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Ideas from Tony Elumelu And What Every African Entrepreneur Must Learn From The Legend

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Editor’s Note: This piece was first published in Nkpuhe, our old blog, by our Founder, Dr Ekekwe. But we want to bring this to you – Tekedia is bigger. The lessons from Mr. Elumelu continue to guide our strategy and have changed our perspectives in many ways. In short, after his talk, we do not have any ‘fear’. Why? If he could do it, we too can. Thank you Mr. Tony Elumelu for that wonderful talk.

 

Boston, USA – Nov 21, 2010:  I just made it back from Philadelphia after participating in the Wharton Africa Business Forum (WABF) as a panelist on the topic “Beyond Natural Resources: The future of knowledge-based industries in Africa”.  The theme of the forum, which was organized by African MBA students in the iconic business school, was “A Blueprint for Africa: Navigating the World’s Fastest Growing Continent”. By and large, they delivered. The energy was intense, the intellectual vigor was deep, the pragmatism was real, and on parade were the core of Africa’s brightest future minds on business.

 

Usually, I write my weekly contribution to Harvard Business Review every Sunday. But this week, I will move it to tomorrow morning, in order to share some of my WABF insights. There are many exciting aspects of the forum, but I will be focusing on a man who has inspired me, all these years.

 

Mr. Tony Elumelu delivered the keynote, titled: “Perception and Reality – One African Entrepreneur’s Journey” The Nigerian-born African business legend who through hard work, discipline, and vision helped reshaped Africa’s banking industry shared invaluable business experiences.  He was the immediate past CEO of United Bank for Africa Group (UBA) and presently is the Chairman of Heirs Holdings Limited, a principal investment company, within Africa. He also founded The Tony Elumelu Foundation with the goal, largely, to facilitate the promotion and celebration of excellence in business management, entrepreneurship and leadership in Africa.

 

As CEO of UBA, he transformed the bank from a Nigerian financial institution into a key African financial services institution. UBA is today a multinational corporation, out of Africa, with offices in France, USA and UK.  And Tony Elumelu is an African business icon with lots of influence.  Despite everything, I saw yesterday, a man with in-depth entrepreneurial and philanthropic passion. A truly bold thinker, Mr. Elumelu holds the Nigeria’s Member of the Order of the Federal Republic (MFR) – a national honor.

He spoke in the simplest and most candid ways I have ever seen from a successful CEO. A young man from a middle class family, in Nigeria, was a bank CEO before his 34th birthday. It does not always happen, but listening to him I saw a man who could see beyond his years and his peers and pursued those visions with unmatched passion.

 

As he was talking, he kept reminding the full-packed auditorium that if he could do it, that any of us could certainly do what he had done. When Standard Trust Bank was formed, he had three key strategic objectives on what he wanted the bank to become after certain number of years. When the bank morphed into UBA, he also developed a new set of objectives. And in all cases, he realized them.

 

This man has confidence. He saw opportunities in the midst of enormous challenges.  Otherwise how can a mortal think of having a bank in the old Nigerian banking industry with the behemoths of First Bank of Nigeria, Union Bank, Africa and old UBA? Indeed, Tony’s resolute and absolute commitments to his ultra-vision are worthy of emulations by the young Africans.

 

Mr. Elumelu’s success illustrates many good things. Firstly, Africa’s universities can and do produce success. Mr. Elumelu spent his entire Undergraduate and Graduate career in Africa, only considerably later attending IMD & The Harvard Business School, AMP. All his life, Mr. Elumelu has worked in Africa. This shows that we can do anything we decide to do if we have the right vision and passion. He has broken the ceiling and put confidence in the minds of many young African business leaders. He illustrates that even at a young age, we can find success if we work hard.

 

The only dull moment for me during the talk was when he explained that the Central Bank of Nigeria had to ask bank chiefs that have served more than 10 years in the industry to retire. It was very unfortunate because all of a sudden, the continent loses a top-notch banker because of the mistakes of his arch-competitors. But good enough, UBA is under the leadership of my former boss (to 3rd order), Mr. Phillips Oduoza. I recalled the day he shook hands with me when he heard that I had passed my IT certification exams when we were both in Diamond Bank. He said, “use that training to add value to DBL”. A very bright man, Mr. Oduoza, like Tony, symbolizes the best from Nigerian educational system.

