AdisGlobal01's Posts
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In our Society today people have turn sexual Immoralities as a normal thing they have see it as something they must involve in. Boyfriends and girlfriends are already lnvolve in these Immoralities. As a normal Nigerian,.What did you think we need to do in our ends to curb this kind of behaviors or did you think we should Normalize it. Please unique and valuable Opinions in the comment section.
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According to research that Nigeria have one of the highest number of paternity fraud in the World, this genuine reasons why I am asking the public what did you think can make a woman to sleep with another Man outside; is it poverty, lack of sexual capabilty, emotional disconnect. Let me here your Òpinion in the comment section.
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If you have a phone and internet, you are not broke. Here are 20 side hustles you can start with your phone. No office. No laptop. No excuses.👇 20 Digital Income Skills You Can Start With Just a Smartphone 1. Freelance Writing & Research Offer writing, proofreading, research, and administrative support services to clients worldwide through platforms like Upwork. 2. Micro-Freelancing Services Sell simple digital services such as caption writing, thumbnail creation, voice-overs, and short video editing on Fiverr. 3. Mobile Photography Sales Turn your smartphone photos into passive income by uploading them to stock photo marketplaces like Shutterstock. 4. Stock Content Creation Sell photos, illustrations, and creative assets on Adobe Stock and earn royalties whenever your content is downloaded. 5. User-Generated Content (UGC) Creation Create authentic product review videos and lifestyle content for brands using only your smartphone camera. 6. Social Media Management Help businesses manage their social media presence by creating posts, responding to messages, and scheduling content. 7. Copywriting for Businesses Write compelling advertisements, social media captions, product descriptions, and promotional content for brands and entrepreneurs. 8. Mobile Graphic Design Design flyers, posters, logos, social media graphics, and YouTube thumbnails using mobile design tools. 9. Short-Form Video Editing Edit Reels, TikTok videos, YouTube Shorts, and promotional clips for content creators and businesses. 10. Professional Resume Writing Create ATS-friendly resumes and persuasive cover letters for job seekers and professionals. 11. Online Tutoring Teach academic subjects, languages, or professional skills through Zoom, WhatsApp, or Google Meet. 12. Virtual Assistance Provide remote support by managing emails, appointments, customer inquiries, and online research tasks. 13. Audio Transcription Services Convert recorded audio and video files into accurate written documents using transcription tools. 14. Digital Product Sales Create and sell templates, ebooks, checklists, planners, guides, and other downloadable resources. 15. Affiliate Marketing Promote useful products, software, and services while earning commissions for every successful referral. 16. Local Product Reselling Buy products at lower prices and resell them through Facebook Marketplace, WhatsApp, and local online communities. 17. Drop Servicing Acquire clients, outsource project execution to skilled freelancers, and profit from the price difference. 18. Print-on-Demand Business Create simple designs for T-shirts, mugs, hoodies, and accessories while fulfillment is handled by specialized platforms. 19. On-Demand Local Creative Services Offer smartphone photography for events, products, restaurants, real estate listings, and social media content. 20. Digital Advertising Services Help local businesses attract customers by setting up WhatsApp Status promotions, Instagram Story ads, and targeted campaigns. Final Thought The digital economy rewards skills, consistency, and execution not necessarily expensive equipment. Master one of these opportunities, build a portfolio, deliver excellent results, and gradually expand your expertise. Your smartphone can be the starting point of a profitable digital career. To learn more about all these skill In an elaborate way check section.
