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How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola - Business (2) - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralBusinessHow I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola (31294 Views)

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Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Kingpele(m): 4:53pm On Aug 19, 2025
Am beginning to like this man even more ....because a lot of billionaires tell lies just to maintain some level of invincibility....
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by grandstar(m): 4:54pm On Aug 19, 2025
A friend informed me that a consortium of banks lent him $1.5bn in 2002 or so, which was probably what he used todominate the diesel industry in Nigeria.

I don't know how true. It is true though that he went bankrupt when the price of crude oil crashed to $35 per barrel in 2009 from $140 the previous year. His creditors were on his neck!

The buying and selling of refined oils is a highly leveraged one.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by tunapawizzy: 4:56pm On Aug 19, 2025
Dear Poor man pikin, if you like follow this template, make u dey shout "school na scam" ur tears go too full bucket
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Watcharena: 5:01pm On Aug 19, 2025
he started with about 685,000,000 naira of today so not a surprise from billionaire kid
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by muhammadmuqtada(m): 5:09pm On Aug 19, 2025
Woah......shell shocked.....Salute to you sir.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by thisisit: 5:11pm On Aug 19, 2025
FEMI OTEDOLA WAS A POOR NIGERIAN UNTIL 1999 WHEN OBJ EMPOWERED HIM
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Nobody: 5:13pm On Aug 19, 2025
kettykin:
A very nice and compelling story, no doubt. But let’s face the truth,he had to immerse himself in the very rudiments of business, learning on the job what others might have bought with time, money, or an MBA. But That journey is neither unique nor unprecedented even Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Steve Jobs, Sam Altman, and countless visionaries did the very same. In a more serious situation, The real question is: does this make it right for Opebholo and Ukachukwu to brandish their so-called D7 as though it were the ultimate badge of achievement in a world that has produced Otedollars that has no certificate.

It simply show that there other paths to real success aside the education path and a university professor is no better or more important than anybody
Someone on the thread stated that “ A brain dead child from a rich family is better than the most brilliant child from a poor family”

If you try such without strong family finance, you will be toasting yourself.

That is the part the Bezos, Elon, Dangote, or Zuckerberg never tell you. They will never tell you the major thing that facyor that gave them that edge.

Show me one poor man that resided in Ajegunle and became a billionaire, and I will show you ten rich kids who are already billionaires.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by chatinent: 5:16pm On Aug 19, 2025
Fake and cooked up stories.

Person wey en papa bi politician.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Dpharisee: 5:17pm On Aug 19, 2025
Billionaire pikin don turn motivational speaker to poor men's children.
Someone born with silver spoon from a very prominent Family with a father who ruled Lagos State as governor with access to easy inflated Govt contracts and involvement in fuel subsidy scam who managed to escape because of connection and people who don't have N1000 account balance like me will now join him to shout school na scam huh
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Saint99: 5:23pm On Aug 19, 2025
This story will do well within the "School is a scam" cronies.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Factcheck0001: 5:25pm On Aug 19, 2025
chukkystar:
Yes He was more advantaged but He made more use of His time than most cos He understood the system earlier. Most Jewish Billionaires don't finish college too there's a reason for that. Plus the school system doesn't teach how to make Ur own money or manage Ur own business just teaches how to be a good employee. He did well though especially leveraging on His Father's success. Many Governors Children are very useless today, it's like their parents used their head for Juju..
as useless as they are, they are more privileged than the son of a poor man.


Many of u don't know the meaning of privilege, with privilege u can control your errors a million times over n same can't b said about the son of a poor man
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Konquest:
Islie:
Billionaire Femi Otedola recounts how his struggle with academics pushed him out of the classroom and into the world of business, where he would eventually build his fortune.

by Musikilu Mojeed


He chairs one of Nigeria’s largest financial groups and has built a multi-billion-dollar business empire. But Femi Otedola has now revealed that his rise was achieved without a university degree — or even a complete high school education.

In the newly released 286-page memoir, Making It Big, which hit the shelves on Monday, the energy mogul details how his struggle with academics pushed him out of the classroom and into the world of business, where he would later make his fortune.

Mr Otedola, 62, writes that he began his education at the University of Lagos Staff School in 1968 but consistently performed poorly. “My parents enrolled me at the University of Lagos Staff School in 1968, at the age of six,” he says. “Kola Abiola — the first son of Chief Moshood Abiola, the future business magnate and presidential candidate who was at the time an accountant — sat beside me in class.


“But there was something about academia and me; we were not compatible. I finished primary school in 1974 because I repeated a class. Even when I was allowed to pass, I consistently anchored the bottom rungs of our end-of-term examination results. My interests were definitely not in academia.”

