Category: Small Business and Entreprenuership

  • ‘Nigeria has no reason to import shoes’

    The Chief Executive, Melandrie Shoes, Gbenga Olanipekun’s venture into entrepreneurship is a good example of necessity turning into invention. Olanipekun, who studied Linguistics and Communi-cation Studies, was formerly a sales person with a book publishing firm before taking a decision to carve a niche for himself in the shoe making business.

    As a young man, he picked interest in shoe making when a shoe maker made a belt for him and  the job came out so well that many did not believe that  it was made in Nigeria. Even when he got a job with a publishing firm, he still patronised the cobbler until he finally decided to learn the skill.

    Pursuing his trade with an unrelenting vigour, he not only specialises in premium shoe brands, he also leverages social media platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and WhatsApp.

    Olanipekun has also signed up to some digital marketing platforms which makes it possible for people to place orders online.

    One of the highpoints of his business so far was an encounter with the Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo, and Governor Abiodun Ajimobi during the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) clinic in Oyo State.

    Reliving the experience, he said the Vice President upon seeing the shoe encouraged him and appreciated his effort.

    “The Vice President said:‘This shoe is very good, I like it; this is an All Progressives Congress (APC) shoe’.  He called the governor to check it out so at that moment, I was so elated to the point that I was speechless. It didn’t occur to me to talk to him about anything.  He was the one who suggested that we should take a picture. It was a defining moment for me as it showed there’s a future in what I do,” he said.

    The young man, who said he was looking forward to meeting the Vice President again in order to be sure the shoe he presented to him was the right size, spoke eagerly of his dreams.

    Olanipekun aspires to build a training institute for young people and also expand his business.

    However, as a fast-rising entrepreneur, his journey has not been without hiccups. One prime challenge he encounters is difficulty in sourcing machineries and investors for shoe production on a large scale.

    “Bringing in the right machine to do the right job is difficult. Those machines are very expensive, and the commercial banks are not ready to help raise funds. Not falling into fraud in order to be able to get the right kind of machine is also another challenge. Power is also a major issue; the money I spend on petrol every day is high,” he added.

    Olanipekun said he was in talks with the Bank of Industry (BoI) to see how he could bring in good machinery.

    “I want a situation where people can design shoes online with our app and we will deliver it to them.  Melandrie will also have the mass production stage and also open a shoe and leather trading institute where we will able to train young Nigerians,” he said.

    Another major concern is many Nigerians are yet to key into patronising home-made brands as they have confidence in foreign brands.

    “When I first started this journey, I did not put Made-in-Nigeria  label, so when people heard the name Melandrie they thought it was a foreign brand and it was gaining patronage.  When people see my shoes, they appreciate it but when I tell them I made them locally, they just tune off,” he lamented.

    He believes Made- in-Nigeria brands can compete favorably with other international brands with the needed support.

    According to him, most of the leather he uses is sourced from the international market.

    He asked: “There is no reason why we cannot produce good leather here. It is like the owner of the food eating crumbs. We used to make some of the best leathers in the world, what happened to those industries? Can we start making good quality leader so that our own shoe makers can also buy and produce for internal consumption?’’ Drawing from his experience, he encouraged other young entrepreneurs not to give up.

    “Whatever the situation is, you cannot lose, you can only learn. I have borrowed N300, 000 before and then I lost N200, 000 within the first two months. I was duped; I made shoes and they were stolen. You just have to keep standing even in difficult times,” the young man who referred to his journey as far as a success, said.

     

     

     

  • Anambra to boost spices production for local, export markets

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano has unveiled the plans of the state to boost spices production for local consumption and for export.

    Obiano made this known after an inspection of Tiger Food Production Company, Obosi in Idemili North Local Government Area of the state.

    He said the venture would be under a joint partnership with agro-based investors already working in the state.

    Represented by his Deputy, Dr Nkem Okeke, the governor said his government would explore workable means of engaging farmers in the state in growing the raw materials needed for spices production.

    “From what is on ground, the Tiger Food Company is committed to ensuring that our target in agriculture is realised.

    “We’ll continue to see how to make sure that our partnership with them work as well as engage farmers in the state to do more in growing the raw materials needed for the production of spices.”

    Earlier, the Commissioner for Agriculture, Mechanisation, Processing and Export, Mr. Afam Mbanefo, said the state government planned to begin the production of spices on a 100- hectare of land at Ndikelionwu and Ugbenu communities.

