Category Archives: My Ideas for Making Nigeria Better

Advertise Your Products and Services on Tayo Solagbade’s Buyers-Meet-Sellers Platform for Agro based businesses – and others!

I’m pleased to finally be able to announce that my buyers-meet-sellers platform is LIVE.

Right now, I’m using the contact details and information from businesses belonging to both groups, that I have so far obtained via the market surveys I’ve been doing on behalf of clients in Benin Republic and Nigeria.

The platform is still evolving, but already fully functional – and automated

See below, three 200 x 200 pixel size rotating image banners that I’ve created for 3 different real life clients (2 are farm businesses and one is a private university).

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The platform will be open for use by all my clients (in and out of Africa) as well as other businesses who indicate interest and meet the required terms of access.

This is because I intend to employ strict quality controls in running it to ensure integrity.

If you seek clients, buyers or distributors within our outside the African continent for any products, services or solutions you offer, get in touch with me using this form (click here) for details of how to get started.

 

DISCLAIMER

This is information passed to me by those who choose to advertise. Those who are my clients get FREE access to this platform.

However, you must take the due diligence action of checking and verifying whatever information you read in the ads or the linked pages I setup, especially if you choose to use it, or to make contact directly with the supplier. I do NOT play the role of a middle man.

 

How to Make Drinks You Can Sell from Pineapple Peels (Real Life Phone Coversation Session Prospective Attendee Based in Nigeria’s Abuja

Few days ago, a gentleman called me from Abuja to ask how he could come down to Cotonou to learn how to make my Pineapple peel drink.

I was quite surprised by how determined he was. He told me he’d tried making the drink at a basic level, but that he’d prefer getting the full training from me.

I sent him the details on the night of the next day. I’m hoping the prices will not scare him off lool! (Will forward the message to you. The guy is into natural herbal remedies and already makes and sells all sorts of medicinal drinks made from plants)

Below I share exceprts from the email I sent him, which contains details of the options for accessing the training

Pictures showing some stages of my pineapple peels based drink's production

peelp

Hi,

Thanks for your call yesterday – regarding the above mentioned learning event.

As promised here are the details you need to know:

1. The page linked below announces the small group On-Demand learning event I offer for a minimum of 10 persons.

http://tayosolagbade.com/boisson-tayo.html

Each attendee gets my Step-By-Step Guide PDF titled “How to Make Drinks You Can Sell from Pineapple Peels” at N7,500 (Seven Thousand Five Hundred Naira per person).

NB: Normal Price for the guide is N10,000 (Ten Thousand Naira).

In other words the training is FREE.

2. The step-by-step guide is actually based on the real-life process I use in producing the Non-Fermented version of my Pineapple Peel Based drink, which someone in Calavi (Benin Republic) named “Boisson Tayo”(French for “Tayo’s Drink”).

See details at http://tayosolagbade.com/boisson-tayo.html

3. During the LIVE event, I will:

a. Demonstrate the production process I use from start to finish

b. Explain key considerations for setting up and operating your home-based drinks production business using recommended best practices to meet World Class standards, that can even enable you export your products.

See the attached flyer for more specific details.

4. The Required Investment for YOU:

Now, since the training is to be for you alone, the required investment, based on the fee per person in the minimum group of 10 attendees, becomes N75,000.0 (Seventy Five Thousand Naira).

a. One possible way to lower that fee is to find one or more pêrsons to share it with you.

For instance, if you can find 4 other persons interested in learning, you will EACH pay N15,000.0 (Fifteen Thousand Naira)

b. Alternatively, you may wish to take up the following time limited offer, which I make as a gesture of goodwill:

Pay N60k (instead of N75k) if you make payment on or before MNT Thursday 5th May 2016, and I will come down to Lagos-Nigeria at an agreed date and venue to conduct the training for you.

This will save you time, effort and money that you would expend to meet me in Cotonou.

c. But if you prefer to come down to Cotonou for the training…

Pay N50k (instead of N75k) if you make payment on or before MNT Thursday 5th May 2016, and I will agree a date and venue for you to meet me here to conduct the training for you.

Let me know if you have any questions or require clarification.

