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Did you know that you FUND your own Employment?
DO you realize the IMPACT of the FACT that you FUND your OWN employment? Most people do not realize that they are throwing away a valuabl...
Tuesday, November 8, 2022
Do you know someone living from Hand-to-Mouth !!?
Tuesday, November 1, 2022
Who Teaches Employees to Create Wealth? – Well, Nobody!
join us on TRANSFORMING AFRICA CONVERSATIONS
Many employees, “work for
money to pay the rent” and then end up broke or poor. But who teaches
employees to create wealth from the income they earn in employment- well
nobody! This wisdom is perhaps the best kept secret of all time. Why is it that
such important knowledge is left to chance? Many organizations run expensive employee
induction programs to train new employees to make a profit for the company. But,
nobody runs programs to challenge employee to create wealth for themselves. Yet,
350 million employees across Africa generate 2.7 trillion US dollars (GDP) a year and
own less than 5% of that wealth! Click here to Join Isabella and Allan for a series of transforming conversations on how employees can learn to create wealth for themselves on the job today!
Lets have a conversation about "Employment in Africa"
Monday, August 29, 2022
The Lingering Impact of Ethical Questions in the 2022 Kenya General Elections
Ethical
questions do not have correct or incorrect answers, but all ethical questions communicate a message and have
immediate consequences. Ethical questions have a short term impact on decision
making and long term impact on the advancement of a society. While ethical
choices may appear harmless, they are always driven by values. In other words, it
is possible to shout ethical principles and yet act in line with your values. For
example, everyone volubly condemns corruption without a question, yet when
faced with a choice of whether to bribe a policeman and get home to a peaceful
evening or drive away with an inconvenient court summons, it is not a difficult
choice to make. We all face ethical questions on a personal level and how we
resolve them is within our power. However, making ethical choices assumes that we
are all able to distinguish between right and wrong, good and bad as well as
determine between better and the best action in a situation for the future
wellbeing of society.
Nonetheless, the
circumstances surrounding the Kenya General elections have thrown up several
ethical questions which have a long term bearing on the development of our
society. Voting patterns present us with the first ethical question. Did you
vote for the most qualified candidate or did you vote for your tribesman? If
you voted for the most qualified candidate, you expect services in line with the
candidate qualifications. Your messaging is that development is important and
should be pursued as a priority. If you voted for your tribesman to keep
leadership in the community, your messaging implies that increasing numbers
through reproduction is a priority to keep leadership within the community. Nevertheless,
if you did not vote, what message were you communicating to society?
In the
on-again-off-again case of the impeached Nairobi governor, the flip-flop drama
suggests that the law does not matter, it is the interpretation of the law that
counts. The message to society is that you don’t have to live by the rules so
long as you can convince the law that it is your right to do so. In the on-again-off-again
case of the Nairobi governor candidate whose education certificate was
approved-rejected-and-accepted, the message to school students suggests that education
may be good, but cannot be verified by a certificate thereof. Society does not value
education - engage in it at your own risk.
When a political
grouping decamps from Azimio to UDA or vice versa, what message are they
sending voters? They show a pathetic disdain for the voters whom they used to
get into office using a manifesto they never really believed in. They suggest that
voting was just a game which the winner takes all using taxpayer’s money.
Many have
heralded the lack of violence in these election as a sign of peace and national
maturity. Indeed, the call for peace and justice is a delicate matter. But, we
must ask whether peace is to be pursued beyond the rule of law or at the
expense of righteousness? The ethical question here is, should a criminal be
allowed to get away peacefully because the victim remains silent?
Perhaps the most challenging ethical question touted
by all political parties is the perennial lack of the nation to deal with
corruption. Corruption uses the law to extract payments from its victims. The
ethical message here suggests to society is that the law is powerless to
protect the people. The result is the peoples’ loss of faith in national institutions.
Why do these
questions matter? These unresolved ethical
questions leave society uncertain and groping about for clarity and direction.
These unresolved questions damage the social fabric to the extent that society
is unable to galvanize the momentum it needs to heal and propel itself to a
better future. These questions leave many feeling deluded, helpless victims of
fraud, apathetic to the cause of citizenship. They leave people disinterest
in governance and the collective responsibility of nationhood. These questions need to be pragmatically resolved to lay the foundations of an aspirational and prosperous nation.
