₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,328,213 members, 8,434,650 topics. Date: Saturday, 27 June 2026 at 02:28 AM

Toggle theme

Chuky7's Posts

Nairaland ForumChuky7's ProfileChuky7's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 (of 44 pages)

BusinessRe: Please How Do I Accept Funds From USA by Chuky7(op): 11:26am On Jan 26, 2021
lalasticlala
BusinessPlease How Do I Accept Funds From USA by Chuky7(op): 11:26am On Jan 26, 2021
Help me out.
A colleague sending me over some funds. how do I receive it. safely.
what platform do I use. Please state charges.
BusinessRe: Who Is A CEO, Entrepreneur, Small Business Owner Really? by Chuky7(op): 8:24am On Jan 26, 2021
lalasticlala
BusinessWho Is A CEO, Entrepreneur, Small Business Owner Really? by Chuky7(op): 8:24am On Jan 26, 2021
I have seen this argument go down over and over. how would you define the position of a chief executive officer who applies.

and same with who is an Entrepreneur or a small business owner

they are even small time vendors. traders.

what are the differences?
ProgrammingRe: How Do You Buy And Ship A Device From Us To Nigeria by Chuky7(op): 10:26pm On Jan 25, 2021
lalasticlala
ProgrammingHow Do You Buy And Ship A Device From Us To Nigeria by Chuky7(op): 10:26pm On Jan 25, 2021
Please I need to know all the tiny details.

cause I found out getting a quality cheap laptop is so hard. so a friend suggested I order from a foreign site n ship it home says all his friends do that.

but I'm looking at this to be more costly and difficult considering customs and all.
and there is the issue with the cbn policy for $100. you all heard that right.

so help me out how do I go about it.
BusinessRe: Risevest, Chaka, Trove, Bamboo, Wealth.ng, I-invest, And Investnow Which Is Best by Chuky7(op): 7:02pm On Jan 24, 2021
lalasticlala help your boy O
BusinessRisevest, Chaka, Trove, Bamboo, Wealth.ng, I-invest, And Investnow Which Is Best by Chuky7(op): 7:02pm On Jan 24, 2021
Which is best. what are there features. would you use them and why
BusinessRisevest, Chaka, Trove, Bamboo, Wealth.ng, I-invest, And Investnow Which Is Best by Chuky7(op): 6:36pm On Jan 24, 2021
Which is best. what are there features. would you use them and why
BusinessRe: Binance V Luno by Chuky7(op): 4:54pm On Jan 24, 2021
lalasticlala
ProgrammingRe: Thread On What Is It Like At Andela? by Chuky7(op): 4:53pm On Jan 24, 2021
lalasticlala informative thread please push.
ProgrammingThread On What Is It Like At Andela? by Chuky7(op): 4:52pm On Jan 24, 2021
This thread is for sharing what it's like to work at Andela.

This thread is for learning, me included.

I'm interested in their programs but don't really know how to go about it.

and I face certain confusion like what is Andela really, do they teach n SEND you Abroad, someone said it's contract based or short time maybe 6 months.

I do know zuckerberg invested a while back, I think they are the most funded Nigerian tech firm.

or are they elites only?? cause they hardly do promotions like do the common man have access.

so with this I expect a few responses.

I think I know a few guys on here who participated like Philip0906, I follow his writing and others I can't remember their names please feel free to share.
ProgrammingRe: Where Can I Get Script Or Code For Messaging People by Chuky7(op): 4:37pm On Jan 24, 2021
Lalasticlala
ProgrammingWhere Can I Get Script Or Code For Messaging People by Chuky7(op): 4:37pm On Jan 24, 2021
I once saw a video of a guy (can't remember his name and the name of the video) of a guy using a Script or program to chat with babes on Tinder while he fell asleep till the next day. the goal was to avoid the headache of swiping and rejections while leaving those who were interested in his inbox.

so in conclusion how can I get something like that?

Do I need to code or buy or anywhere to get it for free
RomanceHelp Best Condom Brand by Chuky7(op): 9:44am On Jan 17, 2021
help with a quality brand. that doesn't break with ease. local or international as far as its verified good.
BusinessBinance V Luno by Chuky7(op): 9:37am On Jan 17, 2021
help me decide which?
state great features and your experience.
I want to get started.
PhonesRe: Recommend A Good Android Phone by Chuky7(op): 9:30am On Jan 17, 2021
lalasticlala help your boy. urgent.
PhonesRecommend A Good Android Phone by Chuky7(op): 9:30am On Jan 17, 2021
Please can some one here help me out with a smartphone recommendation, I'm looking to buy one for my cousin as a birthday gift.