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Some victories are born from privilege, but others are forged in silent battles that no one sees. Faizah Jaji's story began with a dream and a difficult choice. After completing her National Diploma (ND), the road ahead seemed already mapped out. Most people expected her to continue with an HND. It was the safer path, the familiar path. But one conversation changed everything. A senior advised her to consider pursuing a university degree instead. It sounded simple, but for Faizah, it meant stepping into uncertainty. There was no guarantee of success. There was no crowd cheering her on. In fact, many people around her doubted the decision. Some questioned it. Others discouraged it entirely. Yet deep inside, she carried a belief that refused to die. With limited support and very little money, she took an internship and worked tirelessly just to raise enough funds for her JAMB registration. While many slept comfortably, Faizah spent countless nights studying, sacrificing, and preparing for an opportunity that had not even arrived yet. There were moments when giving up would have been easier. Moments when the future looked blurry. Moments when the weight of uncertainty felt unbearable. But she kept going. Every page she read was a vote for her future. Every sacrifice was a declaration that her dreams mattered. Then came the breakthrough. She gained admission into Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) to study Accounting. For many, that would have been the finish line. For Faizah, it was only the beginning. University life brought its own storms—academic pressure, leadership responsibilities, personal struggles, and the daily challenge of staying focused when life tested her strength. Yet she remained committed to the promise she had made to herself years earlier. She refused to let temporary difficulties steal a permanent destiny. Day after day. Semester after semester. Challenge after challenge. She kept showing up. And when the journey finally came to an end, the girl who once struggled to afford a JAMB form stood tall as a First Class graduate. What makes her achievement extraordinary is not just the certificate she earned. It is the courage behind it. The tears no one saw. The sacrifices nobody applauded. The faith she held onto when others doubted her. Faizah Jaji's story reminds us that sometimes the greatest obstacle is not a lack of resources, but the voices that tell us our dreams are too big. She chose not to listen. And because she didn't, a young woman who once fought for an opportunity became living proof that determination, resilience, and unwavering self-belief can transform impossible dreams into remarkable realities. Never underestimate what can happen when a person refuses to give up on themselves. ❤️📚✨ Tell me in the comment section what did you learn from the story
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SHE_NEEDS_YOUR_ADVICE My wedding was scheduled for March this year, but everything changed after my fiancé's father passed away unexpectedly in November. His funeral was held just three weeks later, in December. I genuinely wanted to attend, but there was one major problem: my employer had a strict policy against granting leave during the December holiday period. When I accepted the job, this condition was clearly stated. Despite explaining my situation and pleading for an exception, my request was denied. I informed my fiancé immediately. At first, he appeared understanding. I even contributed financially to support the funeral arrangements. Then his mother called. She told me that if I truly wanted to become part of their family, I had to be physically present at her husband's funeral. I tried explaining my circumstances, but she ended the call before I could finish. When I called my fiancé afterward, I expected him to stand by me. Instead, he asked: "If it were your own father, wouldn't you find a way to attend?" I explained that the situations were different because my employer might make an exception if it were my immediate family member. That was when he dropped the bombshell: "No presence. No wedding." I thought grief was speaking. I thought time would calm him down. I was wrong. The wedding was officially cancelled. My family tried everything to reconcile the situation, but his family refused every attempt. Eventually, my father advised me to accept the loss and move forward with my life. It broke me, but I did. Months passed. Then, on May 20th, my ex-fiancé called me. What he said left me speechless. According to him, I had failed the test of being a good wife because I stopped trying to convince his family after the wedding was cancelled. He said a "real wife" would have kept begging until she was accepted. Then he announced that he had "forgiven" me. Not only that, he had already chosen a new wedding date in August and expected me to start preparing immediately. As if the breakup had never happened. As if my feelings didn't matter. As if he alone had the authority to decide when a relationship ends—and when it resumes. Without hesitation, I told him I was no longer interested. His response shocked me even more. He said: "I'm not done. You don't have the right to be done." I blocked his number immediately. But that wasn't the end. A few days later, he appeared at my father's house carrying the bride price and all the marriage items he had previously rejected. My father told him clearly: "My daughter has moved on. As far as this family is concerned, she is no longer available." Still, he refused to accept it. Since then, he and his mother have continued calling, visiting, and pressuring both me and my family despite my repeated refusal. Now I'm beginning to wonder: Is this really about love, or is there something deeper behind their sudden determination? What troubles me most is the mindset that someone can cancel a wedding, disappear for months, return when it suits them, and expect another person to simply obey. I am now considering legal action because the constant calls, visits, and refusal to respect my decision are becoming disturbing. My question is: If someone ends a relationship, then later decides to "forgive" you and resume the wedding without your consent, would you see that as love... or as a dangerous sense of entitlement? What would you do if you were in my shoes?