My Pineapple Peel-Based Drinks Production Project UPDATE: Pilot Scale Shelf-Life, and Variable Cost-Reduction “Trials”

ppeelsdn

 

How Studying a Great African Achiever is Leading Me to Self-Actualization

“Va vers les gens, vit avec eux. Apprend d’eux. Aime-les. Commence avec ce qu’ils connaissent. Planifie avec eux. Construit sur ce qu’ils ont. Enseigne en montrant. Apprend en pratiquant. Ne te conforme pas, mais transforme. Ne soulage pas mais libère. Et quand avec les meilleurs leaders, le travail est fait, la tâche accomplie, les gens diront nous l’avons fait nous-mêmes”. Lao Tsu, Fondateur de la philosophie Tao, 600 av J.C.

English Translation:

“Go to the people. Live with them. Learn from them. Love them. Start with what they know. Build with what they have. But with the best leaders, when the work is done, the task accomplished, the people will say ‘We have done this ourselves.” – Lao Tzu, founder of the Tao philosophy, 600 B.C

I discovered the above wise quote through reading a publication by a great African man here in Benin Republic, whose works have inspired me since I read about an award he received way back in 1987.

That was during my first undergraduate year as a student of Agricultural Extension Services in Nigeria’s University Of Ibadan.

I was 17 years old at the time. In another 2 months from today I will clock 46.

How time has flown – almost 30 years have passed – yet this man has continued to be a leading light and inspiration to many across the world, for his works.

I constantly drew inspiration from following his progress, and often visualised myself doing something similar in my chosen area of interest.

Over the past 10 years I’ve taken concrete steps closer to achieving my dream. And I resolved that I would find a way to meet and thank him for doing what he’s been doing.

Relocating to Benin Republic in 2013 made the possibility of that happening just a matter of time.

And now it has…

About 2 weeks ago I met and spoke with him for the first time ever. The next day I ran into him again and we had a short exchange.

In between those 2 meetings I had a good opportunity to observe him from a distance as he moved around and interacted with the people. It was obvious, to me, that there was deliberate purpose in his actipns and utterances.

Later that day I got handed a document published by his organization in which I read the quote reproduced above, and had my inner eyes opened to the secret of his success.

Click here to read the page on his organisation’s website, where the quote is reproduced.

Click below to view a page with the english version of the quote, along with several other quotes by the same Chinese philosopher.

This man does not know it, but he’s been mentoring me remotely as I followed his progress, over the past 2 and a half decades.

As soon as I read this quote, I instantly knew it was what I needed to adopt to achieve the new plans I’ve been working on.

Before now, I periodically sensed a need to do what it advised but resisted the impulse each time mainly because I was not sure how to proceed.

Luckily for me, this great man chose not to be miserly in sharing the sources of his own inspiration. As a result, the rest of us benefit.

How I wish there was a way I could add value to him the way he has done to me and many thousand others who continue to benefit from the enduring solutions provided by his organisation.

For now, one way I know I can thank him is by succeeding in using this quote’s wisdom to implement my own evolving plans to start a centre that help others with solutions I offer.

PS: By the way, in case you’ve not discovered it yet, from clicking the above mentioned link to his website, this man that I have spoken so highly of in this article, is Father Godfrey Nzamujo – the Founder of the world renowned Songhai Integrated Farming centre, headquarted here in Benin Republic’s Porto Novo. He makes me proud to be African!

Marriage is Not for Everyone [You Don’t Have to Get Married to Prove You’re Normal]

Yes.

 

It is my considered opinion, based on my personal observations over the past 25 years of my adult life (16 of them as a husband and father) that marriage is not for everyone.

 

You don’t have to get married to prove you’re normal. And when you’re a high performing achiever or “genius”, getting married successfully will require finding someone who often COMPLEMENTS you, making you better than you were – and who, in doing so will NEVER feel inadequate or threatened by the success that consequently accrues to YOU in the process!

 

Henry Ford and his wife; Andrew Carnegie and his wife (as mentioned in Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich) reportedly enjoyed that kind of blissful union.

 

As a result, when fame and fortune came into their lives, they kept their partnership going strong and did not lose focus on what mattered – which was the preservation of the true love, friendship and affection they began their journey with, no matter the conflicts or disagreements they had!

 

<h3>In Nigeria I consider Tunde and Wunmi Obe (TWO) to be an exemplary celebrity couple who undoubtedly will have LOTS of useful wisdom to pass on to couples – be they celebrities or everyday married people. </h3>

 

In Napoleon Hill’s Think and Grow Rich, he expounded (in a chapter dedicated to it) on the concept he called “Sex Transmutation”.