Wednesday, August 24, 2022
THREE ways to get things done; Get in the right frame of mind
Three ways to get things done
Many people
struggle with the combined concepts of empowerment, personal development and
leadership. They are certainly related, but different. Empowerment is to acquire the right frame of mind, attitude and inspiration
to pursue your dreams. Personal
development is the initiative you take to equip yourself with hands-on-skills
to remain relevant in a dynamic environment. Leadership is the character you need to undertake and accomplish the
noble goals you set for yourself for the benefit of others.
Empowerment
Do you find
yourself in a position where you are capable of doing something you need to do,
but won’t do it? Like saving money for a project you would love to undertake.
You believe it is a good idea. You even have an available source of funds (Income,
salary or wages) to enact this dream project. But is just doesn’t get off the
ground. May be it is the desire to go back to school, build a house or mentor
kids in the local market, it remains a dream. If you are here, then you need
empowerment. How do you get into the right frame of mind to do what you need to
do? The short answer is to start. The long answer is to find some inspiration.
Go spend some time at the local school. Have coffee with a 90-year-old who went
back to school, research the benefits and blessings of undertaking the venture,
then make your own decisions.
Personal development
Perhaps you are operating
in what I call the “plateau-zone”. Everything is comfortable, you know everything
about what you do, but not everything about everything and don’t care to know
anything else or explore any other options of what you could possibly do. I’d
say the reason you need personal development is the fact that the world is
moving on without you. Everyday there is a micro advancement in your
environment. Everyday there is a better way of doing things which, needs you to
learn something new and develop yourself. Every day, much as it may appear
stable, the plateau-zone is depreciating. If you have read the book Who Moved My Cheese, then you know what
I am talking about. Personal development is not really an option. It is a means
of staying relevant in your apparently comfortable circumstances.
Leadership
Now everyone
knows almost everything about leadership. And perhaps that is the problem.
Leadership has more than 2000 known views, perspectives and definitions. So how
do I know you are applying the “proper” leadership principles in your life to
ensure you are better than the rest. Desiderata
tells me that is a futile engagement, “There will always be those greater and
lesser than yourself”. So what then should be your pinnacle leadership
achievement in your circumstances? Hmm… I have already given you the answer. In
other words, realize your full potential. Strive to be all you could ever be in
your reality. Do your best to be the God-gift you are to this world and I will
ask no more of your leadership.
Monday, August 22, 2022
Preparing for a New Chief Executive in Kenya - 2022 Elections!
The day I reported for my new job at the factory, the CEO was fired. After waiting at the reception for several hours, I learned that the shareholding in the company had changed. As such my appointment was in limbo as my letter was to be signed by the CEO. None of the staff would give my letter to him. The executives at the factory were in a nail-biting state of suspense but, they were also responsible to keep the factory operational. The people, the buildings and the factory procedures were not about to change anytime soon. In my view the only change a new CEO could possibly bring was a new philosophy.
At the demise of the Pharaoh in old Egypt the fate of his servants was sealed the day they took office. However, in the philosophical democratic of empires of Rome and Greece, the king’s courts were staffed with counsellors representing various interests. When a new King was appointed, counsellors had an intricate choice of allegiance to make. To continue serving in the court, they had three options; to protect the people from the king, to protect the king from the people or protect the people and the king.
As Kenya awaits a new president, the nation sits in the waiting room, a little perplexed. Who is the new president and what changes will he bring? The tension in the public is palpable, with a great desire among the populace to have the whole matter over and done with. Nonetheless, officers in the administration are in a delicate state. A transition brings fresh perspectives and inspires new energy and allocation of resources in areas the president deems to be of priority. While the people may anticipate a new leadership philosophy, officers in the administration are faced with the same choices counsellors had to make in the king’s court in Rome and Greece.
Tuesday, August 16, 2022
What the People of Kenya are Teaching the World about General Elections in 2022!