    Mbanefo added that Tiger Foods had investment interest in chili pepper, tumeric, local basil and vegetables.

    Tiger Food Company Managing Director, Mr. Don Ebubeogu, thanked the state government for its willingness to create the enabling environment for the growth of the sector.

    Ebubeogu described as cumbersome the running of the value chain of agricultural produce and urged the government to render more assistance to investors.

    He also appealed to the government to help in identifying better locations with comparative advantage for the cultivation of a particular commodity for commercial purpose.

     

     

  • How to empower women entrepreneurs

    Entrepreneurs share their ideas on how best to empower women during a session held at American Corner, Yaba in Lagos, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The global market for edible snails is worth €1 billion. An acre of land under snail cultivation can generate potential profit of N2million yearly. But leaders such as the Managing Director, Nectar Green Snails, Olajumoke Walker, is encouraging small scale backyard snails business which one can start with N20, 000.

    He was a guest speaker at an empowerment forum held at American Corner in Yaba, Lagos.

    Walker set up his small snail farm in Ogun State when he had a challenge sourcing snails for his grandmother, who needed them in her meals to stay alive from a debilitating health condition. He started a snail’s farm when it became very expensive for him to buy snails for his grandmother.

    Walker suffered losses when he  first started about two years ago. He started researching snail farming and identified a gap in the market.

    But today, he has formulated a unique system suitable for the Nigerian climate and is well on the way to establishing a successful and sustainable business.

    He is part of a rapidly-growing trend in Nigeria’s agriculture which is seeing an increasing number of snail producers racing to keep up with burgeoning demand for it.

    He pointed to the minimal investment as one reason for the gradually growing interest in the business.

    He told the forum, made up mostly of female entrepreneurs, that one does not need so much land to get started, and the financial return is significant if one can diversify usage.

    Walker said snail rearing is one of the unassuming, lucrative arms of agric businesses which people have not explored.

    According to him, the sector is one with large, long-term business opportunities. Generally, a well taken one acre snail farm can produce 10 tonnes of snails a year.

    The breed of snails that he is working with is the common brown snail.

    One can invest about N15, 000 to buy or build containers for snail rearing and about N5, 000 in sourcing for about 20 or more snails.

    The housing varies from a patch of fence-protected ground, sheltered from the wind to a covered box.

    Having recorded success, he   runs training courses for potential entrepreneurs.

    After training, participants become knowledgeable about the various processes snails undergo before harvest.

    His training has attracted a lot of Nigerians who have expressed their interest to be trained.

    The Coordinator of the forum and Managing Director, Ogunmod Int’l Investments, Pelumi ‘Salas Aribisala, is part of the growing buzz surrounding cassava processing business in Oyo State.

    He established his cassava production company. In response to market demand for processed cassava products, he expanded the business with the establishment of a factory in Oyo State. Aribisala’s income is huge and certain. This is because he discovered the secret to a prosperous agro business. He belongs to online platforms including agroshop that connects farmers to the agricultural supply and value chain and provides them with critical information on weather, market prices and incoming opportunities via text messages.

    He said the market for cassava’s commercial and industrial use has started to grow. Its root starch is now in demand from food and beverage companies for bread and beer production. It can also be used in plywood and pharmaceuticals, as well as feedstock for the production of ethanol biofuel. He is processing cassava into high-quality flour that can partially substitute for wheat flour. Aribisala holds agri clinics and agri business centres at grassroots level on how people can start profitable businesses. He stressed that agro business sector had tremendous growth potential and that his organisation would expand its activities to get more people to start new ventures.

    He said it is the goal of his organisation to get more women into agric business to reduce hunger and improve rural livelihoods.

    Aribisala urged women to explore opportunities in agric business in the face of dire economic challenges facing Nigeria.

    He said boosting employment opportunities for young women a top priority. According to him, agribusiness continues to provide income and employment. One of the collaborative efforts, spearheaded by his organisation and other partners is to create job opportunities for youth in agricultural value chains.

    He stressed that his partnership with the United States government  is to create decent employment opportunities for young women and men through the development of sustainable agricultural and agricbusiness enterprises along strategic value chains.

