1/ Career Story: From the Dusty Roofs of Ogbomoso to the Skyscrapers of Dubai (thread)
(Originally written on my FB wall sometime in 2019)
I saw a younger friend of mine check-in via Facebook into Dubai yesterday evening and I went into our private channel of communication to
2/ ..ask him whether he had taken the job he sought my advice on few months ago. The answer was in the affirmative.
He resumed early this month in a Private Equity (PE) firm in Dubai, one of the top financial centers of the world.
3/ For the uninitiated, PE, like investment banking, is one of the most lucrative jobs in the world of finance, nay in any field.
He had sought my advice in October last year (2018) on whether to choose that Dubai-based PE firm he was talking to or stay where he was (another
4/ (another top finance firm in Nigeria with international capital backing) and move to Canada later this year (2019) to resume at a top Canadian university for a highly rated MBA, which will also help his Canadian citizenship chase (citizens of ...
5/ citizens of North America and Western Europe are priced higher in the international job market).
Advised him to quit his then job and take the Dubai offer even if he would resign later for the Canadian MBA...
6/ because having such PE firm on his CV, no matter how short the stay is, will help his job return after his MBA in Canada.
He saw reason in my view but I didn’t know he took it until I saw his “check-in” into Dubai this evening (2019). He was told about the Dubai job...
7/ He was told about the Dubai job by his friend that works in another PE firm and he had a couple of interviews on phone be4 meeting their MD in London late last year (2018). Prior to this Dubai move, the young man had changed jobs 3 times (a Big 4, a local but well regarded IB
8/ and the international capital backed finance firm – not counting the jobs he turned down, like with an oil company which office building is arguably the most beautiful in VI!). This was a boy that was hustling as an undergraduate in Ogbomoso less than 8 years ago.
9/ From under the brown roofs of Ogbomoso studying accounting in a university of technology (anomaly?), he is now analysing investments from the skyscrapers of Dubai, when he’s not sent to do due diligence on a potential investment in Singapore or closing deal in Mumbai.
10/ Our paths crossed on Nairaland at a time he was a student and I an early-career online information father christmas. Interestingly, every single job move (including the ones he turned down) he has made since graduating, he sought my advice ...
11/ even when the quality of his experience might have overtaken mine at some point. He remained very humble enough to bounce his options off me as he did when he was a student.
12/ His qualifications? BTech Accounting, ICAN + CFA. CFA is world’s #1 finance qualification – makes you a globally competitive finance professional. Leading to the moral of the story: Don’t let people deceive you that there is no hope for the common man without any connection
13/ With right information (exposure) and good qualifications (and smartness, of course), many ordinary guys still do well for themselves in this country.
14/ Got tens of stories like this (another, a friend I accommodated at my bro’s place when he came to write job test in Lagos just 11 yrs ago, is on a fast-track career path to become an executive in a popular IOC in few years’ time, living in a 9 digit naira worth own house now
15/ Education does a lot in people’s lives. It’s the hope of the common man.
PS: Wrote this in 2019. He had since moved to Canada for the top rated MBA. The PE experience on his CV already. Interesting that everything worked as advised in 2018.
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Have stopped telling people they can get job in good organizations, including public sector organizations, without any connection.
Have come to realize that it doesn’t make any difference. And it’s an agelong thing.
In 1991, a young graduate secondary school teacher in Ilorin called Babs came to hustle for jobs in Lagos. He walked around Marina etc submitting his paper CVs. On the day he was returning to his family in Ilorin, he bought a newspaper at the motor park and saw Shell advert.
When he got to Ilorin, he told his friend, Ade, a fellow job seeker, about it. Ade told him the job was not meant for people like him, job already reserved for children of elite. He did not listen to Ade. He wrote his application letter, photocopied his documents, went to the post office, and posted them to Shell in PH.
Babs was invited for test, later interview, in PH. The friend kept discouraging him. “You will travel to Port Harcourt? Why are you wasting your time? They know the people they want to pick already. This is just formality”.
All through the process, Ade was discouraging him. Until he received Shell offer letter. He couldn’t believe it.
Babs would go ahead to rise from a young warehouse stock officer in Shell PH to become the #3 person in Shell Nigeria at some point, later seconded to NLNG as CEO, and after NLNG assignment, moved to Shell global HQ in Hague, Netherlands, as Global VP for Upstream covering about 50 countries.
There are many Ades here. Choose who listen to.
If an Ade here tells you, “that was 1991, not now”, move to page 2 on this thread.
1/5
Shola, bred in Bariga, Lagos, lost his parents at a young age. But he was very brilliant. Managed to raise funds for his UME and got admission into UNILAG. He took tutorials to make some money for feeding. His brilliance was helping him. He was always winning sholarships. He graduated with first class. He worked in a couple of financial insitutions before applying to Shell. He did not know anybody. He got into Shell.
He got into Shell in 2020. If you think that was long ago, I want to remind you 2020 was Covid year.
Shola is here reading this.
If another Ade changes the story that these are private organizations, move to page 3.
2/5
In 2019, NNPC published recruitment advert. Bobola, a young guy from Akure that just finished NYSC and had never worked anywhere, applied.
He joined the thread on Nairaland where people were discussing that recruitment. A lot of people were saying they were wasting their time, that NNPC would not give them job, that the job was reserved for children of politicians.
A certain Jarus, well experienced in career matter and has seen hundreds of people get jobs in these organizations time and again, was shouting oarse on that thread that they should not give up.
Stage after stage in the recruitment process, there were Ades swarming the thread and passing message of defeatism - “wasting your time on jobs you cannot get”.
Bobola kept pushing, stage after stage, not entirely hopeful, but kept hope alive, reading the posts of people like Jarus encouraging them.
February 2020. He opened his email and saw NNPC offer. He is with NNPC now.
He is reading this.
2020 was not “then”. 2020 was four years ago.
Need one more example for same NNPC? Move to page 4.
3/5
If it will inspire the younger ones (or anyone at all), retelling the story of Taiwo Oyedele’s career
1. Born in a village in Ondo State in mid 1970s
2. Almost denied admission into primary school at 5 because he was small and his left hand could not touch the right ear
3. Accepted only because his twin sister’s hand could do. And they were born same day. You can’t say Kehinde is ripe for primary education and not Taiye born on same day.
4. He was consistently the best student in his class through primary and secondary schools
5. Mostly struggled to pay the N50 school fees but weekend farm work helped. Got paid N5-N10 per weekend of farm work.
6. Then the struggle to pay the big fee for WAEC exam - N495. Needed to do at least 6 months of farm support before being able to raise that. Dropping out… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
One of my closest friends picked up a unit of Fortrose Court this week (what will be his 2nd house in Lagos) and it evokes memories & lessons in friends supporting each other in course of life.
In May 2008, fresh after NYSC, I resumed at a coy in VI as an accounting officer 1/
I never liked accounting, I was given the opportunity because they saw in my CV I was writing ICAN exams and winning prizes.
So there I was, thrown into real accounting, to manage the accounting records of a company with over 500 chains of filling stations.
Oju agbami
2/
As I struggled to settle down in first few weeks, there was a colleague sitting beside me. Let’s call him Ola. Ola was a contract staff employed a year before me. I was a full staff, so earning way more.
But he was already a chartered accountant (qualified in 2007) while
3/