Why Kenya Attracts America's Best & Brightest Young Social Entrepreneurs

Why Kenya Attracts America's Best & Brightest Young Social Entrepreneurs

Siku zote mtu asiyejiamini hutumia udhaifu wa mtu shujaa kuficha udhaifu wake. Bali mwerevu na kujiamini huonyesha kwa vitendo. Kauli zenu wakenya zaonyesha mmekata tamaa na maisha na mnalalama tu. Basi endeleeni kutoa kauli ambazo mwisho wa siku zitawapa matokeo.


My kenyans friends are very good at marketing themselves. Unaweza ukafikiri kuna la maana wanaloongea hapa kumbe ni hadithi na mikwala tu! Nimefanya nao kazi sehemu nyingi so I know them!

If anyone ever wonders why Africans are not developing at all, all they need to do is come onto this forum and they'll not wonder any more. The reason manifests itself here very clearly...Instead of coming together and supporting each other, this is what people react like when something positive is said about the "other" or even when they try to bring some development to themselves, no matter how small. The rest of the world is going one way (uniting) and Africans are going the other (hate and division), and the results are plain for all to see. It's sad!

:smash:
 
The crab mentality kshaka.....ive kept saying that here.....but hey...who wants to listen to a nyang'au???.....

Cancer of Discrimination will eat you if you can't change your altitude towards others.
 
[h=1]Nairobi, Africa's new HQ for multinational firms
[/h]
Nairobi is fast becoming the African home of choice for multinational companies, especially those in the services sector, looking to grow their presence on the continent.









Pfizer, the US-based pharmaceutical company, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Posterscope, an outdoor advertising firm, have in the past seven days unveiled plans to establish a regional hub, recruit staff and set up shop respectively in Kenya's capital city last week.


In the past one year, global heavyweights in the service industry such as IBM, Google, PwC, advertising agency WPP, Bharti Airtel, Nokia/Siemens, Huawei, Procter & Gamble, Biersdoff, Barclays and Stanchart have announced plans to either set up regional hubs or transform their local operations to serve sub-Sahara Africa.


Several factors work to the benefit of Kenya and the other East African states too. First, the formation of a Common Market is helping create a strong internal market with a population of 130 million and a middle class estimated at 30 million consumers. With South Sudan, which has a population of 8.4 million, expressing interest in joining the EAC, and Kenya opening up its northern frontier through the Lamu Corridor to serve Ethiopia, which has a population of 84 million, the region now boasts a potentially connected internal market of 240 million people. This is way above the 150 million mark that experts say a country or a bloc needs to be a major world power.


The second factor is the peace dividend that has come with the ending of most of the civil wars in the Great Lakes. This is making the region a safe bet to invest in. The peace dividend has seen homegrown African multinationals such as Ecobank, Stanbic, UBA, MTN, KCB and Equity pursuing a more aggressive expansion strategy in these markets, which are similar to their home markets. Global multinationals too, like Pfizer and IBM, are smelling opportunity in the region.


Pfizer sells mostly antibiotics, cough syrups and anti-fungals. The drugs are finding a ready market as the East African population grows - at an estimated 3.5 per cent in 2011.

"The hub will serve as a legitimate supply system of products, bringing us closer to the market and reducing the total accumulated cost per product," said country director for Nigeria and the East Africa region Enrico Liggeri when launching Pfizer's hub last week. Kenya's healthcare industry has attracted private equity investments that have helped some of the insurance service providers and hospitals expand.


In 2009, IBM opened an office in Nairobi to meet the increased demand from clients in both the private and public sector in East Africa and across the region.



The clincher for IBM, which previously had little interest in sub-Saharan Africa, was winning a multimillion-dollar contract to manage Airtel's IT infrastructure across 16 African markets. IBM is expected to hire 2,000 workers to serve its continental business. Airtel too wants to have the hub of its African operations in Kenya and is currently planning to put up a headquarters in the city.



Another factor that is acting in the region's favour is the massive investment that EAC governments have put in to build fibre-optic cables, which has boosted Internet speeds and connection levels.


Unlike in manufacturing – where cheap power, water and raw materials are key – the global services industry thrives on extensive and reliable airline connections, a comfortable but affordable location, fast Internet connections and a deep pool of skilled talent.


Operational centre


This is why international firms are looking to make Nairobi the fulcrum of their continent-wide operations as they race to be part of Africa's growth story. One of the biggest pluses for Nairobi is its central location on the continent. This hugely favours the national carrier, Kenya Airways.


South African Airways, a key competitor, is disadvantaged by the longer distances it must fly to cover the rest of Africa. Indeed, KQ has a bold, if not overly ambitious, target of flying to every African capital city by 2013. If it hits this target, business executives will find it much easier to reach any part of the continent from Nairobi.


This will mean better revenues for KQ because Africa remains its most lucrative market, where it enjoys healthy margins and little competition. It generated about half of its $953 million revenues in Africa in the financial year ended March 2011.

It also means that the majority of business executives traversing the continent will find their way back to Nairobi, the airline's main hub. The airline's expansion has already created a demand for scarce hotel rooms, which according to a report released by Mercer, a human-resource consulting firm, is among the highest in the world. The growing demand for accommodation and conference facilities has encouraged global hotel chains to set up in Nairobi to plug the supply deficit. Rezidor Hotel Group, owners of the Radission brand, are putting up a hotel in Nairobi, joining about 10 other local hotels coming up.