Please note...state spec like memory and others. mostly good battery life.

price range is from 45 to 55.

thanks in advance.
BusinessRe: Please How Do You Build Work Experience by Chuky7(op): 9:23am On Dec 03, 2020
FP material O
dominique help your guy
lalasticlala I need money and job like you.
BusinessPlease How Do You Build Work Experience by Chuky7(op): 9:22am On Dec 03, 2020
I have been told times without numbers by a few of my family members that this may be my breakthrough strategy.

since direct connection to lucrative jobs no day.

But am confused on how to go about it especially with the structure of our country.
PhonesWhat Specs You Look For When Buying A PC? by Chuky7(op): 9:03am On Dec 03, 2020
RAM?(what is this anyway) screen size battery
And state why or what it does.
RomanceDrop List Of Your Three Square Meals by Chuky7(op): 12:06pm On Nov 18, 2020
Morning. Afternoon. night.
wetin u dey chop
RomanceDoes Garri Help In Adding Weight by Chuky7(op): 11:35am On Nov 18, 2020
Especially if taken twice a day??
RomancePlease Effect Of Eating Garri In Morning by Chuky7(op): 11:12am On Nov 18, 2020
What are the good n bad
or even eating twice daily.
ProgrammingPlease Best Torrent Recommendations by Chuky7(op): 10:23am On Nov 18, 2020
I tried getting one directly from the original u torrent site but it seems it requires some backup files. I really don't know.

just recommend and guide me on what and what I need. files and where to get them


also are they torrent with lesser mb. that is size of the file.
omo a movie can go for 1gb
FoodRecommend Foods With High Calorie by Chuky7(op): 8:48am On Nov 11, 2020
Please foods that can be sourced in Nigeria or at least with ease. Am looking to add weight. so yeah. you can also share what your diet was like when you added weight.
FamilyRecommend Foods With High Calorie by Chuky7(op): 8:41am On Nov 11, 2020
Please foods that can be sourced in Nigeria or at least with ease.
Am looking to add weight. so yeah.
you can also share what your diet was like when you added weight.
RomanceWhy Is My Newly Added Muscle Dropping by Chuky7(op): 12:55pm On Nov 09, 2020
I don't know who has experienced this before

am talking of the moment for those who work out when you workout for let's say a week and by weekend your added arms starts deflating like back to initial size.

it can be very annoying and embarrassing at the same time.

so what am I doing wrong or what could be the cause of this.

if it's food related what exactly should I take and how.
RomanceHow Do You Get A Strong Withdrawal Game? by Chuky7(op): 12:17pm On Nov 09, 2020
Pull out niggas how do get an 100% game.

Most people I know use this method during sex for a while but overtime you start hearing stories of pregnancy.

So pros how do you do it.
BusinessWhat Makes Nigerians In Diaspora So Successful by Chuky7(op): 1:04pm On Nov 01, 2020
Anthony Joshua, world heavyweight boxing champion; John Boyega, Hollywood actor; Pearlena Igbokwe, Universal Studios group chair and Maggie Aderin-Pocock, space scientist. These are just a few names in a long list of Nigerians in diaspora who have achieved success on an international scale in a wide range of fields. 61% proportion of Nigerian immigrants in the US to hold at least a bachelors degree In the US, Nigerians are the most highly educated of all groups, with 61 per cent holding at least a bachelors degree compared with 31 per cent of the total foreign-born population and 32 per cent of the US-born population, according to 2017 data from the Migration Policy Institute. More than half of Nigerian immigrants (54 per cent) were most likely to occupy management positions, compared with 32 per cent of the total foreign-born population and 39 per cent of the US- born population. Similar Nigerian success is reflected in the UK, where many in a highly-educated diaspora work in financial services, IT, and the legal and medical professions. What drives Nigerians and the diaspora, and can future generations continue their success? The economic future of Nigeria and the success of Nigerians abroad are closely tied, as is the lack of opportunity that drives many to leave home in the first place.

In the past three years, Nigerians abroad have sent home more than $25bn annually in remittances, according to President Muhammadu Buhari, who this summer emphasised the importance of support equivalent to about 6 per cent of the country’s GDP and 80 per cent of the annual budget. A strong desire to succeed in life, enabled by education, is also a common theme in Nigerian homes. In 2016, the continent’s most populous nation sent the largest number of African students abroad — 95,000 — and ranked fifth in the world in terms of overall number of students in foreign study; the UK and US were among their top destinations for Nigerian students, according to figures from Unesco. “Education is an essential part of our culture,” says Emeka Okaro, a consultant obstetrician and lead clinician for benign gynaecology at St Bartholomew’s and Royal London Hospital, who was born in Moscow to Nigerian-born parents and now lives in London. “[When] I went to school, we were encouraged to excel. Parents expected it of us.” His wife Joy Odili, a consultant plastic and reconstructive surgeon at St George's Hospital, adds: “As a people we are very proud and we like to do well. I had a parent who absolutely believed I could be anything I wanted, therefore I grew up [believing] there was no obstacle to whatever I wanted to achieve.” Resilience is another big part of the Nigerian identity. A “special case of lack of infrastructure [in Nigeria] engenders in us is a real creativity, so where others might see chaos, Nigerians see opportunity,” says award-winning Nigerian writer and novelist Chibundu Onuzo who lives in the UK and will publish her third novel — Sankofa — next year. “Sometimes that is why Nigerians in diaspora — especially the first generation — can be reluctant to talk about race and racial barriers, because we are conditioned to not say, ‘It is not going to work for me because . . . ’. They don’t want to talk about racial bias. They want to talk about the opportunities.”