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It was my first week working as an Uber driver in Lagos, and I had no idea that one particular trip would leave me speechless long after it ended. I was somewhere around the Lekki axis when I received a ride request from a lady. When I arrived at the pickup point, I noticed a man escorting her out of an apartment building. At first, everything seemed normal, but within seconds, a heated argument broke out. They were dragging over money. The lady insisted that the payment was incomplete, while the man argued that he had already given her enough. Their voices grew louder, and it became obvious that there was more to the story than I understood. Still, it wasn't my place to interfere, so I simply waited. Eventually, she entered the car, and we began the long journey toward the mainland. As we drove, she couldn't stop talking about the money. Her frustration filled the car. "This is the third day I've been with him and his friends," she complained. "After everything, he couldn't even give me enough money. He didn't even consider my transport fare." I remained silent, focusing on the road. A few minutes later, I noticed through my mirror that she was changing into more modest clothing. I assumed she was heading home and didn't want anyone to recognize the life she had been living. Then came a moment I never expected. She suddenly asked if she could "pay in kind" instead of paying the fare. For a second, I thought I had misheard her. When I asked what she meant, she casually explained that another driver had accepted such an arrangement before. I immediately declined. I told her politely but firmly that I only wanted my fare. She smiled, took her time getting dressed, and occasionally looked at me as though expecting me to change my mind. But I didn't. As we approached her destination, she returned to complaining about the money she had received. She kept saying it wasn't worth everything she had gone through and that she would need to call the man later to demand the balance. When we arrived, she made a phone call. Moments later, a man emerged from the house carrying a little child. The child ran toward her with excitement. "Mummy! Mummy!" The woman suddenly transformed. The same tired, frustrated passenger instantly became a loving mother. I watched quietly as she stepped out of the vehicle and slowly walked toward them. Curious, I struck up a light conversation with the man while waiting for my payment. Trying to joke around, I smiled and said, "Boss, is that your sister? She's beautiful." The man laughed. Then he replied with words that completely stunned me. "My sister? That's my wife." I froze. "My wife," he repeated. "We've been married for three years." My heart skipped. He went on to explain that she had travelled for work and had just returned. He even mentioned that he was the one who advised her to take an Uber because she would likely be exhausted from the journey. As he spoke, I looked toward the woman playing with her child. Everything suddenly felt surreal. The entire trip replayed in my mind like a movie. The argument. The complaints. The proposition. The child calling her "Mummy." The husband proudly calling her "My wife." That day, I learned a lesson I will never forget: You can spend hours with someone and still know absolutely nothing about the life they live behind closed doors. People carry secrets, struggles, and double lives that are often invisible to the world. And sometimes, the most shocking stories are hidden behind the most ordinary faces.
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As narrated to me by Barrister Stella Justice If you want to marry a lawyer, come closer. Let me help you. Don’t say : “Baby, I love you.” Say: “My Lady, I humbly apply for a long-term relationship with a view to marriage.” Don’t say: “Can I have your number?” Say: “Kindly grant me access to your communication channel for further discussions.” Don’t say: “Will you marry me?” Say: “Are you willing to enter into a legally recognised union with me, subject to terms and conditions?” And please attach: 1. Passport photograph 2. Means of identification 3. Evidence of seriousness 4. Proof that you are not wasting anybody’s time Failure to comply may result in immediate dismissal of your application. Do this and thank me later. Written by Stella Justice Nnennaya, the number one celebrity lawyer for public consumption
