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Loy Okezie 2.0
Loy Okezie 2.0
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Speaking at a Consumer Engagement Workshop in Lagos

Teleios Consulting is organizing a Consumer Engagement workshop themed: “Harnessing the power of social media for brands”.

The workshop is structured to be highly engaging and seeks to bring together bloggers, internet marketers, social media and brand communication professionals to chart the course on how the internet is changing consumer habits, expectations and how business professionals and entrepreneurs can leverage on these mobile and digital platforms in meeting their business objectives.

As new media platforms are emerging, what better time for Nigerian brands to leverage on these platforms to bring their brands online.

Participants will benefit from the knowledge and experience of some of Nigeria’s finest social media strategists including:

Dayo AdefilaChief Operating Officer at HotSauce

Yinka OlaitoLead Consultant at Michael Sage Consulting

Franklin OzekhomeBusiness Director at Insight Communications

Loy OkezieEditor of TechLoy.com and Digital Content Producer at NEXT

Deola KayodeManaging Partner at Teleios Consulting

The event holds this Thursday, July 21, 2011 at Korbis Building, 18/20 Kudirat Abiola Way, Oregun, Ikeja, Lagos. To register to attend this event, visit this link. Free, but limited spaces are available.


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July 18, 2011 | 7:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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Nominated For ‘Best Technology Blog’ At Nigerian Blog Awards 2011. [VOTE NOW]

I’m excited to announce that my blog has been nominated for a Nigerian Blog Awards in the Best Science or Technology Blog’ category for the second time consecutively.

The blog won the Best Technology Blog in Nigeria in the 2010 edition of the Nigerian Blog Awards.

This time, the blog will be competiting with Mobility Nigeria, Ogbonge Blog, Seye Kuyinu and Technessivity for the award.

The Nigerian Blog Awards (in its 3rd year) is an annual blogger’s award which recognizes the best blogs in different categories such as beauty, religion, photography, music, sports, food, etc.

Voting has already started today and will end on July 9. Winners will be announced on June 10.

To vote for my blog or your favourite blogs in Nigeria, visit the Nigerian Blog Awards website.

Do you like this post? Subscribe to this blog’s feed at http://loyokezie.com/feed and share the post.


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June 28, 2011 | 7:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Why Nigeria Must Build Tech Innovation Hubs (Or Bleed Out)

Ever heard of Kenya’s iHub? Cameroon’s ActivSpaces or even Ghana’s MEST?

These are all thriving innovation hubs and incubation centres that are encouraging collaboration amongst technology entrepreneurs and birthing very innovative products and services.

Little wonder, the international media has turned its attention on some of these emerging tech markets in Africa like Kenya with their beaming searchlights.

Unfortunately, Nigeria hardly gets
any of its technology companies or entrepreneurs featured in foreign media, let alone mentioned or cited in a focus on African tech entrepreneurship.

This begs some questions: Are there really Nigerian tech entrepreneurs out there? Or are there just a noisy bunch of know-it-all-but-do-nothing-developers out there?

Or could it be that there’s a disconnect between developers and tech entrepreneurs? Perhaps there are not enough entrepreneurial skills/talents out there to match the existing technical expertise?

From what I can percieve, we have developers who create a project or product, but never bother about running it as a business and on the other hand, entrepreneurs who worry more about getting the product/service out to users, instead of developing a revenue model and focusing on running a profitable business.

Personally, I feel that all the ‘noise’ we hear on our timelines everyday and at tech events over the years, could stall local innovation from coming out of (or happening in) Nigeria if entrepreneurs and developers fail to collaborate now.

In order not to play catch up to other emerging African tech markets (this may already be happening), Nigeria must have operational collaborative spaces where developers and students meet researchers and entrepreneurs, and local innovation can be birthed.

Granted, this may not be the ultimate solution, but here are 5 reasons why Nigeria must build innovation hubs sooner (now) rather than later (never).

1. The whales are coming. Or they’re here already.

By whales, I mean the likes of Google, Naspers, Groupon and their other breeds and species.

When you’re swimming in an ocean and don’t see a whale coming, or you didn’t by any chance prepare for its coming, you’d be swallowed up (and eventually die). The lesson: We need to get prepared for the coming of the tech giants (better later than never) either by building stuff they’d be interested in buying later or wished they had better competitive advantage.