 

That phrase, despite the presence of the ever suggestive 3 letter word in it, has less to do with the act itself, and a lot more to do with the degree to which a couple can use their “sexuality” to connect “symbiotically” on a deep emotional and psychological level, that makes them flourish and excel, seemingly at virtually anything they do.

 

Check out Tunde and Wunmi’s many hit songs, videos – as well as photos of they share of their kids/family. Check out the way they “roll” in public and how they “flow” in private (even while still in public view).

 

Then go back and pay close(r) attention to the often very instructive messages in the lyrics of most of their songs, and you will begin to understand what I mean: those two (pun intended) are in sychrony with one another: the closest thing one will ever see to a perfect marital union – especially for a celebrity couple.

 

<h3>It takes two (pardon the pun…again) to make marriage work that way. </h3>

 

Everyone – man or woman, husband or wife – can and will make mistakes. What counts is not how loudly you prove you can scream when you feel genuinely aggrieved.

 

What really matters is how far you are willing to go to protect what you have, by trying your best to repair any damage that may be done by the other party, using the “connection” you share.

 

You would do the above within reason of course (however subjective that may be). You don’t, for instance, want to make yourself a willing accomplice in unrepentant visitation of abuse (physical, emotional or psychological) on your person. This is after all the 21st century.

 

<B>Not everyone is willing to adopt this kind of attitude however, and many believe they must prove they are right, and the other person wrong, before they can let things be. </b>

 

How very wrong!

 

<h3>The worst part of it all is the misguided belief majority seem to have that there is some kind of wisdom inherent in the act of putting your private affairs up for consideration in the “court of public opinion” e.g newspapers, TV, social media etc. </h3>

 

In most cases that simply ends up messing the relationship up the more.

 

The sad part is however that they forget their loved ones (parents, siblings, unclues/aunts/cousins, friends, associates, clients, business partners and more!) will also suffer major pain and embarrassment as a result of that singular move into the public space.

 

Quite often those people would have attended the couple’s engagement and wedding events, playing influential, often visible roles – with pride!

 

Most would have received the wedding videos and excitedly played it for guests to watch and admire the couple.

 

When it all falls apart, they will want to avoid being mentioned in relation to the former love birds!

 

The simple scenario I’ve painted above proves that the collateral damage that can result from going “public” with your marriage/private issues, can be far reaching, hard to quantify or contain, and often impossible to repair!

 

<h3>Case Study: There is story of a celebrity couple’s marriage collapse currently trending in the news…</h3>

 

As far as I’m concered BOTH of them are the losers. Neither is better off – especially with the court of public opinion session they have now started.

 

They may not admit it, but the pain and embarassment is there and it will continue eating at them for a long time to come. No one will ever look at them the same way again.

 

Could they – as well as their respective fans – have been better off if they had never gotten married?

 

On the benefit of hindsight…the answer seems to be an obvious YES.

 

That’s what doing what society expects of you can sometimes do to you e.g bite you in the you-know-where.

 

But nothing is impossible – so I hope they can find a way to make up, especially for the sake of the little child between them.

 

<h3>This is why I believe – and I’ve been hammering it into the heads of all my kids – that Marriage is not for everyone.</h3>

 

You don’t have to get married to prove you’re normal.

 

Alternatives exist and we have examples in history and many today to refer to.

 

If you’re keen to do, get all the help you can to choose the right partner, then be prepared to fight to keep your marriage: YES, be ready to fight!

 

Some smart thinking women with great visions and ambitions choose to stay single, but arrange to have a child or two via what today are available as “professional services”.

 

Many end up proving to be great parents, and raising well rounded and successful kids.

 

I won’t bore you by giving specific examples. I know you can think up a few, all by yourself :-)

 

Single parent Moms and Dads can be found all over the planet.

 

Some chose the life, while others were forced into it via being abandonned by a partner or through the loss (via death) of the partner.

 

But they went on/are going on to make the most of it. So, it’s not impossible.

It may not be normal, but the risks of emotional trauma, pain and suffering are greatly minimised.

 

<h3>Not everyone can endure the B.S that staying married sometimes requires both parties to swallow from another at various times.</h3>

 

Such persons must therefore get real and consider that the marriage option is simply NOT for them: No be by force O!