After finishing primary school, the young Mr Otedola proceeded to Methodist Boys’ High School, Lagos. His academic struggles continued there.

“The school had been founded almost a hundred years earlier, in 1878. Alumni include grand names in Nigerian history: Benjamin Nnamdi Azikiwe, Mobolaji Johnson, Ola Rotimi, Fola Adeola, Olusegun Osoba and Hezekiah Oladipo Davies. When I joined the student body in 1974 the principal was D. A. Famoroti, who’d taken up the post in 1963 and would leave in 1980,” he recalls. “I started Form 1 at age 12 and was there for three years.”

By 1977, after it became clear that his performance was not improving, his parents transferred him to Olivet Baptist High School, Oyo, a boarding school founded by Southern Baptist missionaries in 1945.

“My parents’ thinking was that all my siblings were boarders, and they seemed to be doing well,” Mr Otedola writes. “They thought this change would help turn around my attitude towards academia, but nothing changed.”

He continues: “I started in Form 3 at Olivet, and as I rounded off the first year of my A Levels, my father was establishing his printing company, Impact Press, in Surulere, a residential and commercial district in Lagos State. I grew fascinated with the machines and told myself that my future would be inextricably tied to them. I managed to remain in school until the Lower Sixth examination was over. And then, I was finished; I never returned for my Upper Sixth.

“All I wanted to do was get involved in business. My father kept watch over me and drew me close. My sister taught me shorthand. I knew how to type and began typing letters for my dad. I prepared all his business correspondence. I was fascinated by the way printing machines treat paper
. The white paper is placed on one end, the ink and plates are fixed, and the printed material comes out of the other end. It was captivating.”

Despite his mother’s protests and tears, Mr Otedola abandoned school to work full-time in his father’s printing business. He rose quickly, becoming managing director of Impact Press in 1987 at the age of 25.

“However, I soon became restless. I had immersed myself in all aspects of the business and learned the ropes at my dad’s right hand. I certainly enjoyed the job more than grappling with the Pythagoras theorem and struggling through homework at Olivet. As time went by, though, I also thought it was time for a measure of independence from my dad.




“I still wanted to work for him — I really enjoyed hearing the rumbling of machines and savouring the smell of freshly printed material — but I also wanted to do things differently. I told him I wanted to become a sales consultant for the press, and he agreed. He said he would pay me a commission of 10–15% on any work I brought in.

“That was a significant break for me. I invested my money in buying cars for sales and marketing outreach and moved on to the next phase in my nascent professional life.”

With his new role, Mr Otedola began bringing in jobs from major companies and advertising agencies, particularly in calendars and diaries.

“We could hardly keep up with the demand. Our unique selling point was quality, thanks to the state-of-the-art machines we owned. We were also always on time with job delivery. We were engaged in healthy competition with Academy Press, a company located in the Ilupeju area of Lagos.

“I served as my dad’s sales exec up until 1991, when he started his Lagos State gubernatorial campaign.
It was a run for office — ultimately successful — that I had initiated.”

That break in the family business gave Mr Otedola the confidence and foundation to strike out on his own. In 1994, he founded Centre Force Ltd. with ₦10 million in starting capital. From those beginnings, he built a vast business empire in oil and gas, shipping, real estate, finance and philanthropy. He went on to chair Forte Oil, invested in power through Geregu Power Plc, and today chairs the board of FirstHoldco Plc, one of Nigeria’s largest financial groups.

The businessman’s disclosure of his educational history may come as a surprise to many who long believed he was a university graduate. At one point, his Wikipedia page even suggested he studied at the University of Lagos.

But in “Making It Big”, Mr Otedola insists his true classroom was not a lecture hall but the business floor. His lessons, he says, came from watching his father, trusting his instincts, and learning from both failures and triumphs.

“I never returned for my Upper Sixth. All I wanted was to get involved in business,” he writes. That decision, once a source of his mother’s tears, would lay the foundation for a career that has made him one of Africa’s most influential businesspersons.


In the end, Mr Otedola’s memoir delivers a striking message: formal education may have eluded him, but discipline, persistence, and the hunger to build made him — in his own words — “make it big.”
https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/more-news/815072-how-i-dropped-out-of-high-school-and-didnt-go-to-university-femi-otedola.html
Interesting takes.

'Femi's biological father, Sir. Michael Otedola was a senior boss at Chevron Oil. He rose to become the Governor of Lagos State.