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Elijah Obafemi, a First-Class graduate of Civil Engineering from the Federal University of Technology, Akure (FUTA) 2025 set, has been selected as one of the beneficiaries of the Ekiti State Innovation and Entrepreneurship Grant for a housing sourcing solution called JustBukit. JustBukit was born from a challenge faced by thousands of students across Nigerian campuses: finding safe and trustworthy accommodation. Many students lose money to fake agents, they are shown apartments that do not match what was advertised, or pay for accommodations that fail to meet their expectations, or pay without any existing apartments sometimes. To address this problem, he developed JustBukit, a technology platform designed to connect students with verified housing agents while providing payment protection throughout the accommodation search process. Through the platform, agents undergo identity verification before they can list properties. Students can browse available accommodations, schedule inspections, and make payments securely. Rather than paying agents directly, payments are held securely and only released when the student has inspected the property and confirmed that the agreed conditions have been met. The startup is also working on additional features, including an AI-powered roommate matching system and tools that will simplify and secure annual rent payments between students, and landlords. The idea was presented at the Ekiti State Innovation and Entrepreneurship Programme, where it was recognized as a promising technology-driven solution with the potential to solve a real problem affecting students and families. Speaking about the motivation behind the startup, the goal is not just to help students find accommodation, but to create a trusted housing ecosystem where students can confidently search, inspect, and secure housing without fear of scams. The JustBukit team is currently onboarding more agents and conducting identity verification to expand the number of trusted accommodation options available to students. Students looking for accommodation (especially the new students who will be coming in soon) and verified agents interested in listing properties can visit: My Question to you is that what you are learning currently to change the global market and make you a special personality in the society. Kindly tell me in the comment section Credit to justbukit.app
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🚀 HOW TO BUILD A VIRAL FACELESS FACEBOOK PAGE IN 30 DAYS (Step-by-step. No camera needed. No experience required.) Most people think you need to show your face to grow on Facebook. You don't. In 2026, Facebook is a full-on content discovery engine. It now pushes great content to people who have NEVER heard of you. That means a brand new page can reach tens of thousands of people — organically — starting from zero. Here's the exact 30-day roadmap 👇 ⚡ QUICK START (If you're starting TODAY) 1. Open Facebook → Create a Page 2. Pick your niche 3. Design your profile with Canva (free) 4. Post your first Reel TODAY 5. Reply to every comment in the first hour That's it. Just start. You improve as you go. 💡 THE TRUTH Most people quit in Week 2 because results feel slow. But here's what they don't know: 👉 The algorithm needs 2–4 weeks to fully understand what your page is about. 👉 In 2026, content quality beats follower count. A brand new page with one great Reel can outperform a page with 50,000 followers. 👉 The pages blowing up right now? They started 30 days ago and didn't quit. The difference between a page with 1,000 followers and one with 100,000? About 90 days of not quitting. 📈 WEEK 3: GROWTH STRATEGY (Days 15–21) 📌 Day 15 — Engage With Your Audience Reply to every comment within the FIRST HOUR of posting. ✅ Tip: The first 60 minutes after posting determines 80% of your content's viral potential. Early engagement triggers the algorithm to push your post further. 📌 Day 16 — Join Relevant Facebook Groups Share content in active niche groups. Be genuinely helpful. Don't spam links. ✅ Tip: In 2026, Groups are the #1 underrated growth lever on Facebook. Your page name shows up next to every comment — that's free visibility. 📌 Day 17 — Collaborate (Shoutouts) Partner with similar-sized pages for cross-promotion. It's free and gets you in front of a warm audience. ✅ Tip: Mutual shoutouts work best when both pages have similar follower counts and the same target audience. 📌 Day 18 — Leverage All Facebook Features Use Reels, Stories, Polls, and Lives. The algorithm rewards pages that use ALL native features. ✅ Tip: Start with a Poll today. Example: "Which do you prefer — A or B?" Polls are the fastest way to spike engagement with zero effort. 