 

In other words my message is this:

 

<blockquote>Unless you are damn sure you can deal with things not working out with the person you’re currently crazy and raving about, DO NOT get married to him/her!</blockquote>

 

Period.

No Country Can Really Develop Unless its Citizens are Educated: But What Kind of “Education” is Needed?

“No country can really develop unless its citizens are educated.” – Nelson Mandela

I believe it’s safe to say we all agree that the above quote is accurate.

What I’m not so sure about is how well we all agree on the shape and form this so called “education” should take, to equip those exposed to it, to emerge with real world relevant competence to “develop” their respective countries.

This is why some societies push millions of people through their “educational systems”, who on completing their programs arrive larger society unprepared to deal with realities of fending for themselves, talk less of influencing change to develop society.

The above scenario is a common one, that strongly indicates that societies need to constantly review and evolve their educational systems to give learners the knowledge, skills and attitudes to function as competent members of society.

These persons would not only have the ability to flourish financially and otherwise, but also understand how to work with others to influence positive social change and progress in their society.

When that kind of educational system is in place in any society, the wisdom contained in Mandela’s above mentioned quote will become “harvestable” there.

Take a close look at countries we call developed or advanced today, and you’ll realize most strive continually to reinvent their “educational” systems to equip their learners to deal effectively with the evolving realities of larger society.

In contrast, less developed societies tend to be guilty of doing the exact opposite.

For instance there are countries where parents, education providers and policy makers mindlessly continue to place illogical preference on having youths attend universities to earn degrees, despite ample evidence that many of those instutions in their country offer mostly theoretical learning with little or no practical or real world exposure provided to the learners.

As a result, they continue to blindly operate outdated educational systems, churning out millions of “products” ill equipped to be useful to themselves or the society.

The developed societies on the other hand have various aspects of their system tailored to meet the unique needs and talents of learners, as well as the society.

As a result, learners get useful guidance to choose the best career path to follow, which sometimes would not require a tour of university academics.

For instance some learners demonstrate traits that qualify them to attend Vocational Skills Development programs or technical colleges, emerging with market ready income earning skills that make them unlikely to become a burden on those who support them after comnpleting their “education”.

The same cannot be said for persons who undergo mostly theoretical education.

[Recommended Article/Website] Librarians Love It, and Everybody (Including You!) Needs It: The Secret You Need to Know About Ebooks – and ONE website that spills it!

[I am constantly on the lookout for useful articles/websites I can recommend to my readers. This is one!]

Here are excerpts with the clickable link to learn more:

Earlier this year, the price on the blockbuster book, The Girl on the Train, was slashed from $11.99 to $1.99 for one day only.

Previously, Gone Girl was discounted from $9.99 to $2.99, and The Da Vinci Code was given away for free for one week. In all three cases, the discounts were only available for the ebook version.
Most people were completely unaware of these huge deals.

A select group of readers, however, had the inside scoop on all these deals and more. They were using BookBub, a daily email that alerts readers to free and deeply discounted ebooks that are available for a limited time.

Over 5 million people have signed up for BookBub’s free service. Readers sign up with just an email address, and then select their favorite genres. Each day, BookBub sends an email with free and discounted bestselling ebooks in the selected genres.

Just click, download, and read on any device: Kindle, Nook, iPad, iPhone, Droid,

Continue reading

How to Show True Patriotism That Can Make Nigeria Achieve Her True Potential

I fly the Nigerian flag high everywhere I travel by constantly striving to be an epitome of good ethical conduct and excellent performance at

You cannot show true patriotism with the words you utter alone. You need to act it out – with confidence, and conviction too. In other words you must walk your talk.

Too often we have people who say good things about Nigeria and profess undying love for, yet they readily engage in unbecoming conduct that gives Nigeria a bad name.

How to Show True Patriotism That Can Make Nigeria Achieve Her True Potential

Nigeria does not need adverts or jingles to tell people, especially foreigners, how great she is.

What she needs is simply for as many Nigerians as possible to form the habit of speaking/acting continually in a manner that gets Nigeria, and Nigerians talked (and thought) about in the best possible terms by as many people, especially foreigners, as possible.

If I can confidently buy clothes and shoes at pocket friendly prices in Nigeria’s Lagos for instance, where my family still lives, without being scared of getting cheated, I would have no need to wait till I return to Cotonou to buy those items(which is what I’ve been doing).