 

These are my takes from Tony’s speech at WABF:

 

You need a vision: Tony had a vision that though the Nigeria’s banking industry was competitive, yet, service and superior products will help him get the market share he wanted. He consistently adapted his vision and the goals all through his storied career.

 

Match that vision with strategy: At the stage of Standard Trust, Tony had three key strategic goals.  Also, when it was time for UBA, he also developed three core objectives. Without these objectives, it would have been difficult for him to access himself. Those objectives were largely building a brand, increasing market share, having regional influence in key financial sectors.

 

Hire the right people: He consistently mentioned that he got the “right people”. That was very important and that enabled him to execute.

 

Test, validate and scale: Tony bought one of his early institutions with about N30m. He was able to prove his worth as a turnaround expert. With those initial successes, he built a personal brand and people believed, much more easily- he has records. Then they looked at his results and it was easy for him to tap more resources from investors. As he focused on testing the ideas on smaller business units, he validated most, and then at the time of UBA, he scaled.

 

Confidence: It takes confidence and an unusual one for a 33 year old to run a bank in Nigeria. He has basically helped to usher a new dawn that younger managers could be accepted by the public.

 

Be open-minded: When UBA New York had some challenges, Tony called a Nigerian based staff to go and fix it. That was unusual because in Africa the reverse is always the case. But he did it and that demonstrated his core business values of having confidence in people and openness to try unusual things.

 

Build a brand: In his talk, Tony kept emphasizing his obsession with image. I could hear the pain when he spoke about rating downgrade of one of his branches. That brand consciousness pushed him to do the right things, quickly, to solve the problem.

 

Have balance: You must not start an organization and immediately devote a big portion of your working capital to charity. He answered a question and it was very clear that having a balance on meeting social responsibility is important. Now the dusts have settled, he has his Foundation- there is time for business and there is time for charity.

 

Think broad: Tony in his speech repeatedly said stakeholders. In short, he evaluated the value UBA has created for shareholders. He examined the jobs UBA has created. He looked at the respect the firm has brought to Nigeria. And finally, he understood he was now rich. Simply, he has a broad way to see how his business is affecting all the necessary partners.

 

Take risks: I saw in Tony a man that when he believes in something, he goes for it. He does not always allow the challenges to outweigh him; rather, he takes them heads-on by developing mitigating strategies. I saw a risk taker when he decided to invest in a collapsed Crystal Bank.

 

Society matters: After he made the big bucks, he wants to help build a new core of experts to continue that progression. The Tony Elumelu Foundation is poised to help engineer a rebirth and renewal in leadership, entrepreneurship, and management in Africa.

 

I do hope the students will post the video as I cannot wait to study it. Tony spoke literally without using slide. There was a slide but he was simply talking and lecturing throughout the time. The talk was effectively educative and inspiring.


As Tony was talking, I immediately reevaluated a strategy of a project in Nigeria which I am leading. I will do five things, differently, based on the lessons from his talk.  Right here in Boston, he is framed on a photo I took with him this July when he visited Boston. And I could hear again, from him, saying “If I can do it, you can do it too”.

 

Photo: Tony Elumelu ( then UBA Boss), Dr Ekekwe,  (private)  in Boston, July 2010

Motogari Ovi App – A Kenyan Finds a New Meaning to Car Obsession And Hitting Home Runs

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Motogari – a motor  Nokia app is doing just fine. It was created by a Kenyan app developer.The guy is really obsessed with cars and his writing is pretty cool. Motogari app is news and analysis powerhouse for the cars. He is holding up with interests all over the world. This is how they stack up around the world – we mean those that have downloaded the app.

 

The app is packed with high quality photos and the blog is a one stop shop for everything motoring, from exotic supercars to affordable 1800cc cars.

