I spent hours searching online for an asset I needed for work, only to find out later that I already had unlimited access through my workplace’s subscription.
Made me realise many times we look far for what God has already given us. We just don’t tap into it.
One thing I’ve noticed with us Nigerians is that we often don’t get involved in issues unless it affects us personally.
Every other day, someone in the UK is complaining about the Nigerian Embassy @Nigerialondon not answering calls or emails but the truth is, this has been going on for a long time.
That mindset of “E no concern me” is part of the problem because one day, it will concern you and if everyone keeps minding their business, nothing will ever change.
I’ve personally raised this issue at the embassy multiple times, but it feels like I’m the only one speaking up and one voice is rarely enough to drive real change.
If we want better service, we need to act collectively. Complaining online isn’t enough.
My honest advice: if you have an issue, go to the embassy physically.
Make your presence felt. Ask questions. Demand answers respectfully.
Change will only happen when more of us stop staying silent.
Built a company that was every young Nigerian’s dream to be a part of.
Understood design and product like no other did before it was cool.
Forbes 30 under 30.
Tech bro before it became a buzzword.
If Nigeria had a young Steve Jobs, it was him.
Way ahead of his time. Built a product that could’ve been selar + mainstack + nestuge + selfany combined. He had the early mover advantage.
Then just like Jobs, he was set to be ousted from his own company. Forced to sell what he had built.
Disappeared to the US.
But never stopped building.
One day when tech media is serious, they’ll tell the story of Evans Akanno.
Till then, let’s keep pretending Cregital and Disha didn’t happen.
@Mobiolaa@jhaystrong@instablog9ja Most retards like you don't know that weather also affect skin complexion. Living in an environment with lesser sunlight will definitely make your skin lighter. You always want to make it sound like those living in Nigeria don't even get oxygen. Low lives!