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CareerAre You Tired Of Sitting At Home Doing Nothing? Read This. by socialconscious(op): 3:53pm On Jan 23, 2018
Are you tired of sitting at home doing nothing?

Are you tired of sending your CV to establishment after establishment and attending interview after interview without any tangible results. You're not alone.

No doubt, getting a job in Nigeria these days has become almost as hard as passing a camel through the eye of a needle.

There are simply way too many graduates and not enough jobs to go around.

Does it then mean that there is no hope of earning a decent living as a youth living in Nigeria?

No, alas, there is hope…..

There is one sector that has yielded the most positive results for everyone involved. That sector is none other than the technology sector.

It's no secret that a career in technology is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

According to a survey by Techpoint.ng, the average salary for software developers in Nigeria is ₦275,980/month.

With dedication and focus, in two years, you can command up to ₦500K/month or more as a senior developer. There's even a saying that a job in tech is now the new oil company job.

Software developers are making waves within and outside the country. Hardly a tech conference happens anywhere in the world where a Nigerian developer isn't invited to speak.

What's more, techies also find it easier to relocate outside Nigeria (to greener pastures?). Several Nigerian techies got offered jobs outside Nigeria (Europe and America) last year alone.

Companies like booking.com and other notable tech companies went on massive recruitment drives in Nigeria last year, a trend that is expected to increase.

The reality is that numerous countries have more than $10 billion (cumulatively) in unclaimed tech wages also due to this lack of talent to fill roles. Software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are consistently in high demand. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

At the beginning of 2017, the Nigerian tech ecosystem had a valuation of $2 billion, making it the largest in Africa.

Also last year, the federal government budgeted over nine billion naira to spend on foreign software, enough to create 2000 well-paid local technology jobs.

With well-honed coding skills, success is all but guaranteed in the Nigerian and global markets.

What does all this mean for you-you ask? considering that you have no programming skills...

The good news is that with focus and dedication, anyone can become an employable software developer after only 12 weeks of training. Yes, 12 weeks is all it takes to get you on your way to a rewarding career in tech.

The New Economy Skills Accelerator, NESA by Makers [url]nesa.makers.ng[/url] is banking on this to equip young Nigerians with the skills that enable them to participate in today’s digital economy.

They specialize in preparing students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals for rewarding careers in tech or high-growth entrepreneurial activities.

They achieve this by ensuring their trainees learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Graduates of the program have gone to land jobs at notable tech companies in Nigeria.

Some program benefits include:
⚡ Learning relevant software development skills (HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL, ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap)
⚡ Job placement with our hiring partners upon successful program completion
⚡ Access to our pool of mentors around the world

NESA is currently accepting applications for cohort #4 of their full-stack web development training program. If you are interested in beginning a lucrative career in tech, you can apply here: www.nesa.makers.ng/apply

Even if you're not interested, you probably know someone who will benefit from the program. Think about everyone you know who has been doing nothing for a while and share this with them to let them know that this opportunity exists. They will thank you for it.

For more info about the program visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

CareerAfrica Is Experiencing “brain Gain” As Young Elite Graduates Give Up On The West by socialconscious(op): 1:40pm On Jan 15, 2018
In July 2017, Alexandra Ndiwalana, 28, moved back to Johannesburg, South Africa after ten months of pursuing her MBA at the IE Business School in Madrid. By returning home right after completing her studies abroad, Ndiwalana joined an emerging crop of African graduates that seem to be reversing the continent’s long-running brain drain problem. It’s a trend that offers some hope of bridging the continent’s huge skills gap.

Nearly 70% of African MBA students at the top 10 US and European schools planned to return home and work after graduation, found a survey by Jacana Partners, a pan-African private equity firm. Another study shows nine in ten African PhD students studying abroad plan to work on the continent.

Motivations behind the trend are understandable given the once-promising “Africa rising” narrative and the continent being home to some of the world’s fastest-growing economies.

Today, however, that narrative has grown increasingly doubtful due to a downturn in the commodities boom that had driven it in the decade running up to 2015. With slowing economic growth, the longstanding lack of infrastructure, corruption and high unemployment challenges, it would be difficult to make an impact—even if you’re an expensively trained graduate from a top American or European university.

When Ndiwalana left her job as a management trainee at a multinational brewery and beverage company in South Africa, she went to Spain with plans to “do everything she could to stay.” She applied for jobs long before graduation, but hiring preferences foiled her overseas ambitions. Reactions to job interviews betrayed the same sentiment: “You’re a great candidate; if only you were European.”

