Saturday 8 February 2014

TRIATS OF SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS

It takes more than a great business idea and a huge capital base to hit it big in the business world, SIMON EJEMBI writes
It is true that limited access to funds has been a major setback for businesses in Nigeria.
The situation is particularly bad for small-sized firms.
“Nigerian small and medium-sized enterprises’ access to finance is low compared to other African countries like Kenya. Most working capital is financed through internal funds,” the Head, Finance and Private Sector Development, World Bank, Michael Wong, said at a meeting organised by the Nigerian Association of Small and Medium-Scale Enterprises in Lagos on Wednesday.
Several entrepreneurs with tales of failure have often blamed their inability to transform their business ideas to thriving companies on this.
Experts are, however, quick to note that access to funds and a great business idea are not all it takes for a business to succeed.
Successful entrepreneurs admit that such things as hard work and passion are equally important.
According to the Chief Executive Officer, Zanibal On-Demand Business Solutions, an indigenous software development company, Mr. UchennaIgwebuike, an individual requires the following traits, among others, to be successful in business:
Clarity of purpose
According Igwebuike, for an entrepreneur to succeed, he or she needs to understand the purpose of the business, and focus is key in that regard.
He says, “One of the things needed is focus. You need to have focus. You need to have an understanding of where you want to go and focus on that irrespective of the challenges along the way.”
Ability to manage failure
Igwebuike says any entrepreneur who wants to succeed in business and in life has to embrace failure and realise that failure is just a way of learning and guiding an individual to get it right eventually.
 Integrity
The Zanibal CEO adds that integrity is also very important to succeed. “When I say integrity, I mean in every aspect of it – as an intellectual individual. People can look at you and even if they disagree with you in terms of what your opinion is, they will actually realise that what you are saying is based on you advancing what is the best opinion about what you perceive.
Hard work
Hard work is another trait that Igwebuike says entrepreneurs need. According to him, there is the need for people to be willing to go all the way and give ‘150 per cent’ to get things done.
Ability to execute plans
Here, he says good ideas are not all it takes. “It is really not about having ideas on what you need to do, but having the discipline, the focus to stay on course and get things done.
Networking skills
In today’s knowledge-based world, the ability to connect easily with people is very important, according to Igwebuike.
“Sometimes, you want to do certain things or source for fund, you find out that having access to people who will help you to do a whole lot of things can really smoothen your way to being successful,” he says.
He adds that the ability to recognise opportunities and seize them is also vital.
Co-founder, InventRight, LLC, a United States-based company that educates entrepreneurs on how to bring ideas to market, Stephen Key, writes in entrepreneur.com that the following traits are important:
An unwavering passion
The advice to do what you love has become a bit of a cliché. Everyone says, “Find your passion.” But that’s easier said than done.
According to him, being an entrepreneur demands commitment and dedication more than most jobs do.
“If you’re ambivalent or mildly enthused about your product or service, that’s not going to sustain you through the highs and lows that will inevitably occur. If you find something you love enough to want to share with others, that love will fuel and give you purpose,” he writes.
 Open-mindedness
Key explains that the most successful entrepreneurs he knows always remember how much they can learn from others. “They ask for advice. They’re flexible. They soak up the best practices around them like a sponge. Fear of failure can make it easy to grip onto your vision with an iron fist, but rigidity won’t serve you.”
The desire to be an expert
According to Key, entrepreneurs like a challenge. He explains, “If they didn’t, they’d probably have chosen another line of work. But as exciting as it is to consider a new field, high-achieving entrepreneurs know that the benefits of staying in the same industry for a while are immense. When you spend years in the same industry, you learn its history.
“Knowing what’s been done before can help you to identify how it can and should move forward. In the meantime, you’ll build a network of relationships to support yourself in future endeavours, especially when times are lean. Those relationships are invaluable.”
A forward-looking approach
Here, Key explains that it is important for people to know where they are headed as that will keep them from losing focus.
He writes, “Successful entrepreneurs are always thinking ahead. They may stray from their roadmap, and that’s okay, but they have one in mind. Having a clearly established set of goals will keep you from getting stuck. Your goals may be constantly evolving, but if you don’t know where you want to go, chances are, you won’t get anywhere.”
A constant flow of ideas
One more trait successful entrepreneurs have, according to Key, is that they avoid becoming complacent. He says, “Having one project that’s doing well is great. But the successful entrepreneurs I know don’t rest on their laurels. Instead, they’re constantly asking themselves, “What’s next?” They understand that being a successful entrepreneur is a lifestyle choice, not a destination.”
More qualities
For the Managing Director, Enterprise Stockbrokers Plc, Mr. RotimiFakayejo, an entrepreneur who wants to be successful needs the following traits: passion, the grace of God, proper training, support from family and friends, resilience and professional guidance.

