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Cp-africa’s Interview With Seun Osewa, Founder Of Nairaland : Repeat - Nairaland / General - Nairaland

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Cp-africa’s Interview With Seun Osewa, Founder Of Nairaland : Repeat by mrpackager(m): 5:55pm On Apr 27, 2015
came accross diz on ,net .... So i feel i shud share it wit ma fello NLS



very inspiring ........

Thanks for joining us at CP-Africa Seun!
Thanks, Nmachi. It’s a real honour to be here. CP-
Africa is going places.

Thanks Seun. It is our pleasure and honour to have
you on. Let’s start with the origins of the site. When
did you start the Nairaland Forum?
I installed the Simplemachines Forum on the 10th of
March, 2005, and opened Nairaland to the public on
the 25th of March, 2005 after working on it for about
two weeks. That’s about 14 months after Mark
Zuckerberg launched TheFacebook.com.
Interesting…Why did you choose to start Nairaland?
About 2 years earlier I had attempted to start a web
hosting business, but after 3 months I could only
boast of one customer, so I ran out of capital and
the business died. It would probably have
succeeded if I had managed my capital more wisely
or raised more money as I got many hosting
requests I couldn’t satisfy later that year.

After that first failure, I was encouraged to get
certifications and a regular job, but I couldn’t go
back to that kind of path after tasting creative
freedom, so I kept researching business ideas and
presenting them to friends and family, but no capital
was forthcoming to carry any of them out. I did this
for less than 2 years. (The last idea was a site for
sending SMS messages. I picked up Python to
implement it.)
Eventually, I decided to start a web forum, because
it was the only idea that required no additional
capital: I already had Internet access and a $15
per month VPS graciously paid for by a family
friend. I created 3 forums in November 2003 (one
for higher institution students, one for IT
discussions, and one to cover the emerging GSM
industry; the Mobile Nigeria Forum at
MobileNigeria.com).

The Mobile Nigeria Forum took off, so I relaunched
it in February 2005 with the assistance of Mr. John
Sagai Adams, who posted a link to the forum on his
mailing list and participated enthusiastically in those
early days. Other mobile enthusiasts like Mr. Yomi
Adegboye pitched in to make the site a success. In
a month or so, the forum had about 300 members,
but the growth potential didn’t satisfy me.

I decided to start Nairaland when I noticed two odd
things about MobileNigeria:
(1) Despite its narrow focus, it was the only
Nigerian community that gave a voice to Nigerians
at home. Most other Nigerian sites were owned
and dominated by Nigerians in the US or UK. They
covered only issues of interests to Nigerians
abroad.
(2) The off topic section of the forum, covering
topics outside telecoms, like romance and jokes,
was becoming more vibrant than the Mobile Nigeria
Forum itself, suggesting the need for a more
general-purpose Nigerian forum.

This gave me the confidence to take forums like
Naijaryders and Talknaija head on by starting a
general purpose discussion forum with a strong
bias towards issues of interest to Nigerians at
home. I felt that such a site could attract enough
traffic to make enough money from Google adverts.
That’s why I started the Nairaland Forum.

When will you say Nairaland hit its “tipping point”
that helped launch it into the mainstream in the
Nigerian internet community?


I don’t believe there was a real tipping point,
because we were providing something people really
wanted. Growth has been linear from day one.
However, I can tell you about some memorable
moments in our history.

I remember a time we got about 30 registrations a
day from our coverage of Gulder Ultimate Search. I
think that was the first month.
I remember when the Job section became so
popular that most Nigerians at home thought
Nairaland was a job portal. It was a bit annoying,
but I embraced it.

I remember when our business section became
popular when all those wonder banks were in
vogue. And after that, spammers and advertisers
finished it off. It used to be great.
I remember when I realised I could no longer
respond to every thread on the forum, and after a
while I couldn’t even read every thread. Now I can’t
even check every section in day.

I remember when I first realised that revolts by old
members couldn’t kill the site because of the
constant influx of new members. This, coupled with
stress from the rapid growth of the site, led me to
adopt a Buhari-style approach to managing the
forum, which tarnished my reputation quite a bit.
I’m trying to change that now.

I remember when I locked all Nairalanders out of
the forum during a public holiday because I couldn’t
keep up with spammers anymore. I was spending
several hours every day just deleting spam and I
was tired. Mukina2, a famous Nairalander,
volunteered to help by moderating and recruiting
other volunteer moderators.