 

 

According to Kachwanya of MMF (Mobile Monday Kenya), the founder plans to shift to local content and possibly a classified portal for cars. He is also working with other potential partners to provide contents. And finally, the big one – how to make money from this passion.

 

Photo credit/Motogari, MMK

Ovim Plus Android Tablet Specification – The Engine of Work and Play is Bold

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Ovim Plus was unveiled few days ago by Microscale Embedded and Fasmicro. Here is the specification of this machine, an engine of work and play. This beast will be available in May.

 

Processor: Freescale iMX515 800MHz ARM Cortex A8

CPU: Dual core 800MHZ

O/S:Android 2.2 Support   Flash10.1

Memory/Hard disk:512M/4GB

Display:10.1″ TFT resistive touch screen,1024*600

Camera:Support TF card.Battery:3800mAh

support word,Excel,Power point and email function

Audio/Video:Support web video,music,chat,picture

Other function:Support HDMI  WIFI , built-in 3G

Box/Kg:30.5*21.5*8.5mm/0.9KG

 

Ovim Plus  is a joint product of Fasmicro and Microscale Embedded.

Incorporate Your Business – What Paul Allen’s Book Teaches Us About Bill Gates, Microsoft and Law

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This could happen to any person. You build a storied company and all of a sudden, you are out of the game. It happens many times across Africa because people do not follow even the laws we have in the land. You start a business at Ariaria, Aba – all your nest egg invested. All of a sudden, you are out of the game. What do you do? You want to kill and die!

That is very bad. In this case, you are to be blamed. Ask for the law and follow it. Incorporate the company at Corporate Affairs Commission – sure it may take 6 months – but have patience; they are not on strike. If you incorporate, the law will be there and no one will take your share. If they do, you have the law and that will work for you.

Always remember that man is the same – American, Nigerian, British; the only difference is that an American has a law that he ‘fears’. If not, from the latest book (Idea Man) of Paul Allen – the cofounder of Microsoft, he discussed how Bill Gates and Steve Ballmer wanted to scheme him out of his shares in Microsoft.  Of course it did not work out because there was the law. Mr. Gates might have done it if not that the system will not accommodate that.

No one is a saint – including the founders of Microsoft. Always doubt and be on the side of the law. Incorporate.

Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen, who portrays the company’s current chief executive Steve Ballmer as scheming in his new book, says that Ballmer, in a conversation two weeks ago, confirmed Allen’s account of the events.

“Steve said, ‘Yeah, those things did happen,’ that I recount,” Allen said during an appearance at the Town Hall Seattle speakers series. Allen was interviewed on stage by GeekWire’s Todd Bishop, a longtime technology reporter in Seattle.

In his book, “Idea Man: A Memoir by the Cofounder of Microsoft,” Allen writes that in 1982, he overheard Ballmer and Bill Gates discussing a plan to reduce Allen’s 36 percent stake in Microsoft shortly after Allen was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Allen writes that he burst in and shouted, “This is unbelievable! It shows your true character, once and for all.” He calls the plot “mercenary opportunism, plain and simple.”

Technology Bubble And Seeding of Next Cycle – What Can Social Media Offer?

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Do social media add any competitiveness to a nation?  Mastering how to get people to click ads is good for Wall Street and investors, but is that really great? For a nation’s competitiveness, does it add any value? That you have mastered all those algorithms to get hits on the right ads may not be helping man. Sure?

What technology cycle will come after social media? The PC passed computing power  to the masses. The web gave us connectivity. What is social media giving us when they finally make way for another cycle? Organizing our best photos so that our kids will not do their homeworks?

This is very interesting because social media like Internet companies do not create much jobs– no manufacturing and no special design investment.  They cramp equations that make computers do what thousands of industrial age engineers can do and find patterns to get ads to the right person.

But remember that the skills picked from social media can be used for biotech where data mining is vital. DNA sequencing could pick a lot from social media since they are about crunching numbers and understanding relationships. The next tech cycle is on the way and may be figured out by a 5 year old kid. Irrespective of anything, we need to ensure that social media cycle passes core value to the next one.