2. Local clones are getting cloned.

One of the strongest unique feature of the Nigerian business culture is that we clone clones that are clonning other clones.

We don’t see anything wrong with running the same business with the same revenue model on the same street/area (make that domain name) as our supposed competition.

Not that it’s really a bad thing, but why clone clones when you can collaborate, combine resources and talents together to provide the same service and solve a need on a larger scale?

Within 5 months into this year, we’ve already seen 3 or more similar services launched by different entrepreneurs struggling to get the same small amount of customers/users to try out their services.

That’s why we badly need an ideas and innovation lab so that I’m not planning my startup in isolation and eventually launch the same startup that Oo is about to launch.

3. Isolation hubs hardly thrive.

Isolation hubs are those ones we build in our homes and laptops. Most times, we labour in isolation with limited resources (I’ve seen many of those ‘Oh no! PHCN has interrupted power’ tweets), while working on the same or similar services that someone else, somewhere (maybe around us) is already working on.

We may have built a hub around us, but how far can we go it alone? Not too far, because sooner or later, we would be stuck in that confined space and then tweet out our frustrations hoping that someone out there in Twitterland can comfort us.

But according to Bill Zimmerman at 27Months:

“The idea behind the iHub—and other new technology labs cropping up across Sub-Saharan Africa—is to put a group of exceptionally smart “doers” under one roof, provide them with a top notch work environment, generate ideas at a rapid pace, filter out the dead ends, present the best candidates to investors and produce viable businesses (and success stories) along the way.

Hopefully, the soon-to-be-launched Co-creation Hub (ccHub) situated in the Lagos Island and the Wennovation Hub in the Ikeja area of Lagos can trigger a set of chain reactions across cities in Nigeria and put our developers and entrepreneurs out of their misery.

I believe that this is the best and surest way to grow a stronger and better technology community — one that policymakers and VCs would be naturally drawn to — that could attract foreign direct investment into Nigeria.

4. Generational commonalities.

By August this year, the Nigerian telecommunications industry will be celebrating the 10th year anniversary of GSM in Nigeria. If you’re reading this today, chances are that you’re 10, 20 or 30 years older than the GSM.

Thus since we have a generational commonality with the GSM, we have a great advantage that our parents didn’t have: living in the age of mobile technology.

Now’s the best time to leverage on this to produce local mobile content (music, games, apps, etc) for over 70 million mobile phone users in Nigeria. Why wait for the Indians or the Chinese to develop our mobile content? The fear of chinko should really be the beginning of wisdom.

5. The dotcom boom is here and now.

We’ve been waiting for the dotcom bubble in Nigeria since the U.S bubble bust in 2000.
Now that the dotcom bubble has gone 2.0 in the U.S, we are now experiencing what we might call ‘Nigeria’s Internet Boom’ which is characterized by an increase in commercial growth of the Internet.

This period which started from 2010 (I guess) would be marked by, amongst other things, the founding (and in some cases, failure) of a group of Internet-based companies, otherwise known as dot-com businesses or startups.

Again, we’re lucky to be in the generation that witnesses this Internet boom in Nigeria. What we do to tap into this Internet boom in the next 5 years or so would determine whether or not we can become Internet millionnaires (in $$$) by 2015.

This dream could be realized if we start collaborating in spaces and networks that innovation hubs provide now. And perhaps, Nigeria’s next big thing might just come out of a tech incubator somewhere in Lagos, Benin or Owerri.

You never know.

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June 27, 2011 | 7:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Mobicanvas – An Innovative Mobile Site Builder

Founded in January 2011, Mobicanvas is a web tool that helps small-to-medium enterprises and startups generally to easily and cheaply build, promote and monetise their own mobile websites.

The mobicanvas web interface provides a unique way to build a mobile site without any development costs and you can have your mobile site deployed on a domain of your choice in minutes.

With mobicanvas, you can build a mobile website quickly and easily using a drag and drop feature on the mobile site builder. The tool allows you to choose from a selection of themes to customize the look and feel of your mobile site. You can change the colours, header, footer and even add your own images.

Mobicanvas lets you choose from a wide selection of widgets such as twitter feeds, weather, finance, google maps, custom forms, user polls, mobile optimized rss feeds and downloadable content (videos, audio, and images), etc to add functionality to your mobile site.

Mobicanvas mobile site builder from Mobi Canvas on Vimeo.