Disappointed and disillusioned, Ndiwalana set her sights on returning home partly because she didn’t want to become like many of her peers who settled for positions for which they were clearly overqualified. She says many sacrificed career advancement simply for the chance to remain in Europe or North America.

“In the West, it seems like there’s a glass ceiling—le plafond de verre—that cannot be broken,” says Chams Diagne, founder of Talent2Africa, a Dakar-based recruitment agency that specializes in bringing African talent home. “People are moving back to grow their careers faster.”

Ndiwalana became one such example. Soon after coming back to South Africa, she landed a senior marketing analytics role at Uber’s Sub-Saharan Africa division.

The reverse-migration trend has led to the rise of professional matchmaking and networking services, like Talent2Africa and others such as Movemeback and MBTN Global—both based in the UK—that pair diaspora talent with opportunities in Africa.

Regardless of talk of an economic downturn, the international corporations—beyond traditional energy and commodity players—opening up in fast-growing African cities suggest a different reality on the ground. “Most western organizations are investing more in Africa because Africa is the next frontier,” Diagne says.

This has led to a notable trend where multinationals on the continent are contributing to the brain gain movement. Several of these corporates are now replacing expatriates with top talent from the diaspora, says Diagne. The companies and international NGOs usually cite reasons such as cost (paying salaries midway between a local’s and an expatriate’s), cultural ties, and security—where “repat” executives might “blend in” and speak the local language.

“There’s typically a pay cut some people need to come to terms with,” Diagne says, comparing it with what a manager or an executive might be paid in dollars or euros in New York or Paris. But while it might seem unfair, he says employers make great efforts to sweeten their offers to returnees by providing free or discounted housing, transportation, education or assistance with student loans.

One such returnee who accepted a pay cut on relocating to South Africa is Guy Kamguia, a Cameroonian-American and Harvard Business School alum. Prior to moving to South Africa in 2016, Kamguia, 32, worked as an associate with the global markets management team at Credit Suisse in New York. “I took a 20% to 30% pay cut from what I was making,” Kamguia says.

But he didn’t mind earning less because in the US he wasn’t making the kind of impact to which he aspired. Now, as strategic business manager for Africa growth and strategy at Philafrica Foods, Kamguia is finally realizing his dream of developing manufacturing on the continent by acquiring and building food processing plants throughout Sub-Saharan Africa.

“If you have an MBA, a law or medical degree, yes you’ll take a pay cut, but if you factor in the cost of living and do the math, you’re actually saving more,” he says.

Kamguia says more of his friends who were African students at business school are going back home. “There’s a genuine sense that if you’re not going back to fix Africa, who is going to do it? There is a sense of responsibility.”

That sense that there’s more to your work experience than simply earning the fattest paycheck has been well covered with millennials in western countries and it’s no different for young Africans, particularly those that seem to have the world at their feet, thanks to their world-class degrees.

“Something’s happening more generally where young people are looking for something better aligned with their internal compass,” says Oyin Solebo, co-founder of London-based Movemeback.

Since Movemeback’s launch in 2014, the company has grown to over 10,000 members, the biggest concentration of which fall between ages of 28 and 35. They have partnerships with elite internationals schools including Harvard, Columbia, Cambridge and Oxford.

Chatter about moving to Africa grows louder around graduation time, says Bradley Mensah, president of Columbia University’s African Students Association. Africans used to believe prosperity was only possible by leaving Africa for the Western countries, he says. Now, there is a “perception that prosperity is possible on the continent as well.”

For Adabara Abdullahi, founder of MBTN Global, the returnee’s motives for relocating are more nuanced depending on whether or not the returnee was born on the continent and the financial status of African-born migrants. While first-generation Western citizens of African descent are often driven by Sankofa ideals of reconnecting with their roots and elevating the continent, the story isn’t quite the same for those born on the continent.

“Most people who come to the UK or to the US from [Africa] to go to university, upon graduation, what they want to do is stay. They want to stay and they want to get some work experience here.

“The people who upon graduating want to move back are either people from really wealthy families who upon graduating, return home and join the family business,” he says, “or people who upon graduation, their student visas have run out and they’re not able to find a job that will sponsor a work visa for them, so they have no choice but to move back.”

Maudo Jallow, a recent MS graduate at the London School of Economics, falls in the former group. After spending nine years abroad attending university and boarding school, the 23-year-old is happy to be back on the continent. He says his parents sent him abroad with the desire to get the “best education” and return to Gambia—not to take over the family business as such but to continue in the footsteps of his father, a UN official in Uganda.