While the emotional
aftermath of winning and losing in the 2022 political season is likely to go on for a period of
time, Kenya is teaching the world four major lessons from the unfolding events
of the General Elections. With a final voter turnout of 65% it is clear that
every third registered voter did not cast their ballot. The result of the presidential
elections was determined by two out of three eligible voters. The choice of two
thirds of the voting block determined the destiny of the nation. Politicians around
the world are usually blamed for many things, but the people of Kenya can only
blame themselves for not coming out to vote. While the margin of victory between
the winner and the loser of the presidential vote stands at less than 2%, if
the third man, or woman, had cast their vote for one or other of the candidates, that
candidate would have garnered a whopping, uncontestable 62% of the vote.
Unfortunately, we will never know the veracity of that claim, because every third
voter in Kenya did not turn up at the ballot box. Kenya is now a international case-study in Voter Apathy that has cost the country a decisive electoral victory. The results
are bound to be disputed.
Secondly, politics and leadership are not the same thing. Politics is about the will of the people. Leadership is about good governance. The will of the people has been known to obtain great victory in politics like electing Abraham Lincoln to the Oval office. But, it also petulantly ejected Britain’s war time hero, Winston Churchill from prime minister. But the will of the people is also credited with incorrigible instances such as voting for the release from prison of "Barabbas", a murderer, instead of a person with no criminal record in ancient Israel. When people yearn for leadership they aspire for socio-economic well-being and personal security. However, general elections do not always deliver that outcome. Where leadership and politics converge we get Nelson Mandela, Mahatma Gandhi and Ellen Sirleaf Johnson. Where the two diverge we get Hitler, Taylor, Apartheid and other forms of dictatorship. In the later circumstances there is an immediate call for a savior.
Third, tribalism
leads to isolation. The use of the tribal card during elections is clearly
reflected in voting patterns. Unfortunately, the election outcome has been directed
by vested “tribal strongholds” touted by the political class long before
election day. Whether this is good or bad for the country is a matter of debate,
However, what is not in debate is the clear division and emergence of pockets
of disenfranchised strongholds rather than the establishment of a broad based
national consensus of winning candidates. The problem with the “tribalism of
the vote” is that no one can change “parties”. In other words, a person from one
community, by natures endowment, cannot change their perceived membership to
another community party even if they so wished. This leads to imputed and
assumed voter profiling based on ethnicity rather than an individuals political
leaning. This automatically leads to ostracism, distrust among communities, sustained
disenfranchisement among losers and exclusion from governance no matter what
platitudes or word combinations are used to convince the people otherwise.
Fourth, civic responsibility
is more than casting a vote. That vote needs to count for good governance, the conscientious
wellbeing of the nation and its civilian work ethic. In other words, civic
education needs to empower voters to consider what is good for the nation
beyond what is gratifying to self. A citizens’ civic responsibility goes beyond
self. Boy scouts and the disciplined forces have the right
attitude with “service beyond self”. Civil responsibility, in the face of political
leaning, can deal with the demise of corruption. But, this attitude need not be
confined to the disciplined forces, it is an attitude that can transform the
tunes of patriotic songs and dances into lived experiences of hope. Kenyans
have a choice to make, but the world is certainly learning from us. As a nation
under the fear of God, we could do well to learn from ourselves.
Leadership consultant, lecturer & author
His
training has impacted thousands of employees from hundreds of organizations
around Africa. His empowering books on leadership and personal development
have transformed many lives across the continent.
Tuesday, July 26, 2022
St Mary's; The Legend of '91
St Mary’s; The Legend of ‘91
In
late 1990, I joined my primary school math teacher on the staff of St. Mary’s
School in Nairobi. I was teaching high school, but I never forgot the mathematical genius Mr. Peter Mwangura instilled in me and my
class mates in those early days. His rule was simple,
“Never stay down and never get comfortable with your last success”. Joining St
Mary’s was not in my strategic plan, but needless to say I was jobless. I had
to make a quick turnaround before I was kicked out for defaulting on my rent. I
had smugly quit my previous job several months ago and now my finances were
going south. I was to teach physics, math, computer basics. I also taught something
called theory of knowledge (TOK). During one of these classes Eric brought the house down when he declared, " I want to be rich and famous". I later learned that the appearance of the
word “rugby” on my resume gave me an edge for the job against two other candidates. It was not
until the middle of the first school term in 1991 that I was persuaded to go
down to the furthest field on the vast school grounds to see a sorry picture of
about eight or so fresh faced, portly, roughly dressed, long, wide and short cast
members rolling about the arena. They were all cackling loudly and having a whale of a
time. They were practicing for a stage comedy of sorts. As I sat down for the
pre-Broadway edition of "who can catch the ball", I realized I was watching
the school rugby team.