As an extension of the Mobicanvas service, a worldwide bulk SMS interface is offered with competitive global rates. This could come in handy should you want inform your existing database of contacts about your offerings via SMS.

Mobile sites built using Mobicanvas (e.g sitename.mobicanvas.com) come with Admob ads by default, but you can remove such ads by upgrading to a premium account which costs $10 USD (about N1500) per month. In order to host a custom domain (e.g. sitename.mobi), you’ll have to pay $10 USD and all payments are done via PayPal.

Mobicanvas has already hosted more than 100 sites since launch. Some great examples of mobile sites built using Mobicanvas include m.thedailymaverick.co.za, soulcandi.mobicanvas.com and thepresidencyfm.mobicanvas.com

This is a sponsored post.


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June 24, 2011 | 2:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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TechLoy.com, the new blog in the tech bloc

Last wednesday, I launched with much excitement a new technology news blog at www.techloy.com!

After several months of intense planning (at times during the heat of the day) and spirited strategising (mostly in the quiet of the night) for an independent media site that can cover and cater to the needs of the local tech, mobile and startup ecosystem, the launch was greeted with great excitement from the Internet community.

Within the past week, I’ve covered some very exciting stories and revelations on the blog. (Go check ‘em out for yourself) But nothing as big as a story that could break the TechLoy server yet :)

So why TechLoy?

Simply because I believe it’s time for me to build an independent tech media network that provides relevant news and information about what’s happening and what to expect within the industry in West Africa’s tech markets.

To achieve this, I’m building around me a great team of carefully selected experts in their own field, coupled with our combined network of contacts within the industry. More will be revealed about these people when appropriate.

Oh before I forgot, many thanks to Anibe Agamah for designing and developing such a great technology blog! And thanks to Ahmad Mukoshy for designing the TechLoy logo. These guys are rock stars!

So what next for LoyOkezie.com?

Well, there’s not much to say for now than: expect the creation of the brand – Loy Okezie.

But hey, don’t be in a rush to unsubscribe from the blog’s feed or even stop visiting this blog. Just be assured that what would become of LoyOkezie.com pretty soon is perhaps the best kept secret :-)

See you around!

Do you like this post? Subscribe to this blog’s feed at http://loyokezie.com/feed and share the post.


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June 22, 2011 | 5:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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GTBank’s Twitter Page Mourns CEO’s Death

Today, GTBank officially announced via Twitter, the passing away of their MD/CEO, Mr. Tayo Aderinokun.

In honour of the former GTBank, the bank’s Twitter page spotted a black background and their twitter profile picture was changed to a candle-lit image possibly denoting that Aderinokun’s memory lives on, with the text that reads: Tayo Aderinokun passes…(1955 – 2011).

According to GTBank’s website:

With a deep sense of loss, but with gratitude to the Almighty God, we write to notify you of the passing on to eternal glory of our dearly beloved Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Tayo Aderinokun. Mr. Aderinokun who had been on Medical Leave, passed on this afternoon, Tuesday, June 14, 2011, in the United Kingdom.

Aderinokun co-founded Guaranty Trust Bank Plc in 1990 and served as Deputy Managing Director for 12 years between 1990 and 2002, after which he became the Managing Director, a position he held until his death.

While serving as the Bank’s Managing Director, GTBank witnessed tremendous progress and growth and recognised as one of the most profitable and professionally managed corporate institutions in Nigeria.


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June 14, 2011 | 3:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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Nigerian URL Shortener Yrn.me Redesigns

Local URL shortener service, Yrn.me has redesigned its logo and website which went live today. The service which launched in February 2010 was the first URL shortening service to come out of Nigeria. [Here's what it looked like before redesign]

YRN.ME, a 5-lettered domain name better spoken as “Yarn Me” (Nigerian slang word for “tell me”) can shorten up to 2,000 characters length of web addresses to merely 20 characters. (Oh, by the way, it has already shortened over 2300 links so far). Not bad for a service in a saturated space!

The service has since been adopted by Nigerian web users, but has yet to cause a disruption in the URL shortening space currently being dominated by Twitter’s default URL shortener, bit.ly

While Yrn.me offers an local alternative to shortening those long URLs, it is yet to be seen if there’ll be a general shift from other URL shorteners to this service. After 14 months of launch, the service has yet to define a revenue model.

Thanks for the tip @GbengaSesan


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June 13, 2011 | 3:06 AM Comments  0 comments

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