@aebsonline All this companies now the are really taking much from Nigeria and giving a drop back to the community, there's no how you will make it to the top 100 on their list forget about it, build your own company
The Chief Executive Officer of BUA Group, Abdul Samad Rabiu, has recounted how he was denied entry into South Africa after his visa expired just one day before his arrival, while foreign travelers were reportedly allowed into the country without visas.
“I do not have a problem with the fact that I was there without the visa and I was returned. I took full responsibility of that. I had an issue with being an African in Africa, being turned away because I do not have a visa and foreigners from other continents were coming in and were allowed to enter without a visa. This must change.”
-Abdul Samad Rabiu— BUA.✅
🎥 : .@ARISEtv
@SAMKLEF It's looks like bully,still u read your Bible and know who's a woman is like the story of Samson, she's doing soft voice,the only people going down is going to be the two men because if anything happens to VDM,Our top man sons goes down for it nd either way it's a man going down
According to the original post, the guy at the gym got a man daughter pregnant, and the man decided to arrest him while he was having a gym session. What would you have done in such a situation?
Steve Jobs on why the greatest breakthroughs come from people who both think and do:
"The doers are the major thinkers. The people that really create the things that change this industry are both the thinker-doer in one person."
He uses Leonardo da Vinci as the perfect example:
"Did Leonardo have a guy off to the side that was thinking five years out in the future what he would paint or the technology he would use to paint it? Of course not. Leonardo was the artist, but he also mixed all his own paints. He also was a fairly good chemist."
Jobs explains that it was this combination of art and science, thinking and doing, that produced Leonardo's exceptional results. And he sees no difference in the technology industry.
He also calls out a common pattern:
People who claim credit for ideas without doing the hard work of execution.
"It's very easy for somebody to say, 'Oh, I thought of this three years ago.' But usually when you dig a little deeper, you find that the people that really did it were also the people that really worked through the hard intellectual problems as well."
The takeaway? Ideas alone aren't enough.
The people who make real contributions are the ones willing to get deep into the details of execution, and it's through that execution that the hardest intellectual problems actually get solved.