June Angelides, a venture capitalist who was born in London but attended secondary school in Nigeria, says growing up surrounded by family and friends who were entrepreneurs, gave her the confidence to start Mums in Technology. The baby-friendly coding course trained more than 250 women to become tech literate, and some alumnae went on to start their own companies. “It’s in our blood. One thing I love about Nigerians is we have this inherent ability to make things happen where it may seem impossible to others. We are extremely resourceful as a nation,” says Ms Angelides, who was awarded an MBE for services to women in technology this month. “Women are [also] realising they have to take charge. They cannot wait to be given permission any more. But we still need more visible female role models [in leadership].”
Michael Eboda, CEO of Powerful Media
Michael Eboda compiles the annual Powerlist to showcase the most influential people of African or African Caribbean heritage in Britain. He and Femi Ogunkolati, the UK-based chief executive of consultancy Synterra Energy Assets, say that travelling back to Nigeria for secondary school and university also made them more ambitious, as they saw black people in professional roles. UK-born Mr Eboda says that since the Powerlist was launched 15 years ago, the number of people of Nigerian heritage recognised for doing well has grown. “It’s a function predominantly of the demographic,” he says. “[Mass] immigration from the Caribbean [largely] stopped in the 1970s, but from Nigeria and West Africa, more generally, it has continued.”

The last UK census in 2011 found that those who identified as black African were the biggest group in the UK’s black community. But the migrant Nigerian population is complex. In Nigeria, there is a large middle-class population but an even larger underclass that is poorly educated — a situation exacerbated by falling standards in state- funded education and an increase in the number of expensive private schools to which many teachers have gravitated. Increasingly, whether or not Nigerians are successful in the west depends on their ability to meet tough visa requirements, and afford the fees and living costs to travel abroad to work and study. That creates a hyper-selective population of high achievers, who pass their ambition on to their children, says Onoso Imoagene, associate professor at New York University and author of Beyond Expectations: Second-Generation Nigerians in the United States and Britain.

Those who are poorly-skilled are more likely to take illegal routes out of the country. Often they are unable to get beyond Africa or if they do make it to Europe, they work in unskilled jobs. “The number of Nigerians travelling to the diaspora will continue and those already in diaspora will influence their children to succeed,” says Nigerian-born Onyekachi Wambu, executive director of Africa Foundation for Development, and a former editor of the UK’s Voice newspaper.
Yet without improved education and training in Nigeria, and with a population predicted to reach nearly 800 million by 2100, the number of Nigerians achieving success in the diaspora could be limited. Richard Iferenta, a partner and vice-chair at KPMG and chair of the race diversity leadership team at the UK’s Business in the Community charity, is optimistic. “On the assumption that the next generation will have good education, be fully assimilated into British culture and have networks within British society and, critically, have the hunger to succeed, I expect this demographic to be even more successful,” Mr Iferenta says.

For many Nigerian parents, becoming a doctor, engineer or lawyer were once the career choices laid out for their children. But that has been changing. Nigeria has a rich cultural history, and in the past 10 years that has fuelled an explosion of talent in art, music , literature and fashion. “For a lot of Nigerian parents who left Nigeria to come to the UK, they were seeking to give their children a better opportunity and a different life,” explains Yinka Ilori, an acclaimed artist and designer, recently appointed to the UK Crafts Council board of trustees. “When I was growing up my parents wanted me to be a civil engineer,” adds Mr Ilori, born in the UK to Nigerian-born parents. “When I went to college and started to discover myself and what I enjoyed doing, my parents were really supportive.”

https://www.ft.com/content/ca39b445-442a-4845-a07c-0f5dae5f3460


Cc Lalasticlala FOD naijacutee dominique
FP material. need more views.
RomanceNeed Help Bulking Up by Chuky7(op): 6:52pm On Oct 31, 2020
If I were to be a skinny guy who decides to workout(go to gym) every weekend for let's say 6 months. Am I bound to see results.

By results I mean body transformation.
If not what would you recommend for someone who doesn't have all the time and money.
RomanceHow To Entice Her To Your Room by Chuky7(op): 3:23pm On Oct 20, 2020
How do you convince a lady you just met whether date or normal parol to follow you to your apartment.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 (of 44 pages)