    Another speaker, Atinuke Lebile, works with rural communities to mentor young out-of-school girls on various entrepreneurial leadership skills through her initiative called MAGIC (mentor A Girl Child) and “SheAgric” Initiative where she raises intending female farmers, empower and motivate women and youth into agriculture and its value chain to ensure food security, poverty reduction and curbing unemployment in Nigeria.  She is a popular name among the young farmers.

    She processes cassava into chips and other derivatives for the local urban market.  Having run a food business, she had seen the opportunity in the market for supplies of various agricultural produce.

    Her vision has been to build a brand that would be recognised for its product quality and packaging.

    In terms of the local economic impact, she considers the food security sector a key pillar and priority for the government. A successful cassava producer, who sells cassava tubers, recalls the heartbreak that she felt when she was not making it initially. Today, she has crops growing on many acres. Other farmers are benefitting from her work as she sells the high-quality tubers so they too can start farming the crop. She has trained many farmers in her area through a women’s group.

    Seeing her dreams and vision coming to pass has brought maximum satisfaction to her as an entrepreneur.

    Encouraging the women at the forum, she reiterated that they have capacity to organise and mobilise in taking charge of their own issues.

    The forum, according to her, is one such forum that addresses some of the challenges that women in agribusiness face, and aims to overcome them as a collective.

    She added that the outlook for youth unemployment is bleak and gives cause for great concern.

    She stressed the importance of creating meaningful employment opportunities for the burgeoning youth population in the agric business.

    She said the programme  aims to promote and replicate successful practices and solutions that contribute to decent employment, skills development and youth participation in entrepreneurship.

     

  • Edo Innovation Hub trains 724 entrepreneurs

    Edo Innovation Hub says it has trained no fewer than 724 entrepreneurs in less than three months of its operation to boost private sector activities in the state.

    The outfit, supported by the state-government, is a cluster for innovators and inventors in Benin City.

    Governor  Godwin Obaseki, at the launch of the hub in June, said the state government set up the outfit to enable youths strengthen the technology ecosystem in the state, adding that the intention was to leverage on technology for job creation and enterprise development.

    In a statement, the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor on Job Creation and Skills Development, Mrs. Ukinebo Dare, said that the centre had in the last few weeks trained 724 entrepreneurs.

    “Two hundred females are being trained by Microsoft and Tech4Dev; 32 persons participated in LinkedIn MeetUp sessions to build a vibrant business community and leverage networking for local and international businesses.

    “Forty-nine budding app developers participated in Curators University’s Artificial Intelligence boot camp; 23 developers were trained by Hotels.NG on coding and app development.

    “Other partners include Makers Academy, who trained 40 students on robotics and 59 trained by Pan Atlantic University’s Enterprise Development Centre in entrepreneurship and innovation.

    “Siemens, Impact Hub conducted pre-hackathon orientation for 25 aspiring entrepreneurs in the power sector while Microsoft took 50 teachers on Basic Digital Literacy for Teachers.”

    Dare said  there was a sustainability plan in place to ensure that the private sector took the lead in the growth of the state’s technology ecosystem, adding that trainings and business incubation would continue at the facility.

    She added that ATC Nigeria donated three fully equipped ICT centre in Benin, Irrua and Ekpoma, to deepen the penetration of tech-driven development across the state.

    She explained that a good number of the firms at the hub had expressed interest for long-term partnership with the state government.

    According to her, the state government is exploring the option of a trust fund to sustain the hub.

    Dare said the facility houses the South-South Innovation Hub with two halls, five training rooms, six fully-furnished co-working spaces, four rooms with a total of 100 computers, offices, conference rooms and outdoor workspaces, among others.

     

     

     

     

  • Entrepreneur launches book on grants

     Entrepreneur and author, Ifedayo Durosinmi-Etti has launched a book titled Accessing Grants for Startups.

    According to the Co-founder of Parliamo Bambini, a kids’ furniture company, the book focuses on grants application, business opportunities and sustainable development goals.

    “I realize that a lot of people don’t know about sustainable development goals in Nigeria, I decided to write about them so that people can see that even if they don’t have any business ideas, and they really want to start a business.

    “The book contains interviews of people who have received grants for business opportunities and how those opportunities have affected their businesses and helped them to scale their businesses,” Durosinmi-Etti stated.

    She added that the book is designed to help solve business ideas, reducing the rate of poverty in Nigeria, help promote economic growth which will support the development of the business and attract international funding.

    Durosinmi-Etti who is a marketing and sustainability expert also launched a competition on Instagram called ‘The AGS Enterprise Challenge’ (Accessing Grants for Startups).