I remember when I wrote an ‘antispam bot’ because
moderators couldn’t keep up with spam. And it
wasn’t enough. Then I added a registration
CAPTCHA and it didn’t make any difference.
Nowadays, everyone hates the bot, because it often
makes mistakes, but we would have had to lock
down the forum if we didn’t have it.

How many users/members does Nairaland
currently have? How many people currently use the
site


We have about 650,000 user accounts. About
30,000 were logged on in the last 30 days. Most
Nairalanders don’t bother to login or register. They
just read the site like a newspaper site and search
it with Google. Our daily visitor count is much
higher.

Who are your main competitors?
NaijaHotJobs, NigeriaBestForum, Goal.com, and
maybe Jobberman.

What do you think has set Nairaland apart from
other Nigerian online forums over the years?

Compared to Nigerian forums that preceded
Nairaland: local point of view, better organization,
more serious topics, and guest-friendliness.
Compared to our current forum competitors;
momentum.

What were some of the initial challenges you
encountered when you first started out?


Power – I had to get an inverter with my last
savings to run MobileNigeria.

Troublemakers – Some people refused to follow the
rules of the forum and caused fights.

Are you looking to outside investors to further scale
the service? Why or why not?


Not really. Right now, our major problems are due
to the nature of an internet forum. Very few forums
grow as big as Nairaland, because several
problems crop up as many people try to interact on
the same forum.

One is trolling; some people just love to behave
badly on anonymous forums. They derail
discussions, insult others for no reason, and treat
people asking for advice with insensitivity. In a
small forum, it’s easy to identify these people and
exclude them, but in a large forum like Nairaland, it
gets to a point where you can only deal with the
extreme cases. Trolling becomes part of the
experience, and that limits growth quite a bit.
Another one is spam, which I discussed earlier. Any
popular site that allows strangers to post what they
like for free will have that problem.

The last one is the most subtle and difficult to
solve. A young internet forum is like an extended
family. Everyone knows everyone, and people
really care about each other. Being part of one is a
very nice, cozy experience. That’s what the Mobile
Nigeria forum was like. But as a forum grows, it
becomes a community of strangers, like Oshodi
before Fashola. Most members are forced to
become spectators.

I don’t think these issues can be solved by having a
lot more money. We (Nairaland moderators and I)
will just end up doing the same things we’re doing
now in more expensive ways. But I have been
working on a plan to solve these problems by
changing the way the forum works. It will be
incredibly risky and time consuming, but won’t
require much money.
Facebook has 1 employee for every 300,000
monthly active users. Nairaland has 1 employee
(me!) for just 30,000 active users, so I think the
priority for now should be to make Nairaland 10
times more efficient.

Do you intend to include other features, such as
evolving Nairaland to become a social networking
hub? Why or why not?


This is such a nice question. If I got 5 naira every
time a developer offered to help me make Nairaland
like Facebook, I would be rich enough to buy the
moon!
But here’s the thing. You can’t beat Facebook. even
if your website is perfect. Social networks benefit
from ‘network effects’, which means the bigger they
are, the better the experience. Facebook has grown
so big that the only thing other social networks can
do is die. MySpace, Hi5, and even Google’s social
network (Orkut), and Microsoft’s Live Spaces have
been beaten and are still losing members every
day. If Google and Microsoft can’t beat them, I
don’t think I should waste my time.
There’s an element of Facebook I’d like to
incorporate, though. The ‘social graph’. It’s the
reason why Facebook can have 500m users on the
same site and yet, unlike most big forums, doesn’t
feel over-crowded. The social graph approach
scales so well.

How profitable is the Nairaland forum?
Haha. Nice one! Is this where you envisioned
Nairaland when you started out


Seun: My initial dream with MobileNigeria was to
make more than 60k a month, which seemed like a
reasonable salary at the time, and then use any
extra income as capital to start a more promising
business. This was reasonable to me, afterall the
total capital I wasted in my failed hosting business
was under N60k. Nairaland flew past this target
within the first year, and continues to grow.

Apart from wanting to create a place where
Nigerians at home could feel at home, I didn’t have
lofty visions for Nairaland, save to remain number

1
. I just wanted to succeed at something for once,
and I thought this was the cheapest thing I could
try.
Where do you see Nairaland in the next five years?

Hopefully, someone more capable than me would be
running it by then, and it will be the most popular
African website (we’re currently number 2). Little
steps!
Any last words for readers who are currently
members of the Nairaland community?


Yes, just two words: Thank You! I have so many
people to thank. If I’m ever interviewed again, I’ll
surely mention more names.

Nmachi: Thanks so much Seun for sharing your
story with us! Very inspiring to say the least. All the
best with Nairaland!

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