Unfortunately from my experiences over the past 3 years since I began shuttling between Lagos and Cotonoiu, I’ve found people I buy from in Benin to be more trustworthy and sincere.

They tell you the truth and give you what you pay for. In contrast many sellers in Nigeria do the opposite, often fleecing their customers for extra gain.

Late last year (2016) I had to return to Nigeria thrice in one week to replace laptop chargers sold to me by a vendor in Lagos’ Ikeja Computer Village.

The first time I came back to complain, the wonderful guy actually tried to make me pay for the replacement.

In Benin most sellers would gladly take back the problematic item and replace/fix it as may be necessary!

Why I say all this: My patriotism never makes me unwilling to point out and demand correction of any shortcomings I observe regarding my country or its people, whenever they occurs.

To accurately claim ownership of authentc leadership status, one must be willing to subject one’s self to the most ecxacting standards possible and meet/exceed them consistently.

You don’t verbally lay claim to leadership:

You must first of all demonstrate incontrovertible competence and proficiency. Doing so will help you command the recogintion of those matter (rhought leaders).

In the case of Nigeria as a nation, we must make the aforementioned happen before we can realistically expect her to be seen to be great.

To make Nigeria become the true Giant she has the (much hackneyed) potential to become, Nigerians must begin to act and speak in the ways prescribed above

Tayo Solagbade Junior clocked 2 Years Old on 8th April 2016: Highlight Video, Photos featuring no-oven charcoal stove baked cakes, pizzas etc made by his siblings

I LOVE all – of my kids with ALL my heart, and I LIVE for them through the work I do.

This video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hj6RECNvMWE&feature=youtu.be) of my 2 year old son was recorded just before I left for Cotonou, the afternoon of the following day -Saturday – after his birthday.

T-boy is what I call him (Tayo Solagbade Junior being what I named him) – but his mother and siblings, plus grandparents (in a grand conspiracy) all call him David. Na wa O.

Anyway he clocked 2 years old on FRIDAY 8TH APRIL 2016 and his siblings put their home based baking biz to serve him.

He and his siblings had taken their home made Pizzas and other gifts to celebrate with their cousins that day.

So I got them to bake him the special cake with candles the morning after. That was their first ever formal effort at using icing on their cakes – and it was a BIG struggle, with yours truly getting involved, even though I knew next to nothing about it.

We managed to get it done – and I was sooooo proud of my boys and girls. Since arriving Cotonou? I have been showing off the videos and photos :-)

See photos along with this video on my blog below:

tboycake

tboycakes

tboycakestable

tboycakestable2

tboyetc1

tboyetc2

tboyetc3

tboypiano

tboypizza

cakecut

Facebook update:

tboy8thapril

pz1

pz2

RELATED

PII 007: Parenting Is NOT A Democracy [Hint: The Need to Assert Yourself to Get Results That Matter – Lesson from True Story of a Girl Who Made Pizza Without An Oven]

Socio-Economic Stability Makes People Less Inclined to be Dishonest [True Story: Lady hawker in Cotonou offers to send me (via e-top up) N250 Naira worth of MTN Benin airtime, and I agreed – giving her the money, knowing that I could not recognize or locate her. Read this article to find out what happened!]

Conversation between Me (Tayo Solagbade) & Lady Hawker in Cotonou – shown in the photo below (Translated from French to English):

This hawker – a total stranger – offered to pay for/send me (via e-top up) N250 Naira worth of MTN Benin airtime, and I agreed – giving her the money, knowing that I could not recognize or locate her. Read on to find out what happened!

Date: Sunday 10th April 2016 | Time: 9.46a.m | Location: Stade de L’amitie, Cotonou – Benin Republic

Conversation between Me (Tayo Solagbade) & Lady Hawker in Cotonou - shown in the photo below (Translated from French to English): This hawker - a total stranger - offered to pay for/send me (via e-top up) N250 Naira worth of MTN Benin airtime, and I agreed - giving her the money, knowing that I could not recognize or locate her. Read on to find out what happened!

Me: Good morning madam. Could you please tell me where I can buy some MTN airtime for my mobile line?

Lady: Ehm, I don’t think there’s anyone inside the stadium selling. But you’ll find them just outside the gate.

Me: Argh. But I’ve only just come in all the way from the gate to watch the Handball players training here. I’m not ready to go back out yet. Anyway, thanks for your help.

