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| Let’s groom child entrepreneurs in Ghana I have read fascinating stories of teenagers who have earned a million dollars in the first year of their attempt at setting up business. They start on their own, while they are still doing home work with the help of parents and siblings. The businesses range from online, courier services, manufacturing to ICT. But one story that has enthralled me so much is that of Leanna Archer a 12-year-old girl from Central Islip, New York in the USA. Leanna’s story quickly sent my mind wandering about our cities’ major streets where most of our children have been reduced to eking out a living, by pathetically selling sachet water. These kids weave dangerously in-between moving vehicles to be able to sell to thirsty travellers. Some of these kids are as young as eight or nine years old. It is hard to tell how much money they are able to make risking their young lives in the manner that they do. I doubt if they earn anything decent enough to be able to afford a balanced diet three times a day, and have some change for a good savings. It would be surprising, that with the number of them on the streets, and competing with some adults, that they would be able to make good sales. Back to Leanna’s story. This 12-year-old girl is already a star in the US. And the intriguing thing about her business is; she got the idea for her business from home. She took a recipe for home-made hair products and turned it into a money making business. Leanna’s Grandmother made the product herself, and used it on her mother. Her mother started using the hair product on Leanna when she was three years old. Leanna decided to use the recipe and produce hair products for sale. Presto! She has a business. She has developed her own website on which she is selling the product. She makes $5000 every month, making her business a $60,000 earner every year. And from the way things look now, this business is likely to grow faster than she has anticipated. This is how the 12-year-old entrepreneur lives her life as she wrote on her website: “With my parents help, on weekends I make and package Leanna’s hair products at home (Hair Dressing, Hair Oil Treatment, Shampoo, Conditioner, Deep Conditioner ). During the week, after I complete all my homework, I pack boxes from every day orders that I get online and from selected Hair salons.” Yes. She runs her business from home, finds time to grant interviews to magazines, radio and TV stations, go round and give motivational talks and yet she still does her homework. I am yet to come across Ghanaian teenagers actually starting money making businesses and running them while they are still in school. Please, if you are reading this piece and you know any one like that let me know. I want to interview them. I am not saying Ghanaian children are not smart, but I am yet to see these smart kids start and run a business that bring in more money than their parents earn in a month! The truth is, when you are a smart kid starting out something beyond and above what your seniors know or think in Ghana, then you must be a witch or a strange kid. You must be protected from yourself or you might be killed by enemies or witches. You are discouraged and advised to shelve any such idea. Young people are not expected to take huge leaps in life. You are young, and should not know or do better than your predecessors. That attitude appears to have been so ingrained in the very core of our being as Ghanaians to the extent that it comes out so naturally for us to discourage a young person from taking ‘outrageous’ decisions that would lead to achieving anything extraordinary. It is no wonder that mediocre and substandard performers in various endeavours become instant heroes in our midst. True to word, they don’t last – they vanish just as they appeared on the scene on the wings of cheap propaganda. This country in my humble opinion has not figured out yet what to do with its young people. I wish I have the voice to tell all the gifted and talented young people to rise up and be counted. We seem to be giving our young people only what we deem to be an education. That is fine, but where does that leave us? Most young people graduate from university with First Class Degrees and yet have no clue about what to do with their lives. Only a few of them really move on in life. Those who can’t stick it out quickly run back to the universities to acquire a Masters Degree – as if a Masters Degree grants automatic immunity from challenges that all graduates face. A Masters Degree in itself is a good thing, but it does not on its own guarantee success if you can’t function. Others who have the money and can afford have gone to read Law. I just hope by passing the Law programme at Makola, they become good, useful and successful lawyers. I wish I have what it takes to tell Ghana's young to live their dreams no matter what. They have what it takes to change their lives, families, and the country and influence the world by releasing their creativity. There are so many opportunities around us that we can turn into life-changing products and money making ventures. It does not take age to achieve anything; it is how you use what you have. Start with what you have and how much you know. Just look around you, there is probably a favourite item your grandfather or someone might have discarded. But it might hold the secret to your breakthrough. Leanna used the home-made recipe her grandmother has been using for years and made products out of them and sold to the world. You can do the same or even more. All adults have a duty to groom young people to fully discover their creative abilities. Don’t stop the children. If they become successful, no witch can kill them. God will protect them. Let them explore and be productive, Ghana can move forward with the young where the old have failed us. The time is now or never. Let us give our young the encouragement and support to be resourceful and productive. And for those young people who spend all their time on the internet watching things that add nothing to their lives but destroy their already fragile future, please put a stop to it and use your energies on things that would challenge you to be creative in a meaningful manner. Authored by: Emmanuel K. Dogbevi Email: edogbevi@hotmail.com Story from Myjoyonline.Com News: http://www.joy997fm.com.gh/features/200804/15235.asp © Myjoyonline.com
__________________ Posted In The Spirit of Learning & Sharing One Love & Respect Always *************************************** The Quest for knowledge stops at the grave. HIM Emperor Haile Selassie I. If you fail to prepare, you are preparing to fail! Mind what you want, because someone wants your mind. Working together, the ants ate the elephant. |
| The Following User Says Asante sana to Jahness For This Useful Post: | ||
Mamazen (04-12-2008) | ||
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__________________ Knowing others is wisdom; Knowing the self is enlightenment. Mastering others requires force; Mastering the self needs strength. He who knows he has enough is rich. Perseverance is a sign of will power. He who stays where he is endures. To die but not to perish is to be eternally present. Lao Tsu Tao Te Ching _________________________ I love animals... With potatoes And brown gravey Watching. Eating. Preserving. Growing. Being. The Blogletter. <a href="http://mangobuttahqueen.blogspot.com/"> African Zen Woman</a> Yarn into cloth. Cloth into dolls. Pan-African Dolls. <a href="http://littlepan-africanclothpeoples.blogspot.com/">Little Pan-African Cloth People</a> |
| The Following User Says Asante sana to Mamazen For This Useful Post: | ||
Jahness (04-13-2008) | ||
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