Richard Branson and lots of entrepreneurs NEVER attended the 4 walls of a conventional Uni, but they leveraged on their "creative intelligence" to monetize solutions to problems. These are largely the USD millionaires and billionaires based off of existing research.


Indeed, all humans have up to 500 individual skills that can be developed according to the legendary Jim Rohn.

However, there is still a need for those who have have the "analytical intelligence" to go into the STEM fields.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Factcheck0001: 5:28pm On Aug 19, 2025
jamuta:
Well that might be true, but an average Nigerian with leverage of government money will also produce fantastic results.

His father was a formal governor of Lagos state, I'm very sure that was his pedestal.
God bless u

With enough money to correct your mistakes n learn again even the dumbest kid in the world will do well
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by BabaO2: 5:29pm On Aug 19, 2025
steeve Jobs of Nigeria
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by spiSeyi: 5:31pm On Aug 19, 2025
kokoA:
Poor man pikin ma go dey follow say "school na scam".. I laugh.
The truth is university doesn't make you rich infact the school system makes you poorer in thinking and finances if care is not taking by collecting your money for tuition and training your brain for leaving from paycheck to paycheck. How many graduates can stand those Igbo traders when it comes to finance.
A wealthy man will higher any graduates for his paperwork if he wishes. Pella just proved that a few weeks back. School nah scam if the only thing you have is certificate undecided
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by amaridigital(m): 5:33pm On Aug 19, 2025
Factcheck0001:
Hmmmm

Billionaire pikin...


Personally left to me I don't see any big deal about this cos even a brain dead billionaire pikin still has great advantage than the most brilliant student from the poorest home.


Stories that motivate me are stories of rags to riches not stories of billionaire pikin to billionaire.

For people who will come here to attack me, let me drop a quick one for u.

When we were young, we had a guy called Felix, he was so dull in school that he had F in all his subjects n we nicknamed him ozone layer.

As it was then, public schools were still very standard so Felix was told to repeat, all his father did was just send him to a private school n was part of PTA committee viam Felix finish secondary school.

The father being a big custom officer no waste time, Felix the ozone layer was sponsored abroad n today e get mouth pass we wey brilliant for class then.


Imagine someone who travelled abroad immediately after secondary school around 2007, imagine how much e go don make n how soft him go b by now.
You are wrong. Absolutely wrong. Is Otedola the only Billionaire pikin in Nigeria? This is the 4th richest person in Nigeria for crying out loud. Where are ojukwu's pikin, Abiola's pikin, Balewa's, Folawiyo's pikin, Babangida's pikin? Was his father the only former Governor in Nigeria? Where are the kids of our past presidents? Remember that the guy isn't in active politics oh. Have you forgotten that Bode George was once a Governor? This guy's story is a great motivation for people all over. Haba, na so e easy!! Otedola is arguably the few names ringing since the 90's in Nigeria. The guy really tries oh. Kudos to you senior man. You are an inspiration to millions. What you went through was enough to discourage you and turned you into a wayward kid or a druggie but you stood your ground and fought your battle. The psychological effect of your learning difficulties must have been difficult to bear especially among your siblings and a mom who would be so worried but you fought your demon and overcame. Today only 4 Nigerians are on the Forbes Billionaires list and you, not former Governors, not former Presidents but you, Otedola are one of them. What an inspiration you are.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by alizma: 5:33pm On Aug 19, 2025
kokoA:
Poor man pikin ma go dey follow say "school na scam".. I laugh.
Truly there is less to what education can can do when it come to whether a man will succeed or fail in business and life generally, king Solomon, Dantata, Dangote stories are another set of examples to support that
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Sammy5413(m): 5:38pm On Aug 19, 2025
Mr Blogger you forgot to mention Tinubu
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by xtianchris(m): 5:39pm On Aug 19, 2025
9jatriot:
This is very inspiring,
One takeaway for me is that it is good for families to have businesses that their kids get involved in. They may not inherit it but they will learn valuable lessons just being involved in it.
Please never fail to build an empire.. Im working on this ...I pray God Almighty will make me succeed...So the lineage can be secured financially.😁
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Judolisco(m): 5:42pm On Aug 19, 2025
ViceGovernor:
Femi ote$ no graduate from university.

I can't believe this, I'm in shock 😮 heh 😮
even secondary sch degree eno get... No compare yourself oh... E get rich papa...
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by 23Ju: 5:46pm On Aug 19, 2025
Factcheck0001:
Hmmmm

Billionaire pikin...


Personally left to me I don't see any big deal about this cos even a brain dead billionaire pikin still has great advantage than the most brilliant student from the poorest home.