Lady (walks away, then suddenly turns around and walk back to me): Let me get it for you. Write down your phone number on a piece of paper, so I can get one of them to sell the airtime via “TRANSFER to your line.

Me: Thanks. But I don’t have a pen on me.

Lady Hawker: Maybe you can ask the security guard at the entrance to the FM/TV building over there (pointing to the office complex about 20 metres away from the courts.

Me: Ok (Soon I return and hand her my MTN Benin Republic mobile phone number)

Lady Hawker: How much airtime do you want to buy – and what network?

Me: MTN 500 FCFA (equivalent to about N230 – by the currently CRAZY Naira exchange rate)

NB: I give her a 1000 FCFA note, and she gives me 500 FCFA change. Then I thank her and she starts walking away…

Up until the above stated moment, I’d felt quite at ease with all we’d been doing. It was something that I’d done and seen done countless times since 2013, when I first began living in this country.

But a few seconds after she’d gone ahead, the Nigerian in me (i.e. that survival instinct from growing up and raising my own kids in a contrasting society where VERY little is done based on trust) took me over.

I thought to myself:

Tayo, just how gullible can you be on a Sunday morning? Especially considering you just came in from Lagos, last night? You’re really beginning to lose your touch! You don’t even know what this lady looks like for heaven’s sake! What if she does NOT buy/send the airtime as promised? How would you track her down?”

It was in that instant, on reflex, that I took out my smart phone and took the photo shown above.

But just as I took the photo of her walking away, I immediately felt stupid for 3 reasons:

1. The photo did not capture her face – only her back. That would be of little help in locating or identifying her.

2. The amount of money in question was really nothing – no big deal (a mere N250 – less than $1 USD): I’d lost or given away many multiples of that in the past!

3. My experiences from 3 years of living in Benin strongly indicated there were only about 5 chances in 100 that the lady – or indeed any other person who made me such an offer in Benin – would do such a dishonest thing.

You see, I’ve lived *and/or interacted) with people belonging to various income groups and social status in Benin. What I’ve discovered is that most of them have what Muhammad Ali told Zairean citizens he met, that they should NEVER lose i.e a “dignity in their poverty”.

Whether or not the Zaireans took Ali’s advice – given when he came down for his Rumble in the Jungle fight with George Foreman – is left for the reader to decide. My point here is that people in Benin strike me as having lots of “dignity in their poverty” – including the poorest among them.

In other words, even though majority may not boast income close to what their counterparts in Nigeria have, MANY carry themselves with pride and confidence, refuse to be talked down to or disrespected, and boldly state to anyone that there are certain dishonest acts they will not stoop to.

Don’t get me wrong: people here also do bad things – but those are generally more the exception than the norm.

Their morals and values remain quite well preserved so that certain positive behaviours continue to be encouraged and rewarded.

After reminding myself of the above, I dismissed my Nigeria-based-fears from my mind and focused on watching the handballers train.

It was well over 30 minutes later that I noticed on my phone, that the airtime receipt alert had arrived less than 10 minutes after the lady left me!

In other words, the lady-hawker did as she’d promised!

And she did so despite NOT asking for compensation of any sort from me: NOT even that I buy something from her!

Wow!

Now, if only I could boast that I would readily do what I did with this TOTAL stranger of a lady-hawker, with her counterpart in Nigeria.

If only I could proudly beat my chest that I could – and would – do it.

Sadly, much as I do not wish to make my country – or its people – look any worse than some already see it, the truth is that the chances of finding someone like that Cotonou-lady-hawker in Lagos, for instance would be very low.

Honest ones like her exist, but not in anything close to the percentage extant in Benin Republic’s Cotonou, for instance..

YOU – the reader – could put on a priest’s clothes in Lagos, and still NOT readily find anyone willing to give you money so you can send him/her airtime later on :-)

So how come these people in Benin have such an overwhelming majority of well behaved members in their society?

I believe it has to do with the fact that they have their basic needs: food, shelter, clothing and security of lives and property reasonably well taken care of. As a result, they feel no psychological pressure or desperation to get and keep/hoard as much extra as possible.

Be it petrol or electricity, food, water etc: Prices remain stable and quantities needed remain accessible/affordable for a large majority of the population, no matter how “poor” they are..

