Lagos girl. Mother. Wife. Healthcare professional. Learning money, building wealth, chasing freedom. I share what they don't teach you at work. ๐ณ๐ฌ
Six years inside Nigerian healthcare administration taught me one thing nobody puts in the job description:
The system doesn't run on medicine. It runs on documentation.
Wrong code = rejected claim.
Missing record = delayed discharge.
Incomplete file = patient stuck in the middle.
The people keeping it together behind the scenes are the ones nobody sees.
Happy to all healthcare admin professionals today. ๐๐พ
@Matt_Titan_ Technology rarely replaces the businesses that understand their customers. It replaces the repetitive work that keeps those businesses from serving customers better. That's where I think the biggest opportunity is.
@itsalvinhuang Success changes more than your bank account. It changes your thinking, your standards, your discipline, and the problems you're capable of solving. That's often the greatest return on the journey.
@Officially_Kriz Lifestyle inflation is what keeps many people stuck. When a new income stream appears, investing part of it before spending the rest can make a huge difference over time.
@RecruitmentPq The hardest part is often the silence, not the rejection. One interview doesn't define your value. Keep showing up the right opportunity only needs one "yes."
The wealth gap in Nigeria isn't just about the economy. It's about what we were never taught. ๐งต
Nobody sat us down and explained how money actually works. Not our parents, they were figuring it out too. Not our schools, they taught us to get a job, not to build. So we learned by making expensive mistakes. This thread is what I wish someone had told me earlier.
One of the biggest financial advantages you can have isn't a higher salary.
It's a career that keeps increasing your value.
Income pays today's bills.
Skills determine tomorrow's income.
Never stop investing in the person who earns the money.
Your reputation isn't built on your best day.
It's built on the days you're tired and still deliver.
Anyone can perform when everything is going well.
Consistency under pressure is what people remember.
@BrianDEvans An advantage only matters if it's paired with good judgment. I've seen people with every opportunity available still fail because they never learned how to use it well.
@ZRsvibes I think adulthood gets a little easier the day you stop expecting to have all the answers. Most of us are just learning, adjusting, and doing the best we can with what we know today.
@smartnakamoura People often celebrate the apps they use every day, but rarely the infrastructure that makes those apps reliable. The strongest foundations usually get noticed only when they're missing.
@RecruitmentPq Visibility creates opportunities, but credibility is what sustains them. I've seen talented people become known overnight, yet the ones who keep growing are the ones whose work consistently matches their reputation.
One of the biggest career mistakes isn't saying yes too often.
It's saying yes for too long.
The project that stopped teaching you.
The role you've outgrown.
The responsibilities that keep increasing while your growth doesn't.
Loyalty is valuable.
But staying where you're no longer growing has a cost too.
@aminnnn_09 Technical skills get you hired. The ability to explain your thinking, influence decisions, and solve business problems is what keeps expanding your opportunities.
@TomolaGroup A deadline creates urgency, but a reason creates consistency. I've found debt becomes easier to tackle when every payment is connected to the freedom you're buying, not just the balance you're reducing.
@Wearcoby Growth earned through volume is impressive. Growth earned through intentional improvement is even harder to sustain. I've found it's not just showing up every day that compounds, it's getting a little better every day you show up.
@Swagga531584799 Consistency matters, but I think reflection is what makes it valuable. Repeating the same mistake isn't persistence. Learning something from each attempt is.
One thing I've noticed about people who build wealth:
They don't just earn differently.
They think differently.
They ask questions most people never ask:
"What happens if I lose this income?"
"How do I make money without trading more time?"
"What skill will still be valuable five years from now?"
Better questions often lead to better financial decisions.
@Olivia0945 Our future is shaped less by big decisions and more by the standards we refuse to compromise on. Habits reflect those standards, and over time, results reflect our habits.