This offer is a tiny big thing. Easy to execute but with high perceived value
The next type of offer to give is a staked offer. This is where you help people solve their problem in entirety
So you can
1. Set up a google my business page 2. Build a website 3. Help them run ads
You can sell offers like this from ₦100,000 - ₦500,000
And if you can’t build a website or run ads, you can still close the deal and go into a partnership with someone who knows how to do the technical stuff.
The only thing that will stop you from crushing this challenge is you!
Ideas are everywhere, you have to work and push
If you don’t push, nobody is bringing money to you. So if what you desire is to truly hit the target then you have to do what’s necessary
Do it for the people expecting you to fail. Do it for the people you love!
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Most people think banks just store their money safely.
But that’s not exactly true.
When you deposit money in the bank, it doesn’t just sit there.
The bank uses it to make more money mainly by lending it out to other people.
Let’s say you deposit ₦1,000,000.
The bank might keep a small portion (like ₦100,000) and lend out the rest (₦900,000) to someone who needs a loan.
That borrower pays back the loan with interest. So the bank makes money from the interest on the loan.
You, the saver, might get a small interest in return - much less than what the bank earns.
This is part of a system called fractional reserve banking. It means banks are only required to keep a fraction of your deposit and can lend out the rest.
Dear @YeleSowore If you want to start a revolution in Nigeria that ACTUALLY works, here’s exactly how to do it (A thread)
STEP 1: Build a Shadow Circle (before you say anything publicly)
I’d quietly gather 100 smart, angry, and skilled Nigerians:
-Creators
- Techies
- Lawyers
- Writers
- Funders
People who can get into the action, not just tweet.
STEP 2: Choose a SINGLE Nigerian issue
Power grid? Education system? Police reform?
Pick ONE enemy that affects millions and feels personal.
Trying to fight everything means fighting nothing.
In 1358, France burned.
Tired. Broken. Angry.
The peasants had had enough.
They rose up in what history now calls The Jacquerie -
A revolt so brutal, it shocked the nobility.
But it failed. Miserably.
And there’s a lesson here for Nigeria.
Stay with me.
The French peasants weren’t crazy.
They were starving.
Their king had been captured in war.
Their women were raped. Their homes looted.
The nobles, meant to protect them, abandoned them.
So they did the only thing they could: They fought back.
They stormed castles.
Burned manor houses.
Butchers. Blacksmiths. Farmers - all carrying clubs and anger.
They killed nobles, their wives, even children.
For once, the oppressed became the terror.