How to explore the good of Geese farming

How to explore the good of Geese farming

These days when governments are beginning to direct attention to agribusiness in order to provide enough food and create wealth for its growing populations and more importantly create more jobs for the average unemployed youths in Africa.
In the same vein, many developing countries now recognize the importance of livestock in integrated production systems to provide the sustainable increase in food necessary to feed their rapidly expanding population. Geese farming fits well into such system and are especially well adapted to the humid tropics.
Prince 
Arinze Onebunne, Geese farmer
Prince Arinze Onebunne, Geese farmer
They can provide healthy meat and eggs from natural grazing and seems to be more resistance to diseases than other avian species. Yet, even given these advantages, geese farming has remained a neglected species. Geese play an important role in small-scale farming system as an economic and ecological alternative for weed control and as guard animals.
Raising geese
The production of this animal gives farmers a big chance to increase their income and offers an alternative to chicken and also a means of addressing poverty. It is for these advantages that Jovana Farms launched a nationwide initiative to promote farming of Geese, Ostrich, Quail, Mushroom, Grasscutter, Antelope, Rabbit, Snail, etc.
According to the Managing Consultant/CEO, Jovana Farms, Prince Arinze Onebunne,Geese farming can commence even with a unit normally called a foundation stock, which is sold for between N40,000 to N60,000 depending on the specie. He said, a unit comprises 2-males and 6-females.
Therefore with N65,000 you are already in good business. It may interest you to know that at Jovana Farms we have for sale fast growing species of geese and other animals including large quantity of quail and geese eggs.
“Geese are found all over the world, but at present, Geese farming is economically important only in Asia, America, some parts of Africa and Central Europe.
Breeds of Geese
“Some European breeds, such as the Emden and Toulouse, have been introduced into tropical developing countries with notable success. Moreover, Chinese geese which are widely kept in South-East Asia, seem to be especially promising for small-holders.
They are very good layers, active foragers (making them economical and useful as weeders), and the most alert and “talkative” breed and they produce the leanest quality white meat”.
Geese as a multipurpose animal
“Small-scale animal farmers subsist mainly on the product of their own farms, scarcity of land, labour and capital obliges them to reorient their livestock production towards species that are cheap and easy to maintain and that provide animal protein as well as cash income.
Geese are particularly well suited to such systems. Mature geese are independent, larger than other poultry species and thus less vulnerable to predator when kept in small flocks and allowed to roam the farmland, field or backyard.
They are adept scavengers, requiring less attention than any other domestic bird. Geese adapt easily to captivity if small quantity of supplementary feed are provided to boost their rapid growth. Thus, requiring little extra work, these animals supply nutritious meat, huge eggs and rich fat for cooking, as well as soft down and feather for bedding, clothing, upholstery, which makes them particularly appropriate for providing farmers with a supplementary income..

Four men in trouble


Four men in trouble

 February 8, 2014
Four men in trouble
■ Accused of impregnating 12-year-old pry school pupil