Stories that motivate me are stories of rags to riches not stories of billionaire pikin to billionaire.

For people who will come here to attack me, let me drop a quick one for u.

When we were young, we had a guy called Felix, he was so dull in school that he had F in all his subjects n we nicknamed him ozone layer.

As it was then, public schools were still very standard so Felix was told to repeat, all his father did was just send him to a private school n was part of PTA committee viam Felix finish secondary school.

The father being a big custom officer no waste time, Felix the ozone layer was sponsored abroad n today e get mouth pass we wey brilliant for class then.


Imagine someone who travelled abroad immediately after secondary school around 2007, imagine how much e go don make n how soft him go b by now.

Study the book called millionaire next door by Thomas Stanley. You will find that children of most millionaires don't make it.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by JuanDeDios: 5:57pm On Aug 19, 2025
Factcheck0001:
Hmmmm

Billionaire pikin...


Personally left to me I don't see any big deal about this cos even a brain dead billionaire pikin still has great advantage than the most brilliant student from the poorest home.


Stories that motivate me are stories of rags to riches not stories of billionaire pikin to billionaire.

For people who will come here to attack me, let me drop a quick one for u.

When we were young, we had a guy called Felix, he was so dull in school that he had F in all his subjects n we nicknamed him ozone layer.

As it was then, public schools were still very standard so Felix was told to repeat, all his father did was just send him to a private school n was part of PTA committee viam Felix finish secondary school.

The father being a big custom officer no waste time, Felix the ozone layer was sponsored abroad n today e get mouth pass we wey brilliant for class then.


Imagine someone who travelled abroad immediately after secondary school around 2007, imagine how much e go don make n how soft him go b by now.
Femi was a billionaire's pikin?
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Jeezuzpick(m): 5:58pm On Aug 19, 2025
Islie:
Billionaire Femi Otedola recounts how his struggle with academics pushed him out of the classroom and into the world of business, where he would eventually build his fortune.




https://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/more-news/815072-how-i-dropped-out-of-high-school-and-didnt-go-to-university-femi-otedola.html
Some of us are old enough to remember that Femi Otedola is the son of the late multimillionaire and former governor of Lagos State, Sir Michael Otedola.

Femi was born into money. Any and all hardships or challenges he had are are contrived to the rest of us.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Factcheck0001: 6:05pm On Aug 19, 2025
JuanDeDios:
Femi was a billionaire's pikin?
check his records

His family have been big in Lagos since, his grandpa was once a governor.

It's just like adelabu the present minister of power coming to give motivational talk when we all know where he's coming from
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by starpower(m): 6:08pm On Aug 19, 2025
ayoncox:
Seems I am like him, same first name. I loved business than classroom, I told myself I want to register my own company by 18 right from age 12. I fumbled a lot in class, which confused my teachers who felt how could I be so intelligent but not doing well in exams. But my parents being civil servants always felt the best thing was school. I went through school but had extra years twice during my undergraduates, I just love business not classrooms even though I read a lot
I did not have the mind to go to the university later after few trials, though I later discovered it was not because I lacked ability. Nobody told me early enough that as a science student, I needed Further Mathematics if I ever wished to study engineering. I loved numbers, yes, but spelling was my weakness. Still, I could read books with strong comprehension, and that became my anchor.

For many of us, the safe refuge was business or programming, fields where skill grows by compounding, just as wealth does. My father accepted my desire to enter business; my mother did not. Yet, when I look back to where I began, I do not feel disappointment. Business, I have learned, demands focus, and to see compounding take root, one must start early. Some men are fortunate because they find good education and capital waiting for them. I was not and so are many of us out there.

But in 2012, with ₦80,000 as my seed money i saved from backing, cement, building blocks my dad sold, I began my business as a part-time hawker of solar products. That little sum has since compounded at nearly 50% when adjusted for inflation. This is no small testimony. It is why I look forward to reading the memoirs of those who walked similar roads. Such knowledge is not for hoarding; though we may carry it to the grave, it burns like a lamp while we live.

In our country, there are many who love education but cannot withstand the classroom, the endless examinations, and the grading system that often fails to measure true worth. Here in Nigeria, nothing is ever made easy.

Now, at thirty-three, I stand with time still on my side, if God, in His mercy, continues to grant me luck.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by bandad: 6:09pm On Aug 19, 2025
Oga run from Pythagoras theorem 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by Karlovych: 6:09pm On Aug 19, 2025
There's a difference between the son of a famous politician dropping out of school and a Helinuss doing the same, spits
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by starpower(m): 6:15pm On Aug 19, 2025
franchasng:
Please please sir, don't use your half-baked story to mislead our youths.