“Unfortunately, our institutions aren’t valued globally so to get the best education, you need to go to elite universities abroad. It’s almost fashionable,” Jallow says. But realistically, “we don’t need everybody to move back. “Move back if you have money to fall back on, an idea to implement or a tangible way to contribute.”

With Brexit, the Trump presidency and increasingly restrictive immigration policies, the trend is likely to increase, says Tomiwa Igun, founder of the Young African MBAs, a voluntary membership group. More undergrads talk about heading home after their visa work permit expires, says Igun.

“People are not willing to go through the hustle to stay in the US,” adds Zainab Raji, YAM’s Communications Lead. In recent months, Raji has also noticed more of her peers in the UK moving back. “It’s a combination of Brexit and it’s hard to get jobs.”

More people are taking the plunge knowing it’s not going to be rosy when you land. This has consequently spurred entrepreneurship and a startup culture.

Some of those entrepreneurs are returnees like Obinna Ukwuani, a Nigerian-American and MIT graduate who moved to Nigeria two years ago with the vision of building a secondary school that would give young Nigerians the technical skills to trigger a “technological and industrial revolution” in the country. Instead, he founded NESA by Makers [url]nesa.makers.ng[/url], a Lagos-based coding academy that trains novice coders in their mid to late twenties to be employable web developers.

Ukwuani also says returnees need to a “soft landing” before moving back, which means having a variety of financial and social safety nets to cushion the impact of relocating to Africa and ease acclimatization.

Nigeria’s recession has affected the return-migration trend there. There was a migration boom up until around 2015, Ukwuani noticed. Now, the economic decline has stemmed the flow, the crash of the naira versus the dollar was particularly harmful to those who still had obligations to meet back in the US or Europe.

“I had friends who left immediately because they had student loans to pay,” Ukwuani says. “You can imagine you go from making $5000 a month to $500 a month, almost overnight.”

But even with those hurdles, he doesn’t see himself returninganytimeUS any time soon.

“In Nigeria, I’m home. America is meant to be a paragon of democracy but it couldn’t be farther away from it,” he says referencing president Trump. “And with Brexit, people are becoming more protectionist and more xenophobic around the world. Part of me recognizes it as human nature. Now the diaspora really needs to think hard about where home is and why they are not here.”

https://qz.com/1128778/africa-brain-drain-to-brain-gain-african-elite-graduates-head-home-as-brexit-trump-eu-close-doors/

BusinessRe: 10 Businesses That Can Make You Rich In Nigeria by socialconscious: 3:43pm On Nov 10, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today. As a skilled software developer in Nigeria, you could earn between ₦150,000 - ₦1,000,000 per month!

If you've been considering switching to a lucrative career in #tech, the New-Economy Skills Accelerator (www.nesa.makers.ng) now offers a part-time web development training course which allows you to learn to code or advance your coding skills within your busy schedule.

Participants of the course are guaranteed a job placement upon successful program completion.
Limited spaces are available for the next cohort scheduled to start at the end of November 2017 at the NESA campus in Yaba, Lagos.

You can apply to join the program here: /parttimecourse

To get more information about the program, cost of tuition, visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

CareerSwitch To A Lucrative Career In Tech by socialconscious(op): 3:39pm On Nov 10, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today. As a skilled software developer in Nigeria, you could earn between ₦150,000 - ₦1,000,000 per month!

If you've been considering switching to a lucrative career in #tech, the New-Economy Skills Accelerator (www.nesa.makers.ng) now offers a part-time web development training course which allows you to learn to code or advance your coding skills within your busy schedule.

Participants of the course are guaranteed a job placement upon successful program completion.
Limited spaces are available for the next cohort scheduled to start at the end of November 2017 at the NESA campus in Yaba, Lagos.

You can apply to join the program here: /parttimecourse

To get more information about the program, cost of tuition, visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

CareerRe: How To Become A Nse, Coren Registered Engineer In Nigeria by socialconscious: 3:38pm On Nov 10, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today. As a skilled software developer in Nigeria, you could earn between ₦150,000 - ₦1,000,000 per month!

If you've been considering switching to a lucrative career in #tech, the New-Economy Skills Accelerator (www.nesa.makers.ng) now offers a part-time web development training course which allows you to learn to code or advance your coding skills within your busy schedule.

Participants of the course are guaranteed a job placement upon successful program completion.
Limited spaces are available for the next cohort scheduled to start at the end of November 2017 at the NESA campus in Yaba, Lagos.

