The online chat around morning routines is overcomplicated and impossible to achieve, in this video I go through the 4 steps that I take every morning to set myself up for success.
Watch the latest video on my Youtube channel (Thinklikemikee) for a deeper dive
👋🏻 Hey Twitter — allow me to reintroduce myself.
When I was younger, I just wanted to be great. I didn't know what that meant exactly. I just felt it... this deep pull toward something significant.
As I've gotten older, I've realised that the most meaningful version of greatness isn't about how impressive your life looks from the outside. It's about what you gave yourself to. What you built. Who you served.
So. My name is Mike Omoniyi.
I'm the founder and CEO of The Common Sense Network @TCSNetwork — a media platform built on the belief that honest, balanced conversation still matters in a world that's increasingly allergic to nuance.
I founded On Mission @weareonmission_ a leadership and discipleship organisation that has now reached over 14,000 young people in person. I run Common Sense Studios, a production studio in South East London where we help people tell stories worth telling.
I've spoken at the United Nations. I've appeared on BBC Breakfast and GB News. I've been named by the Financial Times as one of the UK's 100 most influential leaders in tech. I've had conversations with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle that reached millions of people.
And if I'm honest — I've spent most of those 15 years with my head down, building, and barely talking about any of it.
That changes now.
I believe faith should inform how we build. I believe ideas matter and that most people are capable of far more rigorous thinking than the algorithm gives them credit for.
I believe the best organisations don't just solve problems — they change the conditions that create those problems in the first place.
I'm not interested in how clean my life looks to people on the outside. I'm committed to submitting to God, knowing he is the true author of how it all turns out.
If any of that resonates, follow along. I write every week at the link in my profile.
Good to meet you. Let's build something.
Dream Big when setting goals. Years ago I set a goal to own a studio and I'm sat in it now. After you watch this video, you'll dream big and set bigger goals too.
Watch Here: https://t.co/V4wP3eCWEm
Last weekend, somewhere between 50,000 and 500,000 people marched through London. That's not a typo. The organisers and the Met Police are that far apart.
The Together Alliance billed it as the largest anti-far-right demonstration in British history. The police said turnout was closer to 50,000.
A few thoughts. 🧵
The first thing worth noting is that crowd counting is genuinely hard. There's no universally agreed methodology, satellite imagery takes time to process, and dense urban marches spread across multiple routes are notoriously difficult to estimate. Both figures may be offered in good faith.
But the gap matters beyond logistics. When the same event is described as 500,000 by one side and 50,000 by another, people aren't just getting different numbers, they're getting different stories. One is a movement. The other is a protest. Its the same street but a completely different meaning.
What does this tell us about the moment we're in? That political events are now immediately processed through narrative before they're processed through fact. The story of the story becomes the story.
The march itself raises real questions worth sitting with. Reform is surging. Tommy Robinson drew 150,000 people last September. The Together Alliance says the majority of Britain rejects that politics. They may be right. But a majority on a march in London on a Saturday is not the same as a political majority in Stoke, Sunderland, or Swindon.
Britain is genuinely divided — not just between left and right, but between people who feel heard and people who feel ignored. No march, from any direction, resolves that.
The hard work is in the conversation after everyone goes home.
@TCSNetwork for more!
🚨NEW | After the Applause: What Real Peace in the Middle East Would Take
"The ceasefire isn’t peace. Gaza is in ruins, Israel is anxious, and the world is already looking away.”
@MikeOmoniyiCS
https://t.co/ScWDKEBtNm
5 apps that’ll quietly change your life (and steal your screen time for good).
Head over to my YouTube to see why these made the list.
https://t.co/d3hY1Gclrd
Big day for Israel. Even if you’re not a Trump fan, you’ve got to acknowledge his role in getting hostages home, pushing a ceasefire, and opening aid routes into Gaza. Still, as the cameras roll, let’s not forget the tens of thousands of Gazans killed, the ruins people are returning to, and how long the road to real peace still is.
This is not over, and we should still keep our eyes on this conflict
🏴 Back in London
Today I headed over to @mrmoneyjar’s Podcast in central London, and we had a good time. We tackled UK politics, US politics, life, and faith. Really excited for this episode to come out.
Head over and subscribe to his show
#fyp#mrmoneyjar#podcast
Charlie Kirk’s shooting. Attempts on Trump’s life.
We’re asking it straight: Can the use of force in political protest ever be justified?
🗓 Sat 18 Oct, 6pm
📍 SE London
🎟 Early bird tickets out now – limited.
https://t.co/JamIhLUnnT
Minimising Distractions is Key
In this episode, we sit down with David Elikwu — writer, strategist, and author of the new book Sovereign. We talk about what it really means to take control of your time, build systems that last.
https://t.co/3bA0e04XNA
Think you’re good at debating?
If you’re guilty of these 10 mistakes, you’re just loud, not logical. 😅
Catch the full video on YouTube now.
https://t.co/5kcuNyW2BW
#debate#logic#YouTube#philosophy