    She said the challenge was borne out of the idea to help female led businesses, showcase them and reward them with grants.

    Prizes were also presented to the top three winners of the challenge.

    The first prize is N1.5m, the first runner up will get N1m and 3rd prize is N.5m.

    All the three winners will get free workspace for three months along with training and mentorship from top business coaches across the country.

    Advising new startups and young entrepreneurs, she said: “regardless of how low or high you earn, you can get an investor once you have the ability, skills and a viable business.

    “My advice to young entrepreneurs is to focus on their strength, and outsource the rest.”

  • Building entrepreneurial skills in students while on campus

    With funding and right training, students can become job creators while still on campus. They do not necessarily have wait to finish and end up as job seekers. This is what Federal College of Agriculture, Akure (FECA) is trying to achieve, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    From running garri processing business to offering extension services, students at Federal College of Agriculture, Akure (FECA) are encouraged to launch fast growing agribusinesses.

    Besides extension services, the Provost, FECA, Dr  Samson Odedina, told reporters in Lagos that the institute has  trained the students on how to brand their products, whom to approach to get the correct market prices and funding and how to present and preserve their products to shield them from loses and poultry management aspects.

    Because of the value chain practical approach introduced into the curriculum, students undertaking classes did not have their minds entirely set for the lecture hall. Partly, they were thinking about their agribusinesses, which they run as side hustles within the campus.

    Through the business, they have been able to pay their bills. Their services include agribusiness development, consultancy and extension services in all fields of farming.

    Odedina said students need to utilise opportunities on campus to become job creators.

    For instance, he said the college created projects and ventures to equip students with business skills that they utilise when they leave college.

    According to him, the ventures are a great opportunity for students to develop business proposals and get grants, a skill many do not have.

    Whatever the amount of money the students make, he noted, that it belongs to them.

    Another opportunity provided the students, according to him, is to make good use of the experts at the college by seeking advice to sharpen their enterprise skills.

    He said the huge population at the college and Ondo State offers students a ready-made market for their products and services.

    Once they complete campus, the students leave to continue with their agribusinesses outside college, creating room for others.

    Odedina said he brought business orientation to agric education when he saw how disconnected students were to agriculture, how they were missing job opportunities, and how propaganda and misinformation were shaping their opinions.

    So he did something about it – he created a practical approach to help college students connect back to agriculture. And guess what? The class has had such a positive impact on its students.

    According to him, FECA, will continue its activities in stimulating youth to become successful agri-entrepreneurs through linking, learning and leadership activities.

  • Exploring business opportunities in the organic sector

    The popularity of organic foods and products has   grown in recent years. The booming attraction to all things organic is opening pathways of business opportunities in many areas that deal with the supply chain process of these products. This has drawn the interest of entrepreneurs in Nigeria and the rest of Africa, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The Executive Secretary, BioGhanaNetwork, Mr David Gyasi’s passion for healthy living led to the creation of an organic restaurant in Accra, Ghana. He is Chief Executive, Florganic Restaurant, Accra, one of the most successful organic restaurants on the country. He studied nutrition.

    He was in Lagos to address a national organic agriculture business summit organised by Association of Organic Agriculture Practitioners of Nigeria (NOAN). His interest in healthy living has turned into successful business. He studied nutrition. “I obtained my training in Nutrition at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana.   I have been trained in Germany at GIZ International Training Centre, Feldafing on Organic and Fairtrade products,” he said. He   serves  as a chef and dietician, in Florganic Restaurant that aims at serving the public with purely organic foods and creating awareness on the importance of eating organic foods. The restaurant serves natural fruit juices, pastries, kebabs and cookies.

    He said his company has created a lot of organic meals made from authentic ingredients by people who grew up eating and loving that food.

    Though demand is growing, he maintained that running an organic restaurant is not easy. Organic foods are intrinsically more expensive than processed foods.

    According to him, organic restaurants owners have to go to great lengths to maintain a consistent menu, especially in a tough economy.

    He explained that managing an organic restaurant requires a high level of ingenuity—one would have to use everything that one knows about restaurants and quickly become an expert on consumer marketing.

    He has had to work round the clock and visit villages to ensure that the contracted farmers produce required ingredients following basic organic good agricultural practices.

    Over the past six years, he has engaged, trained and mentored several business owners, groups, individuals.