You were an elite kid....the son of Lagos state Governor as at that time that 95% of Nigerians had no TV nor access to electricity.

Your success owe tribute to:

1.) Your wealthy father's foundation
2.) Goodluck Ebele Jonathan that helped you to bounce back after you went bankrupt due to loans resulting from the crude oil price fall
3.) Your passion for entrepreneurship which must not be overlooked


But coming out to churn out these your cocoon stories may end up misleading Nigerian youths instead of encouraging or inspiring them.


For Csake, Femi Otedola, Aliko Dangote are not supposed to be writing any book about creating wealth from nothing. You guys were born into wealth and you tried in sustaining and expanding the wealth you inherited, but no come de bobo us.



The wealthy Nigerians we should be listening to as inspiration are:

Mr Cosmos Mmaduka owner of Coscharis Motors
Chief Vincent Obianodo owner of Young Shall Grow Motors

and other wealthy Nigerian men and women who came from poor family background and built wealth from ashes shocked
you shouldn't mislead people too, education doesn't stop or confined to classroom alone, many had similar opportunities, see I have hired quite a lot of people. Some people will be successful, though not billionaire status o, but by there work ethics, enterprise and frugality, with limited or non classroom education. The Nigerian youth like me appreciate his memoir, against all adversities and disadvantages, they didn't give up. How God favors them, is left to him.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by tommy589(m): 6:23pm On Aug 19, 2025
amaridigital:
You are wrong. Absolutely wrong. Is Otedola the only Billionaire pikin in Nigeria? This is the 4th richest person in Nigeria for crying out loud. Where are ojukwu's pikin, Abiola's pikin, Balewa's, Folawiyo's pikin, Babangida's pikin? Was his father the only former Governor in Nigeria? Where are the kids of our past presidents? Remember that the guy isn't in active politics oh. Have you forgotten that Bode George was once a Governor? This guy's story is a great motivation for people all over. Haba, na so e easy!! Otedola is arguably the few names ringing since the 90's in Nigeria. The guy really tries oh. Kudos to you senior man. You are an inspiration to millions. What you went through was enough to discourage you and turned you into a wayward kid or a druggie but you stood your ground and fought your battle. The psychological effect of your learning difficulties must have been difficult to bear especially among your siblings and a mom who would be so worried but you fought your demon and overcame. Today only 4 Nigerians are on the Forbes Billionaires list and you, not former Governors, not former Presidents but you, Otedola are one of them. What an inspiration you are.
If you tell them unborn children from poor homes will still become billionaires in Nigeria they won't believe.There is no standard formula to wealth.Abiola and most of the old money did not come from rich homes.
Coming from a wealthy background only enhances connection to opportunities not that it guarantees direct access to wealth.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by kingthreat(m): 6:24pm On Aug 19, 2025
kokoA:
Poor man pikin ma go dey follow say "school na scam".. I laugh.
There are extremely rich people who never went to the university. Go to the East, West, North, South-south, dem full there.
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by jaxxy(m): 6:25pm On Aug 19, 2025
I'm sure this will take everybody by surprise but truth is a degree doesn't guarantee success in life and academic failure doesn't mean u are not brilliant in something else or won't be successful in life. smiley
Re: How I Dropped Out Of High School And Didn’t Go To University – Femi Otedola by smtx(m): 6:27pm On Aug 19, 2025
Factcheck0001:
Hmmmm

Billionaire pikin...


Personally left to me I don't see any big deal about this cos even a brain dead billionaire pikin still has great advantage than the most brilliant student from the poorest home.


Stories that motivate me are stories of rags to riches not stories of billionaire pikin to billionaire.

For people who will come here to attack me, let me drop a quick one for u.

When we were young, we had a guy called Felix, he was so dull in school that he had F in all his subjects n we nicknamed him ozone layer.

As it was then, public schools were still very standard so Felix was told to repeat, all his father did was just send him to a private school n was part of PTA committee viam Felix finish secondary school.

The father being a big custom officer no waste time, Felix the ozone layer was sponsored abroad n today e get mouth pass we wey brilliant for class then.


Imagine someone who travelled abroad immediately after secondary school around 2007, imagine how much e go don make n how soft him go b by now.
Ozone layer... Lol! The way we give nicknames is amazing. My classmate was Ozone or O3 because of the shape of his head.

You are so right! The rich kid's journey is a sprint on a paved neat road, while the poor kid's is a marathon through a dense forest. Nevertheless, an intelligent kid from poor background can leverage on network, confidence and social skills to get to the top.
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