As she sat beside her mother with her face radiating innocence and a protruding tummy, nothing seems to have changed for Kehinde Williams, a 12- year old pupil, allegedly impregnated by four men, who are father’s tenants.
Her guiltless mien as a child betrayed the worry and anxiety being expressed by her mother and of course the society over her predicament.
The four men have been accused of taking turn to rape her at different times mostly on her mother’s bed. Three of them now in prison custody are:  Shaibu Isiaka, 29; John Obah, 30; Vincent 28, while one Idris, who is also in his late 20s is on the run.
Shaibu, married and has a child works with a private security company, while Idris, also works in another security company and lives with Shaibu.
The victim’s father died last year January and her mother, Mrs. Shade Williams, a petty trader is saddled with the responsibility of training Kehinde and her two siblings. They live in Oworonshoki, a suburb of Lagos State.
Kehinde, a pupil of a public school in the same neighbourhood has already registered and preparing for common entrance examination into one of the state’s secondary schools when the bubble burst that she was pregnant.
Unable to control her emotion, with tears strolling down her cheeks, Kehinde’s mother, narrated to Saturday Sun how she got to know that her 12- year old daughter was pregnant.
According to her, she thought it was a dream and when it finally dawned on her that it wasn’t a dream, she felt that the world was collapsing on her.
As a petty trader she leaves home between 8 and 9 am daily and returns between 7 and 8pm and so couldn’t notice the physiological development and changes in her daughter that suggested that she was pregnant. According to her, two women who are their neighbours drew her attention and asked her to ask Kehinde some questions.
To her, this unsolicited advice sounded bizarre and was almost peeved on why her neighbours should think in that direction, with a suspicion that they wanted to make a mockery of her.
According to her “I didn’t notice the change but had observed that her buttocks were getting fatter and I thought the food she was eating has started manifesting in her adding some flesh. Apart from the food she was eating at home, whenever she was going to school, I used to give her much money so that she would not be interested in what other pupils were buying or eating. I do everything to make her happy and comfortable.”
“Nothing like pregnancy ever came to my mind; I never imagined such because each time I asked her the last time she saw her monthly menstrual period, she told me, ‘last month.”
“Based on this suggestion from our neigbhours, the following morning I asked her to urinate into a cup and I took the urine sample to medical laboratory and the result was positive – that she was pregnant and I took her for pregnancy scan and the scan revealed that she was already six months pregnant and I nearly collapsed.”
The cat let out of the bag
When the scale had fallen off Mrs Williams’s eyes and it was well established that she would soon be a grand mother, she asked Kehinde who was responsible for the pregnancy.
The beleaguered woman said she was thrown aback when her daughter opened up and started mentioning the names of their tenants as people who have violated her.
She said: “Kehinde  mentioned Shaibu Isiaka, who is working with a security company and because of the uniform, the neighbourhood mistakes him for a policeman. He is married and has a child; he is now in prison custody. She also mentioned Idris, who lives with Shaibu in one room apartment, and also works in another security company. When the bubble burst, Idris ran away and we have been to his work place and we were told he has not reported for duty for some days. She also mentioned John Obah and Vincent Amaechi.
“All of them except Idris are in prison custody as we speak because we had to get them arrested and charged while we wait for the outcome of the case. I don’t know why these people should bath me with hot water mixed with pepper. Even when my husband was alive and now, these tenants are treated as members of the family. I usually help Shaibu’s wife with food and money. Sometimes when they don’t have anything to eat, the woman would come to me and I would give her some food items and money. See how they have treated me.
“My daughter told me that these men were raping her on my bed and their houses countless times. Immediately she comes back from school, if Shaibu or Idris was off duty, they would come to my room and start molesting her on my matrimonial bed. “For John and Vincent, one would go and after having his turn, he would tell the other to go that she would not tell her mother. That was how they defiled my daughter for many months and look at the result.”
The fear of what her mother would do to her prevented Kehinde from reporting her bitter experience in the hands of these men to her mother.
According to her mother, “ When I asked Kehinde why she didn’t tell me when these things were going on, she said she was afraid of what I would do to her since I was always warning her not to allow any man to touch her; that any day a man touches her and she gets pregnant that I would throw her out of the house; that she refused to tell me because she doesn’t have any where to go if I carry out my threat of throwing her out of the house.”
Saturday Sun asked Kehinde why she didn’t tell her mother; she corroborated what her mother said. According to her, her mother was always saying what she would do to her if any man touches her and “ I was afraid.”
Not knowing that her current status is a hindrance to her education, she was very eager to go back to school and play with her peers.
By the time she is delivered of the baby, the family is now banking on a DNA test to determine who among the four men is the father of the baby.





Nwakalor Chinonso
Marketing/Management Consultant
Founder/Speaker
Zenith Educational Research Institute
Awka, Anambra State, Nigeria.
nollykalorz@gmail.com
+2348039260270
+2348121188487