    He also believes that a successful journey needs vision, letting go of what doesn’t matter, persistence, sheer hard work and determination.

    In her presentation, Chief Executive, of Kate’s Organics, Kate Kibarah said as a child, she was obese. It didn’t matter in primary school as nobody cared about her being chubby. This, however, changed when she joined high school, as teens in the neighbourhood nicknamed her “balloon”. The clinical nutritionist and colon hydrotherapist, noted that she started discovering a lot about her body. “I realised I was actually fat, weighing 95kg. But this was a family problem, as both my parents and siblings were heavy,” she said. The humiliation became a blessing in disguise, because it drove her to read various books and research widely on natural remedies for her weight problem.

    After Form Four, Kate was to study Law at the University of Nairobi, but opted for a degree in natural health, to pursue more about her problem. Unfortunately, no Kenyan University offered the course. Instead, she did Diet and Nutrition locally. “I started practising what l studied; changed my lifestyle — eating the right kinds of foods, exercising. Slowly, I started to lose weight. Many people noticed and asked me what I had done to lose  weight,” she said. She later got a chance to study for a degree in Clinical Nutrition and furthered it into natural health, which included colon hydrotherapy. Initially, Kate had hoped to get employed after training but realised she could make a business out of her passion. She started a consultancy firm, advising individuals and small groups about eating natural foods. Soon, she started a colonic hydrotherapy service and gave specialised health training through lectures and presentations for corporations, and social networks. Her popularity got her invited to host radio and television programmes on healthy lifestyles.

    By this time, so many of her clients complained of difficulty accessing the healthy organic foods she recommended. She realised the gap, and responded by starting to grow, process and sell organic products.

    In the begining, she could hardly raise enough capital. She overcame this by working from her kitchen so she turned to her savings bearing in mind that even Rome was not built in a day.  She started offering consultancy services. She had nothing and used the money that came later to start processing products. She didn’t go for a bank loan.

    Kate’s Organics offers a healthy lifestyle advisory service. Its products are made from vitamin-rich leaves, flowers, roots and buds. As she began the company, she lacked experience and contacts on consumer information, knowledge and understanding of organic foods, therefore she invested a lot on research to enrich her understanding.

    Today, her company supplies a range of organic products such as Kate’s Organics Moringa Oleifera Leaf Powder, Kate’s Organics Green Tea, Kate’s Organics Aloe Vera Natural Juice, Kate’s Organics Everyday Detox Tea, Kate’s Organics Pure Honey, Kate’s Organic Rejuvenate Plus and Kate’s Organics Healthy Greens. The demand for the products is overwhelming and she cannot fully satisfy the market. “People realising the need for good lifestyle, which goes with natural foodstuffs has worked in my favour,” she explained. She sources the raw material of high quality produce at competitive prices and from organically certified producers. She says she also supports small scale holder farmers including single mothers and widows who grow organic produce in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. She assists them with trainings, input and anything they need to run the farms.

    She is looking for out growers in Nigeria to supply her organic raw materials. To supply her factory in Austria, she sources raw materials from Spain and Mozambique.

    Her plan is to make Kate’s Organic internationally recognised Kenyan flagship for organic production and best practice for the promotion of a healthy lifestyle.

    Organic food is Mrs. Saidat Shonoiki’s passion. She has consciously spread the word on nutritionally healthy foods. The Chief Executive Officer, Green Skills Nigeria, is one of those that have seen the benefits in organic food business and has taken advantage of the business by producing various organic food products.

    According to her, consumers are interested in organic food, as people have become more aware of the health benefits of consuming meat and poultry when it’s natural, hormone-free, or grass-fed.

    Apart from organic vegetables, she has made organic products from Moringa, ginger and other herbal crops. The products are finding their way to marketing outlets in Abuja and other parts of the country. The demand for the products is overwhelming. She attributes the success of her products to their high nutritional value which are gaining popularity as more people seek to prevent lifestyle diseases. As a result, she is now ploughing back profits into the business.

    She has seen the change in consumer patterns and vouches for the growing popularity of all things organic.

    She is too happy to spell out the benefits of organic eating.

    She observed that organic food products doesn’t alter the nutritional content but avoids the synthetic pesticidal and insecticidal residues.

