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Showing posts from January, 2021

YOU don't give a damn? LIAR (NIM your MEME)

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           Want to be happy? look for a meme. Want to be sad? look for a meme. There is a meme for every emotion you have, I love memes. You don't do memes? give it a trial, you don't like it? LIAR.   I have a culture, maybe like everyone, of checking the status of my "meme dealers" every morning and before I go to bed, kudos to my dealer y'all are the best. When I am done with this piece, you guessed right what I am going to do before I sink on a foam. But I'll focus on the good memes, thanks to the Arsenal victory this night, boy it was treat.      I have consumed a lot of memes, some are funny, scary, witty and some are nonsensical. But today I am more concerned about the "I don't give a fvck" memes. You see captions like "You ignore me I ignore you", "Whatever you hear about me please believe", LIARS. Like they or we are capable of shutting out our emotions.      My candid advice, don't take this kinda memes to heart,

What if Nigeria was meant to be great

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What a year it has been, what a month it has been, what a week it has been, personally what a couple of days it has been for me emotionally, 2020 has given us a lot to think about, and I must tell you, it has been a hell of a ride. The saga was initiated by the pandemic that hit the world, followed closely by a rather eventful and controversial show, “Big Brother Naija (BBN)”, drifting into the historic, once in a blue moon, nationwide protest. Interesting thing about these events is the ripple effect they had on one another. The pandemic, as with most countries, forced the Nigerian government to impose a lockdown on its citizenry, with no economic activities going on, Nigerians were stuck with the internet and media, bearing to the end of the lock down, the BBN show started, schools were not in session, most organizations and workers now loved working from home, so they did. The youths had time to watch BBN lock down, and with their lockdown companion -social media, the show had a wel

Ripple effect of this pandemic on the future of tech business

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You often learn what you want by seeing what you do not want to see, God knows no one wanted to see us conscripted on dealing with our "unexpected" guest, Covid-19, pandemics kill business, recessions ruin business to say they have a silver lining is a step too far. But this unwanted circumstance has afforded businesses, government and consumers time to think about who they are and what they really want and desire from their distinct standpoints, the interesting thing is the interrelatedness and interdependency of these thoughts. Governments have had the inefficiencies of their governance and policies laid bare for all to see, consumers are contemplating if they really need to continue patronizing physical outlets after the pandemic or just stick to the pandemic-made-compulsory online shipping for even the least of their basic needs and thirdly, businesses, its executives and supremo are taking this time to look inward to re-engineer their purpose and goals going forward, som

Need for more incorporation of Vendor-managed inventory strategy in modern businesses

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“Curiosity kills a cat, but cats be happy, for satisfaction raises the dead”, several organizations, startups and businesses will and are endlessly, curiously and constantly trying to get innovative ways to mitigate risks and be more cost effective, with competition getting astronomically fiercer by the day, every trick to get that extra edge and advantage in the market must be played. Vendor-managed inventory is a strategy that transfers the management of inventories and order processing from the buyer of a product to the supplier of the product, this strategy is not only cost effective, it is both operation effective and mitigates risks by transference, in simple terms this strategy allows vendors or suppliers to own inventories until they are sold by their clients, the vendors in the supplier chain manages their own products in their clients’ warehouses or stores, for example if a business has ten vendors in its supply chain, each of these ten vendors is hence contractually responsi