On my way to become a millionaire.
No politics money, no rich dad, rich uncle that doesn't regard his own brother, made my first million not by yahoo but hardwork, conistency, mentorship, discipline.
All the thanks go to @Jesusboy_Lion and his community members, @EmmaBams1 and his CMS course, spend money on knowledge it's really worth it guys.
I get that Y'all want to better your prospects in life , especially considering how hard Nigeria is...
But it doesn't deny that fact that people that studied a particular course in school and pivoting to another course just because they saw the job opportunities,
Can ICAN restrict its exam to only people who is doing finance related courses in university? Tired of zoologist and plant scientist dragging wanting to be a chartered accountant with me. Just imagine me writing the bar exams with people who actually studied law.
simply because they was too many supply in the market than the market requires....
Everybody is just talking from a selfish point of view
You can't useless your time in school or making the wrong choice of education in school for you to come out to steal someone spot.
@powerfulbadeeu@jannygel Ideally... That role should have been for people who read the course in school.
This way, there is job opportunities for people straight from school....
Can't even believe it's 2 years already 😂
But this feels like fortitious timing, especially with this olodo uprising conversation that's been going on.
I have no issue with population growth, however we're churning out far more people than we can cater for.
We'll be the third largest country in the world by 2050, but how many of those people will be educated? How many will have access to quality healthcare? How many will live above $2 per day? How many won't be working low paying jobs? How many won't be trying to japa? How many won't be pushed into yahoo and runs?
We can sit in our armchairs and cheer on our exportation of human capital to the West.
But how much of that human capital isn't funnelled into low paying jobs over there? How much of that human capital isn't used to prop up the financial systems of the West by funding their pensions through taxation?
When the fortunes of the Western empires were drying up back in the day, the idea was to look outward and set up colonies to prop up their finances. And we're clearly doing the same thing over again.
Their ancestors brought mirrors and guns and took slaves to work their plantations.
This time they're bringing gigs and low paying jobs and taking 40 years off you to prop up their financial system.
All for what?
For a mansion in Enugu that you'll step foot in once in 5 years? Or investments your kids will sell off because they can't live here?
We are a market. But maybe it's just a 22nd century slave market.
I like how she mentioned the informal economy, and until we take a leaf out of China or Singapore or maybe India's playbook, we'll keep fucking like ants and breeding even more poverty.
Other relevant fields made Barrier to Entry very difficult.
That is why there are some profession today that you can do just that and live a comfortable life without having multiple jobs.
This is the same reason why it wasn't fair at a time when bootcamps were churning software engineers into the market after 6months .
Too much supply of tech professionals in the market watered down the job Market......
After the promise that you will get job in an oil company as a Geologist or Geophysicist.
And then it didn’t happen, then you enroll to become an accountant via ICAN.
Just like that….it not fair to those who spend 4 years studying the accounting.
Can accounting students also become a lawyer by writing Bar exams?
Read books.
Most of the problems people face with money, career, and life are not new. Someone struggled with it, studied it, and wrote the solution down decades ago.
Books compress experience. You get 30 or 40 years of someone else’s lessons in a few hours. That is why reading saves you time, money, and unnecessary mistakes.
If you want better results, borrow better thinking from people who have already been where you are trying to go.
The day venture capitalists, private equity firms, or serious entrepreneurs decide to enter and properly structure the industries many of us ndị Igbo believe we “control” through petty trading, that is the day we’ll realise that small-scale trading alone is not the path to long-term economic power.
Take the spare parts industry, for example. We dominate it today, but dominance without structure, innovation, manufacturing, technology, logistics, and capital is fragile, and we have none of that! The day someone builds an integrated system around it, distribution networks, warehousing, financing, e-commerce, data, and even local production, many of the Igbo traders who think they own the market will be pushed aside.
We should be praying that we are the ones building those structures, not waiting for outsiders to do it for us.
Trading creates income. Institutions create wealth. Industries create power!
The sweet spot is spotting a niche.
There are alot of search terms on amazon for this niche.
There are suggestions from amazon for this niche.
But no single book on that niche.
Pray you find a gold mine like this.
Whenever i find such , i halt all my plans to