📌 Day 19 — Boost Top Performing Posts Amplify posts that are already working organically. Even a small boost multiplies reach fast. ✅ Tip: Never boost a post that isn't already performing. Only put fuel on a fire that's already burning. 📌 Day 20 — Build an Audience List Encourage followers to join your email list or Facebook Group. ✅ Tip: Facebook can limit or remove your page at any time. Your email list is yours forever. Build it from day one. 🤖 AI Prompt: "Write a Facebook post encouraging followers to join my free newsletter or community group for [niche]. Make it feel exclusive and valuable, not pushy." 📌 Day 21 — Review & Optimize Look at 3 weeks of data. What content type performed best? Which day had the most growth? ✅ Tip: Your real viral formula is hidden in your own data. Build the next 30 days around what already worked. 💰 WEEK 4: SCALING & MONETIZATION (Days 22–30) 📌 Day 22 — Scale Content Production Batch-create content to save time. Record 5 Reels in one sitting. Design 10 images in one session. ✅ Tip: Use AI to write your captions, hooks, and scripts in minutes. Customize and post. That's it. 🤖 AI Prompt: "Give me a batch content creation plan for a faceless [niche] Facebook page. I want to create 30 posts in one single day." 📌 Day 23 — Focus on Viral Content Types What gets shared the most on Facebook in 2026: → Listicles ("7 things you didn't know about..." ![]() → How-Tos ("How to do X in 5 minutes" ![]() → Facts & Stats ("Most people have no idea this is happening..." ![]() → Quotes & Mindset posts → Trending news in your niche ✅ Tip: Listicles and How-Tos get saved the most. Saves = massive algorithmic reach. 📌 Day 24 — Drive Traffic From Other Platforms Cross-post to TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Pinterest, Instagram, and Substack. ✅ Tip: One Facebook post = content for 4 platforms. Maximum reach, minimum extra effort. 🤖 AI Prompt: "Rewrite this Facebook post as a TikTok script, an Instagram caption, and a Pinterest pin description: [paste your post]." 📌 Day 25 — Work Toward Monetization Eligibility In 2026, Facebook's Unified Content Ads require 5,000+ followers + 60,000 total minutes watched. Facebook Stars (from Lives and Reels) unlocks at just 500 followers. ✅ Tip: Start with Stars — it's the fastest monetization path. Go Live, create Reels, and let your audience support you early. 📌 Day 26 — Explore Multiple Income Streams You don't have to wait for ad eligibility. Start earlier with: → Affiliate marketing (promote tools you actually use) → Digital products (guides, templates, checklists) → Brand collaborations (unlocks at 1,000+ followers) → Facebook Stars (unlocks at 500+ followers) → Paid community or membership group ✅ Tip: Affiliate marketing is the fastest route to early income from a small but engaged audience. 📌 Day 27 — Build a Strong Brand Identity Stay consistent with colors, fonts, tone, and content style across every post. ✅ Tip: Recognizable brands grow faster. When people know exactly what to expect from you, they follow and share. 🤖 AI Prompt: "Help me define my faceless brand identity for a [niche] Facebook page. Suggest a brand voice, color palette, content tone, and 3 brand taglines." 📌 Day 28 — Nurture Your Community Reply to messages. Celebrate your loyal fans. Make posts that make people feel seen. ✅ Tip: The 2026 algorithm devalues hollow engagement. Real conversations = real reach. People share content that makes them feel something. 📌 Day 29 — Analyze, Learn, and Improve Review the full 30 days. What were your top 5 posts? Your biggest single-day growth spike? ✅ Tip: This data is YOUR personal viral formula. No one else has it. Use it to plan the next 30 days smarter. 📌 Day 30 — Celebrate & Keep Going You did it. 30 days of consistent action. Now go again. ✅ Tip: The pages winning right now? They didn't go viral overnight. They just refused to stop. 🤖 AI Prompt: "Write a friendly outreach message I can send to a similar Facebook page for a shoutout exchange in the [niche] space." 🏆 PRO TIPS ✅ Never put external links in your post caption. Facebook suppresses reach by up to 80%. Put the link in the first comment instead. ✅ The first 60 minutes after posting = 80% of your viral potential. Be ready to engage immediately. ✅ Post Reels vertically (9:16 ratio). Facebook rewards native formats. ✅ Saves and meaningful comments now matter more than likes in 2026. Create content people SAVE. ✅ Own a Facebook Group linked to your Page. Groups have dramatically higher engagement than Pages alone.
