by an official unwilling to accept bribes or one that demanded more than he (my friend) could cough up!

But even as I laughed, I felt saddened by our exchange.

My young friend knew that legally required processes in his country could rarely be bypassed by those assigned, in exchange for financial gratification.

So, for him, the fact that it happened so easily with regard to Nigeria meant that such processes really did not matter – in Nigeria!

To crown it all he arrived at this conclusion with the active support and guidance of Nigerians he interacted with, who knew no (or pretended not to know any) better!

That’s a shame, but I will continue to do my best to reorient all those I encounter with this problem. My hope is that others who share the sentiments I’ve expressed here will do the same.

 

SDN Blog

New posts from last week*

Monday:

 

[Tuesday]:

[Wednesday]:

[Thursday]:

N/A

[Friday]:

Smart Marketing Systems Move Prospects Closer to Buying, Long After You’re Gone [Hint: Why It’s Better to Let People Convince Themselves to Buy from You, Instead of “Pushing” or “Chasing” Them!]

[Saturday]:

Why Schools Need to Teach Emotional Intelligence [Hint: Your Success In Life – Academic Ability Matters LESS Than Your Emotional Intelligence]

 

 

[Sunday]:

 

Tayo K. Solagbade*

Self-Development/Performance Improvement Specialist

*Creator of the Mastering Adversity for Perpetual Success Achievement Coaching Program

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

 

Why Schools Need to Teach Emotional Intelligence [Hint: Your Success In Life – Academic Ability Matters LESS Than Your Emotional Intelligence]

Do you want to excel at what you do in life? If YES, it might interest you to know that your academic prowess and credentials pale in significance when compared to the Emotional Intelligence you possess.

 

I recently read <a href=”http://www.success.com/article/why-you-need-emotional-intelligence-to-succeed”>Why You Need Emotional Intelligence to Succeed</a> (click to read) by Travis Bradberry on Success.com, and the contents resonated greatly with me based on my own knowledge and experiences on the subject over the past decade.

 

In this article I share some tips based on my study and application of this concept, since my mother gave me a copy of Daniel Goleman’s groundbreaking bestseller omn the subject as a birthday gift in 2005.

 

1. EI is not set at birth (unlike academic intelligence’s IQ), and as such can be improved via conscious effort.

 

In other words, EI can be taught and learned – but mostly, in my experience, by doing – not in the classroom.

 

2. EI has several dimensions, and people who demonstrate the greatest degree of EI are often those able to achieve mastery in majority of those dimensions.

 

I discuss two of those dimensions that I consider most critical in the rest of this article.

 

<h3>A. Delayed gratification</h3>

 

The ability tp put off or delay satisfying certain secondary needs in order to dedicate one’s time, efforts and resources to achieve a valued goal(s) is often a pointer to a person’s degree of EI.

 

A survey done of a group of kids in school required them to choose between getting a gift instantl for carrying out an assigned task, and waiting several weeks to get a bigger but unspecified reward.

 

Most of the kids chose to “cash in” immediately. Years later when all the kids had left school, and become working adults, the researcher found that those who had chosen to wait longer to get rewarded were doing siginificantly better in life than those who had not.

 

Historical evidence confirms the accuracy of the above findings, as we often hear successful people recount how they had to deny themselves certain pleasures and also sacrifice many wants and needs, until they reached their goals.

 

<h3>B. Persistence</h3>

 

The ability to commit oneself to long term pursuit of a valued goal in the face of discouragement and deprivation is another strong indicator of a person’s degree of EI.

 

I happen to believe too many people that many people lack this particular quality, and most who do often also lack the earlier mentioned ability to delay gratification.

 

In other words, they are inter related.

 

The ability to persist involves carrying on with the chosen task(s) in pursuit of one’s set goal(s), regardless of the difficulties one may encounter in doing so.

 

<b>What I find often happens with most people is that they assume – often unconsciously – that they have a say in how long they will need to persist before they succeed. </b>

 

Most will not admit it when asked, but they betray the fact that they think so in the way they react to prolonged adversity.

 

<b>The truth is that it is NOT up to any of us to decide how long it should take, or how hard or difficult it will be to arrive at success.</b>

 

There are universal laws guiding achievement and they are applied impartially, but in consonance with the abilities/capacity of each person. As a result no one ever gets tested beyond his/her inborn ability to cope with the challenge visited on him/her.

 

<i>Therefore if you find yourself confronted with adversity in any form, no matter how intimidating, KNOW that the Creator allowed it to reach you because He KNOWS that He has put in you what it takes to beat it.</i>

 

Be inspired by that knowledge – and take action based on it to defeat any adversity that comes your way.

 

<h3>Anyone can LEARN to develop and use these abiliities, on his/her own, or with the help of a competent other e.g teacher, coach or mentor.</h3>

 

What’s more, the learning can happen at any age, and during any phase of life.

 

The implication therefore is that a child can be helped to develop these abilities (and others making up EI) so that s/he arrives adulthood adequately equipped to deal with the inevitable facets of adversity s/he will pass through, such as delays, disappointments, setback and outright failures (aka temporary defeat).

 

Daniel Goleman in his book “Emotional Imtelligence” recommended that educational institiutions incorporate teachings desinged to inculcate the various dimensions of this meta ability into learners, so they can enter the real world better rounded, and more capable of succeeding in life an any area of endeavour they choose to venture.

 

I agree 100%

 

<h3>The 2 abilities discussed above have helped many otherwise ordinary, relatively ungifted persons achieve truly extraordinary feats in various areas of endeavour. </h3>

 

<I>So many unschooled or poorly schooled persons have climbed to unprecedented heights of achievement by making use of them.</i>

 

Well known examples include Thomas Alva Edison and Henry Ford.

 

But if you look around in your own society I’m sure you will find more familiar examples. In my country Nigeria for example, the case of Shina Peters the Afro Juju music maestro comes to mind.

 

At age 8 he quit school and followed his passion for playing music by working as a house boy for Chief Ebenezer Obey – among other difficult roles, just to achieve his dream.

 

Today he is recognized as the inventor of his own genre of music and posesses wealth that enables him provide gainful employment to many who are much better schooied than he is!

 

Many other examples abound. Any persons who take the pains to learn and appy EI in their daily lives will end up as role models or examples for others to emulate or refer to.

 

<h3>Related Articles</h3>

 

1. <a href=”http://ezinearticles.com/?What-Being-Emotionally-Intelligent-Does-Not-Mean&id=864816″>What Being Emotionally Intelligent Does Not Mean</a>

 

2. <a href=”http://excelheaven.tayosolagbade.com/?p=269″>Become A Habitual Peak Performer – Learn How To Get Into Flow …</a>

 

3. <a href=”http://tayosolagbade.com/sdnuggets/are-you-a-social-chameleon-read-this-to-find-out/”>Are You A Social Chameleon? (Read This To Find Out </a>