As a recent graduate, I'm seeking full-time roles, internships, freelance opportunities, and mentorship in Data Analysis, Business Analysis, Research, and Statistical Analysis
I'm also available for statistical analysis, data cleaning and viz, report writing, and research support
In 2023, I walked in and deliberated in the same room with the Mayor of Sicily.
Only Education made that possible.
The rooms I've walked into, the hands I've interacted with, the dreams my mind has incubated - Education was the only reason.
SCHOOL IS NOT SCAM.
But why them dey put light at the end of the tunnel? Wetin do the entrance?
Infact there can be more than one lamp holder, at the entrance, in the tunnel, and at the end.
I actually agree with him. Power BI specialist are not Special.
4 years ago, I was obsessed with tools. Every week there was a new platform/tools to learn.
Then I moved into commercial and digital strategy, marketing, product analytics, and now public sector.
Looking back over the last four years, I genuinely can’t count how many tools I’ve touched.
At some point I stopped chasing tools.
Because I realised they’re rarely the bottleneck.
The analysts who consistently influence decisions aren’t the ones who know the most software.
They’re the ones who understand the business well enough to ask the right questions and turn data into decisions.
When I joined the public sector, I spent less time learning another dashboarding or pipeline tool and more time learning:
➝ The organisation’s business language.
➝ The KPIs and metrics stakeholders actually care about.
➝ What success looks like for the organisation.
➝ Governance, decision-making processes, and how teams work together.
Why?
Because I’d rather sound credible in a meeting than impressive on LinkedIn.
Some days I’m presenting to more than 150 people. Nobody asks which SQL IDE I use.
They care whether I understand the problem, explain the evidence clearly, and make a recommendation they can trust.
If you’re starting your data career, focus on these three things equally:
➝ Tool context - Learn the tools well enough to execute efficiently.
➝ Business domain context - Understand how the organisation creates value, measures success, and makes decisions in a specific.
➝ Application context - Know when, why, and how to apply your technical skills to solve real business problems.
Tools will change.
Business problems won’t.
That’s the skill that compounds over an entire career.
@adesolayomii@SirJarus God bless you for this. They will be equally matched. They the top 2 teams in the tournament, Spain midfield is more compact and technical
Waking up to the news that the kidnapped pupils and teachers in Oyo have been rescued truly brightened my day. May the almighty grant them strength , comfort their families and help them heal from this traumatic experience . ❤️
This!
I've noticed over the years that the more grounded a Yorùbá person is in Yorùbá, the sharper their English tends to be, written and sometimes spoken too.
It is just sad that many Nigerian parents ban their children from speaking Yorùbá at home, convinced that early English is the shortcut to fluency.
There's something linguists call the interdependence hypothesis. It's the idea that skills like vocabulary reasoning, sentence logic, and comprehension aren't relearned from zero in every new language. They transfer. A child who can already argue a point, tell a story with structure, or reason through a proverb in Yorùbá isn't starting English from nothing. They're just moving the same toolbox into a new house. That's why a child who struggles to think clearly in their first language usually struggles just as much in the second, no matter how early you introduce it. I can categorically say that my knowledge of Yorùbá helped me greatly, when I was learning Hausa.
But due to inferiority complex, some people treat deep knowledge of Yorùbá as proof that someone can't handle "real" languages. I pity them.