For the most part, unlike what obtains in Nigeria, the socio-economic circumstances in Benin are not in a perpetual state of negative flux – so the citizens naturally FEEL no need perpetually engage in hustling!!

When people know they do not need to rush or fight to get what they need, they stop worrying about how to get it. It is part for this reason, that people in (or from) Benin Republic often get described by Nigerians as being too laid back.

When I first arrived Cotonou in 2013, I regularly bought a plate of my favourite quick meal “Spaghetti Rouge avec Viande” (Red Spaghetti mixed with cubed meat along with a piece of bread) for 300 FCFA – which was N100 equivalent at the time.

Earlier this afternoon, 3 years on, I still ate the same meal – same quantity too – for exactly the same price.

3 years after!

In contrast, so many food items/meals have had their prices climb upwards in Nigeria since 2013. Indeed since January 2016, prices have been leaping, not just rising.

And that’s what puts psychological and financial pressure on most Nigerians, so that those who lack the required mental discipline/stamina eventually give in to the misguided impulse to do bad things.

So people are living with a mindset of desperation – and like the saying goes, desperate people do desperate things. This state of affairs is no respecter of status.

This is why many supposedly well off Nigerians baffle visiting foreigners by their willingness to readily stoop VERY low to steal any virtually any amount, from any source or anyone (like British expatriate Tim Newman let on in his article).

It’s also why some of the few Nigerians in Lagos who may be willing to do YOU a favour like the Cotonou lady did for me, would still demand you give them a tip or gift, or buy from them as a condition for doing it.

My message is that we can all rise above our circumstances – no matter how tough they might be.

No matter how hard things are, doing something dishonest will NEVER make it better. You may get a relief in the short term, but it will come back to haunt – and even bite! – you in the long run.

The wise alternative is for you to adopt a similar mindset to the one I use:

Tell yourself you will never do anything that does not edify your spirit. That you will never be guilty of failing to deliver what you promise to another. That you will never lose faith in the ability of the Creator to give you what you need, as you continue to live an upright life.

If you do that, with diligent persistence, you will NEVER lack what you truly need. Something will always come through just when it really matters most.

Take it from me: I’ve been there countless times!

Financial Freedom Goes Beyond Just Having Money, to Also Being FREE to Live Your Life the Way You Want It [True Story: How Relocating to Cotonou on 1st April 2013 Helped Me Succeed As a Location Independent Multipreneur]

“(The Church Records & Accounts Manager has) really helped me in the preparation of my monthly Accounts..(CB Solutions’ service is okay. The personnel is always on ground whenever you call him and solution to problem is (provided) without delay or alteration of data“- Adebisi Folayan Finance & Admin Manager, Anglican Church Of The Ascension, Opebi, Lagos.

(The General Accounts Manager) has been a tremendous improvement in our weekly and monthly report.. my Medical Director expressed his happiness when he saw the report…Mr Tayo, I am impressed by your talent, you’re thorough in your job, sincere and friendly with your client. Keep it up.” – Rev. Mfon Inyang, Manager-Accounts, Med-In Specialist Hospital & pharmaceutical Company, Ogudu, Lagos.

Preparation of staff salary has now been reduced from days to just two days. (The Payslip Generator) has helped me a lot…I really commend the CB Solutions* for (an) excellent job. It has solved my organisation’s accounting problem. More grease to your elbow.” – Adeniyi S. Elegbede, Accountant Motayo Hospital, Ikeja, Lagos.

The above are just a few examples of handwritten testimonials written in 2008 by some of my clients, after they had been using custom Excel-VB software I built for their organizations. Click here to learn more about the apps.

I made the very first sale of my Excel-VB software development service in 2004, to a consultant who hired me to build an app, branded in his company name, which he sold to an oil and gas service company.

Like I’ve said in past articles, the market for custom Excel-VB software was practically non-existent at the time I quit my job in 2002, to begin offering the service.

No one was even offering anything like Excel-VB consultancy, talk less of providing software development services.

I visited big name business and computer schools and found that despite offering what they called “Advanced” Excel Training, few of them offered anything resembling my On Demand 4 Day Excel-VB Programming Coaching Workshop. Actually the closest they came was “Introduction to the Macro Recorder”.