    Based on her experience, Mrs. Saidat Shonoiki’s encourages all entrepreneurs interested in organic products to go for it. Saidat Shonoiki has over eight years of experience working directly with fish farmers in the manufacturing of high yielding affordable feeds. She currently serves as the Chief Operating Officer for De Ideal Agro Allies Service Ltd-A Feed Manufacturing Company based in Abuja, Nigeria. She has provided a substitute to imported floating fish brand in order to reduce feed cost. She provides business training to women and founded a business consulting and Islamic finance house called Mrs Saidat holds a bachelor’s degree in Agriculture from the University of Ilorin.

    Mrs Shonoiki, received a $7 million grant from the World Bank for use in building a sustainable agricultural training centre.

    However, the widespread popularity of organic products has led to some challenges. The President, NOAN, Prof Victor Olowe said there was a lack of certified organic Nigerian farmers to match organic food sales growth and its demands.

    He observed that the sector needs to have the necessary tools to grow and compete on a level playing field. That means federal, state and local programmes that help support organic research, and provide the organic farmer with a fully equipped toolkit to be successful.

    He said the industry needs players trained on organic handling and for more processing facilities to be opened, enlarged and retooled across the country.

    According to him, NOAN is certifying organic farms, suppliers, and handlers across the country, and the sector is growing and creating the kinds of healthy, environmentally friendly products that consumers are increasingly demanding.

     

  • Exploring business opportunities in the organic sector

    The popularity of organic foods and products has   grown in recent years. The booming attraction to all things organic is opening pathways of business opportunities in many areas that deal with the supply chain process of these products. This has drawn the interest of entrepreneurs in Nigeria and the rest of Africa, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    The Executive Secretary, BioGhanaNetwork, Mr David Gyasi’s passion for healthy living led to the creation of an organic restaurant in Accra, Ghana. He is Chief Executive, Florganic Restaurant, Accra, one of the most successful organic restaurants on the country. He studied nutrition.

    He was in Lagos to address a national organic agriculture business summit organised by Association of Organic Agriculture Practitioners of Nigeria (NOAN). His interest in healthy living has turned into successful business. He studied nutrition. “I obtained my training in Nutrition at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Ghana.   I have been trained in Germany at GIZ International Training Centre, Feldafing on Organic and Fairtrade products,” he said. He   serves  as a chef and dietician, in Florganic Restaurant that aims at serving the public with purely organic foods and creating awareness on the importance of eating organic foods. The restaurant serves natural fruit juices, pastries, kebabs and cookies.

    He said his company has created a lot of organic meals made from authentic ingredients by people who grew up eating and loving that food.

    Though demand is growing, he maintained that running an organic restaurant is not easy. Organic foods are intrinsically more expensive than processed foods.

    According to him, organic restaurants owners have to go to great lengths to maintain a consistent menu, especially in a tough economy.

    He explained that managing an organic restaurant requires a high level of ingenuity—one would have to use everything that one knows about restaurants and quickly become an expert on consumer marketing.

    He has had to work round the clock and visit villages to ensure that the contracted farmers produce required ingredients following basic organic good agricultural practices.

    Over the past six years, he has engaged, trained and mentored several business owners, groups, individuals.

    He also believes that a successful journey needs vision, letting go of what doesn’t matter, persistence, sheer hard work and determination.

    In her presentation, Chief Executive, of Kate’s Organics, Kate Kibarah said as a child, she was obese. It didn’t matter in primary school as nobody cared about her being chubby. This, however, changed when she joined high school, as teens in the neighbourhood nicknamed her “balloon”. The clinical nutritionist and colon hydrotherapist, noted that she started discovering a lot about her body. “I realised I was actually fat, weighing 95kg. But this was a family problem, as both my parents and siblings were heavy,” she said. The humiliation became a blessing in disguise, because it drove her to read various books and research widely on natural remedies for her weight problem.

    After Form Four, Kate was to study Law at the University of Nairobi, but opted for a degree in natural health, to pursue more about her problem. Unfortunately, no Kenyan University offered the course. Instead, she did Diet and Nutrition locally. “I started practising what l studied; changed my lifestyle — eating the right kinds of foods, exercising. Slowly, I started to lose weight. Many people noticed and asked me what I had done to lose  weight,” she said. She later got a chance to study for a degree in Clinical Nutrition and furthered it into natural health, which included colon hydrotherapy. Initially, Kate had hoped to get employed after training but realised she could make a business out of her passion. She started a consultancy firm, advising individuals and small groups about eating natural foods. Soon, she started a colonic hydrotherapy service and gave specialised health training through lectures and presentations for corporations, and social networks. Her popularity got her invited to host radio and television programmes on healthy lifestyles.

