"....there are jobs that experience is not required: President of a country, husband and an entrepreneur"
Many people I have talked to told me this...."I will work for a few years, gather capital and start my business" Most of them are still working. I agreed with the MTN advert when it said, "go start something."
Monday, January 14, 2008
Wednesday, January 09, 2008
Enviroment, Economy, Intellectual and Social
Is there a link between the enviroment in which a person is bred and the society they create?
Does this explain the result we see in Africans?
As a man thinks so is he. The intellectual content of a man define his person and his productivity. However, the thoughts are the result of the seed sown by his enviroment (people he admires and the culture).
Is the life and the mentalities bred in the villages in the 50s and 60s facilitated by the economic conditions of people of that day affecting the kinds of societies these people are creating today?
Can this explain the Africa of today?
....Just thinking
Does this explain the result we see in Africans?
As a man thinks so is he. The intellectual content of a man define his person and his productivity. However, the thoughts are the result of the seed sown by his enviroment (people he admires and the culture).
Is the life and the mentalities bred in the villages in the 50s and 60s facilitated by the economic conditions of people of that day affecting the kinds of societies these people are creating today?
Can this explain the Africa of today?
....Just thinking
Poor People can think!
*Farmers Turn to Science to Boost Crop Yields
*http://allafrica. com/stories/ printable/ 200801080725. htmlallAfrica.com
NEWS8 January 2008
Posted to the web 8 January 2008By Elizabeth Dickinson
Sabon Gari Ganu late last June, farmers in Sabon Gari Ganu village in northern Nigeria's Katsina state divided their plots of land into 56 rows. Using seeds from 16 African countries, the farmers planted each row with a different variety of millet---some small seeds, some round, some dark and some light. Throughout the rainy season, the farmers watched carefully to see which varieties would grow and which would not.
Five months later, the farmers sat down to vote on which seed varieties they preferred. Women and men were each given ballots, either light or dark blue, respectively. Four seeds were chosen. "Our plan now is that the four chosen will be intensively promoted," explains A. Kabir R. Charanchi, a chief agricultural officer for the Katsina state government who works on the project. "We are now going to bring more seeds for multiplication. "
The morale of the news item:
1. Small business people even local farmers can think. It is good to help to fund the research. We may not have to fund relief efforts!
2. SMEs are looking for better ways of doing their business.
3. They are willing to change if you can convince them it works (powerpoint presentations from HBS or IITA may not be the best. Sit with them.)
*http://allafrica. com/stories/ printable/ 200801080725. htmlallAfrica.com
NEWS8 January 2008
Posted to the web 8 January 2008By Elizabeth Dickinson
Sabon Gari Ganu late last June, farmers in Sabon Gari Ganu village in northern Nigeria's Katsina state divided their plots of land into 56 rows. Using seeds from 16 African countries, the farmers planted each row with a different variety of millet---some small seeds, some round, some dark and some light. Throughout the rainy season, the farmers watched carefully to see which varieties would grow and which would not.
Five months later, the farmers sat down to vote on which seed varieties they preferred. Women and men were each given ballots, either light or dark blue, respectively. Four seeds were chosen. "Our plan now is that the four chosen will be intensively promoted," explains A. Kabir R. Charanchi, a chief agricultural officer for the Katsina state government who works on the project. "We are now going to bring more seeds for multiplication. "
The morale of the news item:
1. Small business people even local farmers can think. It is good to help to fund the research. We may not have to fund relief efforts!
2. SMEs are looking for better ways of doing their business.
3. They are willing to change if you can convince them it works (powerpoint presentations from HBS or IITA may not be the best. Sit with them.)
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