Monday, May 20, 2013

In January 1969, Bruce Lee wrote a letter to himself (My Definite Chief Aim) - the letter read thus:
I, Bruce Lee, will be the first highest paid Oriental super star in the United States. In return I will give the most exciting performances and render the best of quality in the capacity of an actor. Starting 1970 I will achieve world fame and from then onward till the end of 1980 I will have in my possession $10,000,000. I will live the way I please and achieve inner harmony and happiness. Bruce Lee, Jan 1969


Bruce lived just for 3 years after he made the laudable pronouncement. But you know, he achieved his goals.

I liked the fact that he was very specific about what he wanted to achieve, he included a deadline and above all, he wrote what he would have to give to achieve his goals. You can't set a goal and not be ready to commit to it - that's recipe for failure.
Another great Youtube channel I discovered today is Google Africa Engage Academy.

If you own an online store and you have signed up for Google Adwords, you should visit the Google engage Academy often.

Speakers share tips and techniques of Google Adwords.

Friday, May 17, 2013



Perhaps you will think registering a business is something quite difficult to do, I have registered a number of businesses and it’s quite easy.

This post shows you the steps to follow if you want to register a business name in Nigeria. In most cases the process is the same if you want to register a limited company – albeit with differences in documentation and the amount required.

Here we go folks:
Step 1:Think about your business and then a name that fits. (often times we can create brands around any name) for example what has Apple got to with technology, or Konga 'well' got to do with selling things online?). The rule of thumb to fast track your registration process is to find a unique name, otherwise you will find yourself enmeshed in the roller-coaster of name rejection and thereby filling several availability forms. Avoid that stress by thinking of a unique name – I guess Steven Covey was right here “Begin with the end in mind”
Step 2:Find the nearest CAC office. Apparently Corporate Affairs Commission have a website – here it is http://cacnigeria.org/
Step 3:Pick up the necessary forms and fill them - the first you need is availability check and reservation of name.
Step 4:Submit the availability form to the CAC office you picked it. You would be asked to check back in 2 weeks for the result – either your names are available or not. If they are not, you start the search process again. Each time you conduct a new search, a search fee is charged and of course paid by you.
Step 5:Yaay, your name is available, so what’s next? You proceed with the registration process.

The total amount you get to pay for all these shouldn't be up to N10,000 – see breakdown of fee here. 

If you are lazy like me and you don’t like wasting too much time, you may employ the services of a lawyer – they sweat it out for you and you pay for their time.

Now you don’t have an excuse – make your business official and important with a great name (or a name that can become great if you get your acts together).

Monday, January 21, 2013

This article was culled from the book "God Built" by Steve Farrar.  I am blessed by the book. I hope you enjoy this piece and know that whatever situation you find yourself, you don't give up. God is in control. He has a plan for you.

And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us.  Romans 5:5 (NIV) 
Hope is the pillar that holds up the world.” - Pliny the Elder

Howard Head was a lousy athlete who radically changed two sports: skiing and tennis. And it was all because of his broken hope to be a capable athlete. Howard had wanted to be a good skier since he was a kid. But because of his poor athletic ability, just about every time he tried to tackle a slope, he wound up breaking wood skis. Even so, he held on to the hope of one day becoming a skillful skier.

That hope may have looked pretty faint to Howard at times, but not faint enough to keep him from trying something that seemed crazy at the time. The more Howard thought about it, the more he convinced himself that his problem with skiing wasn’t his skills on the slope, it was the skis! So in 1941 Howard Head, who was a brilliant engineer, took $6,000 in poker winnings, and focused his entire life on building skis out of air-craft materials. His friends thought he was nuts. Everyone knew the best skis were made out of hickory. Undaunted, Howard invested several years developing a composite ski that was virtually unbreakable- and the skiing world was changed forever.

Head skis became dominant company in the industry. Eventually, Howard Head sold his company and became a multimillionaire. Along the way, he also realized his dreams of becoming a better skier. Now rich and retired, Howard built a tennis court in his backyard and spent $5,000 on tennis lessons. But once again, his lack of athletic ability seemed to stymie him. He bought a ball machine to help him practice on his own, but he became convinced that the prince ball machine could be improved. So he bought the company and spent months improving the machine. Within a very short time, his improved ball machine captured 50 percent of the market. But he was still a lousy tennis player. Then it dawned on him that his trouble might be with the racquet. He should make it bigger.

Once again, his friends thought he was nuts- it was against the rules to have a bigger racquet. Howard Head looked up the rules and discovered that there were no regulations on the size of the racquet. As far as the rules were concerned, you could play tennis with a waffle iron. So he began to work on an oversized racquet that was two inches wider and three inches longer. He personally played with it, amazing even himself at the improvement in his game. After much trial and error and extensive tests in the lab, Howard eventually had test results that proved the sweet spot of his racquet was 20 percent greater than a normal racquet.

The prince racquet became the gold standard in tennis, and in 1982 Howard Head sold prince Tennis for $62 million. Because he had virtually no hope of becoming a better tennis player unless he improved the equipment, Howard Head did just that. And everyone benefited.

When most people lose hope, however, it’s usually about things significantly more important- and nearer to the heart-than skiing or tennis. How important is hope? It’s a fact of life that a man can live without water for only several days, and without food for a matter of weeks. But nothing kills the heart of a man more than the absence of hope. When hope is gone, life is gone.
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