You can apply to join the program here: /parttimecourse

To get more information about the program, cost of tuition, visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

CareerRe: How Much is a Good Salary in Nigeria? by socialconscious: 3:36pm On Nov 10, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today. As a skilled software developer in Nigeria, you could earn between ₦150,000 - ₦1,000,000 per month!

If you've been considering switching to a lucrative career in #tech, the New-Economy Skills Accelerator (www.nesa.makers.ng) now offers a part-time web development training course which allows you to learn to code or advance your coding skills within your busy schedule.

Participants of the course are guaranteed a job placement upon successful program completion.
Limited spaces are available for the next cohort scheduled to start at the end of November 2017 at the NESA campus in Yaba, Lagos.

You can apply to join the program here: /parttimecourse

To get more information about the program, cost of tuition, visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

Jobs/VacanciesLearn Software Development And Land A High Paying Job In Tech by socialconscious(op): 3:31pm On Nov 10, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today. As a skilled software developer in Nigeria, you could earn between ₦150,000 - ₦1,000,000 per month!

If you've been considering switching to a lucrative career in #tech, the New-Economy Skills Accelerator (www.nesa.makers.ng) now offers a part-time web development training course which allows you to learn to code or advance your coding skills within your busy schedule.

Participants of the course are guaranteed a job placement upon successful program completion.
Limited spaces are available for the next cohort scheduled to start at the end of November 2017 at the NESA campus in Yaba, Lagos.

You can apply to join the program here: /parttimecourse

To get more information about the program, cost of tuition, visit www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp 09034843983.

NYSCRe: Today is 2016 Batch B Stream 1 Passing Out Parade. October Allowance 2017 Delayd by socialconscious: 6:56pm On Nov 02, 2017
Congratulations to all NYSC members passing out today. All the best in your future endeavors.

CareerLearn Software Development And Land A High Paying Job In Tech by socialconscious(op): 4:30pm On Oct 30, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this program is for you.

Currently, they offer three courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.
This course costs ₦300,000, payment of which can be spread over three months.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future. This course costs ₦150,000 only.

There's also a Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course which is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.
This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in November ‘17.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

Jobs/VacanciesLearn Software Development And Land A Job by socialconscious(op): 3:32pm On Oct 30, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this program is for you.

Currently, they offer three courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.
This course costs ₦300,000, payment of which can be spread over three months.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future. This course costs ₦150,000 only.

There's also a Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course which is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.
This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in November ‘17.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

WebmastersLearn Software Development Without Quitting Your Day Job by socialconscious(op): 7:09pm On Oct 26, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this program is for you.

Currently, they offer three courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.
This course costs ₦300,000, payment of which can be spread over three months.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future. This course costs ₦150,000 only.

There's also a Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course which is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.
This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in November ‘17.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

NYSCLearn Software Development & Start Earning Money While Waiting For NYSC by socialconscious(op): 7:00pm On Oct 26, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this program is for you.

Currently, they offer three courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.
This course costs ₦300,000, payment of which can be spread over three months.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future. This course costs ₦150,000 only.

There's also a Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course which is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.
This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in November ‘17.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.
InvestmentMake The Best Investment In Yourself - Learn Software Development by socialconscious(op): 6:35pm On Oct 26, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.

Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this program is for you.

Currently, they offer three courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.
This course costs ₦300,000, payment of which can be spread over three months.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future. This course costs ₦150,000 only.

There's also a Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course which is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.
This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in November ‘17.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

EducationLearn Software Development With Affordable Part-time Evening & Weekend Classes. by socialconscious(op): 5:51pm On Oct 26, 2017
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

If the only thing stopping you from learning software development is your busy schedule then I have exciting news for you!

NESA by Makers has started offering a Part-Time Full-Stack Web Development Course that's specially designed to allow you to learn to code within your busy schedule.

[img][/img]

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip individuals with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavours.

The Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this course is for you.

With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.

Students will leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript, ReactJS and NodeJS, as well as 3 substantial portfolio projects they can show off to potential employers.

Whats more, graduates of the program are guaranteed a job placement with one of our hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

ProgrammingLearn To Code Without Quitting Your Day Job by socialconscious(op):
It's no secret that software development is one of the most lucrative career options available today.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand.

If the only thing stopping you from learning software development is your busy schedule then I have exciting news for you!

NESA by Makers has started offering a Part-Time Full-Stack Web Development Course that's specially designed to allow you to learn to code within your busy schedule.

[img][/img]

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip individuals with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavours.