    By this time, so many of her clients complained of difficulty accessing the healthy organic foods she recommended. She realised the gap, and responded by starting to grow, process and sell organic products.

    In the begining, she could hardly raise enough capital. She overcame this by working from her kitchen so she turned to her savings bearing in mind that even Rome was not built in a day.  She started offering consultancy services. She had nothing and used the money that came later to start processing products. She didn’t go for a bank loan.

    Kate’s Organics offers a healthy lifestyle advisory service. Its products are made from vitamin-rich leaves, flowers, roots and buds. As she began the company, she lacked experience and contacts on consumer information, knowledge and understanding of organic foods, therefore she invested a lot on research to enrich her understanding.

    Today, her company supplies a range of organic products such as Kate’s Organics Moringa Oleifera Leaf Powder, Kate’s Organics Green Tea, Kate’s Organics Aloe Vera Natural Juice, Kate’s Organics Everyday Detox Tea, Kate’s Organics Pure Honey, Kate’s Organic Rejuvenate Plus and Kate’s Organics Healthy Greens. The demand for the products is overwhelming and she cannot fully satisfy the market. “People realising the need for good lifestyle, which goes with natural foodstuffs has worked in my favour,” she explained. She sources the raw material of high quality produce at competitive prices and from organically certified producers. She says she also supports small scale holder farmers including single mothers and widows who grow organic produce in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. She assists them with trainings, input and anything they need to run the farms.

    She is looking for out growers in Nigeria to supply her organic raw materials. To supply her factory in Austria, she sources raw materials from Spain and Mozambique.

    Her plan is to make Kate’s Organic internationally recognised Kenyan flagship for organic production and best practice for the promotion of a healthy lifestyle.

    Organic food is Mrs. Saidat Shonoiki’s passion. She has consciously spread the word on nutritionally healthy foods. The Chief Executive Officer, Green Skills Nigeria, is one of those that have seen the benefits in organic food business and has taken advantage of the business by producing various organic food products.

    According to her, consumers are interested in organic food, as people have become more aware of the health benefits of consuming meat and poultry when it’s natural, hormone-free, or grass-fed.

    Apart from organic vegetables, she has made organic products from Moringa, ginger and other herbal crops. The products are finding their way to marketing outlets in Abuja and other parts of the country. The demand for the products is overwhelming. She attributes the success of her products to their high nutritional value which are gaining popularity as more people seek to prevent lifestyle diseases. As a result, she is now ploughing back profits into the business.

    She has seen the change in consumer patterns and vouches for the growing popularity of all things organic.

    She is too happy to spell out the benefits of organic eating.

    She observed that organic food products doesn’t alter the nutritional content but avoids the synthetic pesticidal and insecticidal residues.

    Based on her experience, Mrs. Saidat Shonoiki’s encourages all entrepreneurs interested in organic products to go for it. Saidat Shonoiki has over eight years of experience working directly with fish farmers in the manufacturing of high yielding affordable feeds. She currently serves as the Chief Operating Officer for De Ideal Agro Allies Service Ltd-A Feed Manufacturing Company based in Abuja, Nigeria. She has provided a substitute to imported floating fish brand in order to reduce feed cost. She provides business training to women and founded a business consulting and Islamic finance house called Mrs Saidat holds a bachelor’s degree in Agriculture from the University of Ilorin.

    Mrs Shonoiki, received a $7 million grant from the World Bank for use in building a sustainable agricultural training centre.

    However, the widespread popularity of organic products has led to some challenges. The President, NOAN, Prof Victor Olowe said there was a lack of certified organic Nigerian farmers to match organic food sales growth and its demands.

    He observed that the sector needs to have the necessary tools to grow and compete on a level playing field. That means federal, state and local programmes that help support organic research, and provide the organic farmer with a fully equipped toolkit to be successful.

    He said the industry needs players trained on organic handling and for more processing facilities to be opened, enlarged and retooled across the country.

    According to him, NOAN is certifying organic farms, suppliers, and handlers across the country, and the sector is growing and creating the kinds of healthy, environmentally friendly products that consumers are increasingly demanding.