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Dr. Hallowed Oluwadara Olaoluwa is recognized as the youngest Ph.D. holder in Mathematics in Africa and one of the youngest Ph.D. holders in any field in Africa. He stands out particularly for his extraordinary ability to run parallel degree programmes in Mathematics and Physics at both BSc and MSc levels, earning top distinctions (First Class / Distinction) in all four degrees while graduating at exceptionally young ages. He was born on September 27, 1989, in Bangui, Central African Republic to Nigerian parents from Ekiti State who are missionaries outside Nigeria. He completed primary and secondary education with four double promotions. He passed the French Baccalauréat (A’ Levels equivalent) in Sciences at age 14 (one of the youngest in the Central African Republic at the time). At the University of Bangui, he simultaneously pursued and completed two full B.Sc. programmes in Mathematics and Physics. He graduated in 2007 at age 18 with B.Sc. Mathematics: First Class Honours and B.Sc. Physics: First Class Honours. Awards: All-Time Best B.Sc. Student Award, Department of Mathematics Best B.Sc. Student Award, Department of Physics (2007). At the University of Bangui, he simultaneously completed two full M.Sc. programmes in Mathematics and Physics (a rare feat; he was the first and only student to do so at the university). He graduated in 2008 at age 19. M.Sc. Mathematics: Distinction M.Sc. Physics: Distinction Awards: Best M.Sc. Student Award, Department of Mathematics (2008) Best M.Sc. Student Award, Department of Physics (2008). At the University of Lagos (UNILAG), Nigeria, jẹ earned his Ph.D. in Mathematics (specializing in Functional Analysis, with focus on Fixed Point Theory) in January 2014 at age 24 with a perfect CGPA of 5.00/5.00 in Ph.D. . Overall Best Graduating Ph.D. Student, University of Lagos (2012–2013). Best Ph.D. Graduate in the Engineering/Sciences category. He was the recipient of an offer for the Master 2 (Mathematics) programme at Université Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI), France. Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Mathematics, Harvard University (2015–2016), where he worked on quantum ergodicity in mathematical physics. Next Einstein Forum (NEF) Fellow. Major Awards for Academic Excellence Ekiti State Merit Award (2014) Youngest PhD Holder in Africa of the Year (2014) Young Achievers Award (Hallmarks of Labour Foundation, 2014) Award of Excellence as The Youngest Academic Achiever in Nigeria (Nigerian Young Professionals Forum). He speaks French, English and Yoruba. He is currently a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Mathematics at the University of Lagos, where he teaches and supervises students.
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When I graduated from university in 2024, I made a dangerous decision… I told myself: “No rushing into NYSC. I want to build something first.” While many people were searching for jobs, I was searching for a way to break the cycle of poverty completely. I knew entrepreneurship was my only escape route. People didn’t understand the vision. But I saw the woman I wanted to become. Then in July 2025, I stumbled on a life-changing opportunity — a fully funded executive entrepreneurship program at Lagos Business School organized by Junior Achievement Nigeria. At first, I thought it was too good to be true… “Lagos Business School? Fully funded? In this Nigeria?” 😂 I immediately began searching for past participants who could guide me. That was when I met someone on Instagram named James. God bless that guy forever 🙏🏽. He literally showed me how to structure my application. Next thing… Interview invite. CV submission. Pressure everywhere 😅 Then I discovered something shocking: They were selecting only graduates with First Class and Second Class Upper. So when some people say “good grades are a scam,” I just smile quietly 😂 A week later… I GOT THE EMAIL. Out of hundreds of applicants: ✅ Only 50 people were selected physically ✅ 100 attended virtually And somehow… I made the physical class 😭🙌🏽 I packed my bags from Kwara and traveled to Lagos. For 5 unforgettable days: ✔️ Hotel accommodation fully paid ✔️ Executive business training fully covered ✔️ Surrounded by brilliant young Nigerians ✔️ Learning directly at Lagos Business School I only paid transport fare and a commitment fee of ₦10,000. That experience changed my mindset forever. Shortly after the training, Resilient Joy Agro Farms began to grow massively, and my income started multiplying. Lagos Business School made me believe something powerful: 🌱 “You can build a mansion from a little farm.” Big thanks to Dangote Foundation for sponsoring 150 young graduates like me 🙌🏽❤️ The application will open again by July, and honestly… If you’re serious about your future, APPLY. And if you need guidance, I’m willing to help anyone genuinely ready to grow. Just make sure: ✔️ Your grades are good ✔️ Your CV is strong ✔️ Your vision is bigger than excuses Your life can literally change with one opportunity. #YoungExecutives #YoungEntrepreneur #LBS #Entrepreneurship #NigeriaYouth #BusinessGrowth #ScholarshipOpportunity #LagosBusinessSchool Narrated by @Resilient Joy Written by Nigeria Students Chronicles
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