Up till today, over a decade later, NONE of them offer training for interested persons on commercial Excel-VB Software Development Services, like the one accessible via my One-On-One Coaching (or the pocket-friendly Excel-VB Annual Membership Club and Competition)

As I’ve noted in sharing details about the maiden edition of my FREE Monthly Excel-VB Workshop for club members, I stopped taking on client projects requiring me to work on client premises back in 2011.

This became necessary following a series of not-so-pleasant experiences of attempted abuse by some exploitative minded ones.

Instead I followed my long standing dream of working from home to earn 80% or more of my income.

When I initially took that decision, few people around me, that I told about my plans, felt it was a wise decision. In their view, I was trying to adopt a strategy used in foreign societies like the USA, in selling my products and services to Nigerians in Nigeria – a people and society unwilling to accept that approach.

I disagreed, and told them so – adding that my approach would be a modified version of what was being done in the USA and other developed markets.

You see, I understood the psychology of the people in my target market and knew what I needed to say/write and do, to make them buy from me, without seeing me.

However, the challenge of a lack of conducive working environment kept me from getting my plans up and running like I knew I really needed, if I was to achieve my goal.

From erratic power supply to hostile socioeconomic and political climate, so many negative forces conspired to repeatedly throw me off balance.

In late 2012, after I got a crazily inflated electricity bill for November 2012, from PHCN – the country’s power company – I knew I needed to change my environment, if I wanted to make any meaningful headway with my plans.

So, on 1 April 2013, I relocated to Cotonou, in what would eventually mark the beginning of a successful transition to a life I’d always dreamed about. Click here to read my very first blog post in that country, from my hotel room.

It took over 6 months of hard work but I made it happen. I had all I needed. 24 hour electricity, stable polity and socioeconomic circumstances.

My new life was characterized by my ability to rapidly build up a critical mass of response generating web marketing/business promotion content online, in a way that triggered a regular flow of sales leads and passive income to me, without my leaving home.

On the average, I worked round the clock – typically 19 hours on the average, creating and uploading new web marketing content online. Stopping only to take a meal, rest a bit and get right back to work.

I was setting up my products and services to get found and purchased even when I was asleep, based on principles advocated by Robert Kiyosaki.

To lean more about how what I did back then, and which I still do today, generates regular passive income for me, read my article titled How You Can Create Income Generating Assets Without Having a Job or ANY Money! (True Story).

Today, I enjoy a life of financial freedom – which goes beyond what some wrongly assume equates to being rich.

Robert Kiyosaki said his rich dad defined intelligence as the ability to make finer distinctions in life.

I imbibed that definition way back in 2000 when I first read his book (Rich Dad, Poor Dad) and over a decade later, his other books that I’ve read, plus countless email newsletters have convinced me that he practices what he preaches!

For instance in an email broadcast he sent out yesterday(see screen shot below), he noted that being rich does not mean the same thing as being financially free.

So many people do not get this. Robert points out that there are lots of rich, broke people. By this he refers to those who spend all they make such that they are often one “job” or payment away from losing all they have if they get nothing to replace all they spend.

For instance in an email broadcast he sent out yesterday(see screen shot here), he noted that being rich does not mean the same thing as being financially free.

 

In contrast, financially free people are those who have a mindset that enables them do anything they want in life, so that they are free from stress or fear or worries and other negative emotions.

To paraphrase Mr. Kiyosaki, Financial Freedom goes beyond just having money, to also being FREE to live your life the way you want it.

And that’s what I successfully began to do for myself when I resolved to stop going to work for clients and focused my energies on selling my market tested products and services to a global online audience of paying clients.

Since I began doing this, and especially within the last 3 years since I found my way to Benin Republic’s amazingly conducive environment, I’ve been able to live MORE like this than ever before.

Today, my new found status enables me to travel and stay ANYWHERE I want, for as long as I please, without worrying about my income or clients.

The above is what makes it possible for me to accurately describe myself as a Location Independent Multipreneur.

Virtually all I do to make money can be done remotely, using the web. As a result, I enjoy the freedom to spend time with those I care about, without experiencing any loss of income.

That is what it means to be financially free.

You do not need to be a money bag to start experiencing it. But adopting the recommended mind set WILL eventually make you RICH!

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PII 006: Succeed by Becoming an Expert at Solving Real World Problems [Hint: Highlights from Maiden Edition of Tayo Solagbade’s FREE Monthly Workshop for his MS Excel Heaven Visual Basic Automation Club Members Held on Sat 19th March 2016 in Lagos-Nigeria]