The Part-Time Full Stack Web Development course is a 12-week introduction to design and web applications specially designed for busy professionals who aren't ready to give up their day jobs just yet.

Whether you’re interested in learning to code to further your career or start your own business as an entrepreneur or freelancer, this course is for you.

With just over 120 hours of in-class instruction, students will be taught essential software development skills from professional engineers in a community-based environment.

Students will leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML5, CSS3, JavaScript, ReactJS and NodeJS, as well as 3 substantial portfolio projects they can show off to potential employers.

Whats more, graduates of the program are guaranteed a job placement with one of our hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

This program meets 3 times a week and costs ₦100,000/month for 3 months.

Do not miss this amazing opportunity to embark on a personal development journey that will change your life forever.

PS: Limited slots are available on a first-come-first-serve basis, so if you’re interested in joining, apply now!

Apply here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfk6nsC3XR0icW84kNpez2rgOYDQIpxzgPhvjZcdll67duGqQ/viewform

Jobs/VacanciesLand A Job After Learning Software Development For 12 Weeks by socialconscious(op): 9:08pm On Sep 11, 2017
As you may be aware, software development skills are consistently in high demand these days. Most Software developers typically earn between 150K - 500K monthly.

There has never been a better time to learn how to code. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.


Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them software development.

NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Currently, they offer two courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future.


They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in October ‘17.

Go to: www.nesa.makers.ng/apply to apply and start your journey towards a rewarding career in tech.

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

NYSCYou Can Learn To Code During NYSC. Here's How. by socialconscious(op): 3:42pm On Aug 31, 2017
Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them to code.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.


NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Currently, they offer two courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future.


They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in October ‘17.

Go to: www.nesa.makers.ng/apply to apply

For more information about their programs: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

EducationLearn To Code And Land A Job In Tech by socialconscious(op): 3:35pm On Aug 31, 2017
Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them to code.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.


NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Currently, they offer two courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future.


They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in October ‘17.

Go to: www.nesa.makers.ng/apply to apply

For more information about their programs: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

Jobs/VacanciesLearn To Code And Land A Job In Tech by socialconscious(op): 3:27pm On Aug 31, 2017
Introducing NESA by Makers, the Yaba-based New Economy Skills Accelerator empowering people by teaching them to code.

As you may know, software engineering skills, particularly in web and app development, are now consistently in high demand. For skilled tech professionals, the world is their proverbial oyster.


NESA by Makers is a Lagos-based new economy skills accelerator with a mission to equip young people with the skills they need to maximize their capacity to create value for themselves for themselves, their loved ones, and society at large.

NESA works to close the industry skills gap by helping students, unemployed graduates, part-time and full-time professionals acquire relevant skills that qualify them for immediate gainful employment or position them to participate in high-growth entrepreneurial endeavors.

They achieve this by ensuring their students learn the most relevant skills face-to-face from practicing software development professionals while helping them build a portfolio of relevant work.

Students who successfully complete their program are guaranteed a job placement with one of their hiring partners so they can put the skills they learn to good use and start earning money as soon as possible.

Currently, they offer two courses. Their Full Stack Web Development (FSWD) course is an intensive, three-month, full-time introduction to design and web applications. Students will be taught essential software development skills so as to leave the program with a firm grasp of HTML/CSS, JavaScript, and PHP/SQL as well as exposure to frameworks such as ReactJS, Laravel, and Bootstrap.

The second course - Web Development Fundamentals (WDF) - is a one-month course designed to help students gain a basic understanding of the languages and frameworks of web development. Participating students will be drilled in computational problem solving and the basics of HTML/CSS, and JavaScript. Graduates will possess a solid foundation on which they can learn more sophisticated programming disciplines in the future.


They are currently accepting applications for their next batch of cohorts with classes set to commence in October ‘17.

Go to: www.nesa.makers.ng/apply to apply and start your journey towards a rewarding career in tech.

For more information about their program: www.nesa.makers.ng/program or call/Whatsapp +234 903 484 3983.

Jobs/VacanciesRe: . by socialconscious(op):
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NCANpatroller:
Are you advertising or sharing ur job testimony?
Jobs/VacanciesRe: . by socialconscious(op):
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Payments can be made installmentally (spread over three months)
ayo2012:
How much does the training cost?
EducationRe: . by socialconscious(op):
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lofty900:
so inspiring. Share more info about the coy. Is it lagos based or what
Education. by socialconscious(op):
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Jobs/Vacancies. by socialconscious(op):
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Career. by socialconscious(op):
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