     

  • Building entrepreneurial skills in students while on campus

    With funding and right training, students can become job creators while still on campus. They do not necessarily have wait to finish and end up as job seekers. This is what Federal College of Agriculture, Akure (FECA) is trying to achieve, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    From running garri processing business to offering extension services, students at Federal College of Agriculture, Akure (FECA) are encouraged to launch fast growing agribusinesses.

    Besides extension services, the Provost, FECA, Dr  Samson Odedina, told reporters in Lagos that the institute has  trained the students on how to brand their products, whom to approach to get the correct market prices and funding and how to present and preserve their products to shield them from loses and poultry management aspects.

    Because of the value chain practical approach introduced into the curriculum, students undertaking classes did not have their minds entirely set for the lecture hall. Partly, they were thinking about their agribusinesses, which they run as side hustles within the campus.

    Through the business, they have been able to pay their bills. Their services include agribusiness development, consultancy and extension services in all fields of farming.

    Odedina said students need to utilise opportunities on campus to become job creators.

    For instance, he said the college created projects and ventures to equip students with business skills that they utilise when they leave college.

    According to him, the ventures are a great opportunity for students to develop business proposals and get grants, a skill many do not have.

    Whatever the amount of money the students make, he noted, that it belongs to them.

    Another opportunity provided the students, according to him, is to make good use of the experts at the college by seeking advice to sharpen their enterprise skills.

    He said the huge population at the college and Ondo State offers students a ready-made market for their products and services.

    Once they complete campus, the students leave to continue with their agribusinesses outside college, creating room for others.

    Odedina said he brought business orientation to agric education when he saw how disconnected students were to agriculture, how they were missing job opportunities, and how propaganda and misinformation were shaping their opinions.

    So he did something about it – he created a practical approach to help college students connect back to agriculture. And guess what? The class has had such a positive impact on its students.

    According to him, FECA, will continue its activities in stimulating youth to become successful agri-entrepreneurs through linking, learning and leadership activities.

  • Promoting artisans’ empowerment

    The Lagos State government is retraining artisans to meet future challenges, DANIEL ESSIET reports.

    Lagos is building on its artisan culture that helps create jobs in tiling, welding, leather and wood works.

    These have resulted in steady business growth, as many artisans are getting orders. In driving the project, the government is encouraging a new generation of youths to acquire skills in tailoring, tilling, jewelry making, woodwork, metal work, and leatherwork, among others.

    The government has created an online platform to bring the services of tradesmen to customers who need them.

    Lagos State Technical and Vocational Education Board (LASTVEB) Executive Secretary, Mrs. Omolara Erogbogbo, said the government has set up a virtual market platform through which artisans who registered with the Ministry of Wealth Creation and Employment could have access to their prospective customers.

    She said the government has produced a compendium of the registered artisans to increase job opportunities and grow the state’s economy, adding that soon Lagosians will be using an app to seek  artisans’ services.

    She said residents would be able to access artisans from anywhere.

    She explained that the platform would make it easy for artisans to have access to finance and benefit from the state Employment Trust Fund.

    Spaeking at the opening ceremony  of  a workshop in Lagos,  Mrs. Erogbogbo said the government was ready to help the artisans  hone their skills.

    According to her, the government wants to work with artisans who create high-quality products, through their associations to promote social upliftment in their communities. She added that the government was committed to empowering artisans.

    The government, Erogbogbo said, wants to add value to what they were  doing by helping them to get techniques.

    She said there was the need for artisans to acquire managerial skills, adding that the training would help them get more skills to start their business.

    The government, she explained,  was targeting over 1000 artisans and 24 trades.

    The ministry’s Head of Entrepreneurship, Mrs. Taiwo Abiose, said the government considered it expedient to standardise the operations of artisans to meet up with what obtains in other developed countries.

    According to her, the government would continue to explore every opportunity to ensure that artisans were given the right impetus to blossom.

    She underscored the need for artisans to key into the various reforms in the state.

    According to her, the government recognised the role of the sector, saying that this was why engaged the artisans’ group to actualise its objectives.

    The trainees  were drawn from various associations under the auspices of the Lagos State Council of Tradesmen and Artisans (LASCOTA). They were trained in entrepreneurship, computer appreciation, and business proposals writing.

    LACOSTA President, Alhaji Nurudeen Buhari praised Governor Akinwunmi Ambode for keeping his promise of scaling up the informal sector and prioritising the interest of artisans and traders. He said many of their members had benefited from the ETF loan.