I
don't know why I went back the next week, but it was probably because Father Caffrey asked me what I thought
of the team. I mumbled something, but I knew he was not going to let me forget
why I was hired. So I went back to the circus and the boys thought I was the
joke. We all discovered, together, that the team had never won a match in memory
and that we were the whipping boys of the National Schools’ rugby league. In
other words, every other school counted three points before match day with the
Saints. I looked over the boys on the set and I saw two things we could
work with. The boys had heart and they had spirit. They also had boots, but they hardly knew
anything about rugby, the ball or teamwork. They had a natural leader, Koech, aka
“captain” or " coach". His last title was a corruption of his ability
to run like a train on tracks - dead center at full speed! Nonetheless, this unnerving habit ended up with a
ton of bodies on top of him while he barked orders from beneath the pile. He
just never knew when to give up! This medium sized lad always
played with a bandage on his left hand. He took everything that came at him.
So
we got to work. We peeled off the fat. Coach was brilliant at that. The players preferred me to the captains’ suicide workouts. Koech did his own workouts
before and after practice. Everyone had to learn to run for 90 minutes’ non-
stop. After that we got them to run in the right direction. What could be
simpler...you would think!?! Then we worked on catching, not juggling, the ball
and running with it towards our opponents and not away from them. After a while we even managed to move around together like a Roman tank. Amazingly,
our numbers began to grow and we began to play for the girls in the gallery.
Class teachers complained about the player’s poor grades and truancy.
Parents came to watch practice sessions after school. We were so popular we had
a following!! Evidently we become a standard feature on a weekly comic strip . Every player
discovered they had a talent and needed to show it off! Teamwork went from mediocre
one day to disaster the next. So, we got all the players to the center of the
pitch and agreed if we wanted to be winners, we would need to do two things fast.
First, we individually needed to decide why we wanted to be on this team and whether
we wanted to work together or not. Next, we needed to focus on character,
teamwork and tactics-on the pitch and not in the stands. We also agreed
that good grades would not hurt our reputation. It took us several weeks to
learn those lines by heart, but we did. With that we said our prayers and
walked into the league at the beginning of the mid-year school term.
The Friday Nation Newspaper reported that “Saint Mary's school Rugby team 1st
XV won their first match 4:3” in the sports pages . That result was
such a shocker it drew the attention of the national sports editor. It was a win
by the narrowest margin possible from the least fancied side in the country. That
was NEWS! That is when everyone else started to believe. But, from then on there was no looking back. That win anchored the school’s
first ever championship success in the Prescott
Cup. It laid the foundation for a winning streak that lasted more than a decade.
By the middle of the season we could hook, ruck, maul and steal the ball at
will. And boy could those boys run! We used everything to our advantage; weight,
height and wings! We could counter attack from our own twenty-five-yard line and
drive all the way back to the opponents try line. The blitz of blue and white
uniforms on the field was like a swarm of migrating wild geese in “V” formation. We could dictate and switch pace of a game and fling the ball across half the field. We had a battery of coded play. The Saints were no longer an afterthought, they became the team
to beat. Half of the team of ’91 would tryout and turnout for the Kenya
National team, registering sterling performances and outstanding accolades at
the international level.
I
slipped out of the St Mary’s School set at the end of ’91 for my next assignment. It was a privilege
to have been part of Gods orchestrated greatness. The memories of the team
stay with me. They may not have looked the part in the beginning, but the boys were
always champions at heart. The boys became men and then gentlemen! Every one of those who turned
out for us on that team had their own story. Each one showed up, because only
champions show up. I should write a book about this someday or better still
make a movie. I am not sure anyone would believe me. You see this story is the
stuff of legends. The greatest team on earth taught me a
champion needs three things; heart, spirit and most important character! ... By the way, Eric did become both rich and famous. Only he had the faith to believe it.
Alolo