Investigations by The EastAfrican show at least 2,500 new bed capacity will be created in the next year in Nairobi alone.
Kenya is also stepping up its efforts to improve infrastructure, with the ongoing road works, which will make it easier to travel within the capital city. Other infrastructure projects supporting the business environment in Nairobi include the laying of infra-red cables allowing for faster Internet connectivity.


The services industry needs fast Internet connectivity because it allows for Internet banking and easier communication such as web conferencing with the Western world.


Multinational firms like Google are also finding it easier to recruit in Nairobi where many say there is a deep and broad pool of talent from banking to technology.



"It seemed to be the easiest place to get the talent that we needed," said Joe Mucheru, Google "lead" for sub-Saharan Africa on why the technology company first set up in Kenya before spreading to other Sub-Saharan countries.




Talent is a big concern for the multinationals and the existence of a strong mobile technology applications innovation hub that has produced products like M-Pesa and the various Google map based apps is working in Kenya's favour.


"We are still way ahead - relative to the rest of sub-Saharan Africa - in terms of graduates being produced every year," said Gitau Githongo, a Nairobi based economist. "This means that you will find good quality staff if you are setting up here."


However, not every Kenyan graduate is lucky enough to get a nice job immediately after graduating, and there is evidence that a good number of these potential employees are not well qualified and employers have to spend a lot of money retraining. The level of unemployment for mass unskilled labour remains as high as in other East African nations.
 
Grab that opportunity and become the Richest person in World. Unless unanikumbusha wakati nikiwa teen jinsi nilivyokuwa natamba kuwa nina brother yupo vile uncle yupo vile na nyumbani kupo vile, leo hii naona haisaidii. Mwisho wa siku ni maisha yako binafsi. Take a chance and make good life usipige mayowe utawaamsha waliolala na kulala wewe.
 
Cancer of Discrimination will eat you if you can't change your altitude towards others.

Eat who???according to the articles above it is us eating the rest of Africa......na bado....
 
Grab that opportunity and become the Richest person in World. Unless unanikumbusha wakati nikiwa teen jinsi nilivyokuwa natamba kuwa nina brother yupo vile uncle yupo vile na nyumbani kupo vile, leo hii naona haisaidii. Mwisho wa siku ni maisha yako binafsi. Take a chance and make good life usipige mayowe utawaamsha waliolala na kulala wewe.

Dude...i can speak for myself and i can tell i aint doing very bad as a young professional....partly because of your country. And the funny thing is as much as you try to keep us away from your country...kenyans are still finding loopholes to live off of you and your resources....lol
 
Dude...i can speak for myself and i can tell i aint doing very bad as a young professional....partly because of your country. And the funny thing is as much as you try to keep us away from your country...kenyans are still finding loopholes to live off of you and your resources....lol

Proffesionaly ur dn fine lakini u will have a hard time to win other people mind/trust. If u think big there is no boundry obsatcle to grow and cecome an int.national entrepeneur in this world. U dont need political support to do business. Ur free as long as your callibre can conquer the world through capitalist approach. I was thinking to look investor around EA but Kenya wont be my choice. Lakini jinsi mnavyojijenga na mitazamo yenu itawarejesha nyuma.
 
Chaguo ni lako....invest where u feel is best for you.....
 
I wonder how we caught ubagazi, how we came by it?, Mwalimu preached Pan Africanism.
 
Eat who???according to the articles above it is us eating the rest of Africa......na bado....

Wewewewe waambie Mnairobi Eat who???? we are internationally known to be hurslers hata Nigerians wanatuogopa .My brothers from Tz mta-complain paka lini dah you guys work smart.....and by the way guys have you realized that the number of Kenyans on this forum is growing exponentially...the reason is the JOBS FORUM BOARD AND TECH maze personally i have been contracted thrice through JF to develop system and i am making top dollar,and you wonder why Kenyans tuko mbele....it's simple GAME YETU IKO JUU TU SANA and by the way you can follow me on https://twitter.com/#!/okechedward
 
Nairobi is fouth largest city in Africa by infrastructure development.

why not the first? and from which criteria r u coming with that finding? cause of Thika rd? can Dar also claim the spot on its Kigamboni Bridge? Try to be rational on ur bragging :lol:
 
Wewewewe waambie Mnairobi Eat who???? we are internationally known to be hurslers hata Nigerians wanatuogopa .My brothers from Tz mta-complain paka lini dah you guys work smart.....and by the way guys have you realized that the number of Kenyans on this forum is growing exponentially...the reason is the JOBS FORUM BOARD AND TECH maze personally i have been contracted thrice through JF to develop system and i am making top dollar,and you wonder why Kenyans tuko mbele....it's simple GAME YETU IKO JUU TU SANA and by the way you can follow me on https://twitter.com/#!/okechedward

Loool...ati they stop us from doing business in thier country......yet employers cross the border to look for kenyans just to work for them. ive seen this happen very often in the recent time.....we need not be there to work for them. All im saying is u cant run away from ur neighbour.
 
What is going on here?
Kenyans as usual brother!! Maneno mingi while uchumi wao umeshikwa na foreigners na si wakenya wenyewe! Nyie Wakenya tunamatatizo yanayofanana tusichekane bali tuungane kukata wezi wa resources zetu.Mwl Nyerere aliwahi kuliambia Bunge la South Africa kuwa nchi yenu inauchumi mkubwa sana kuliko Tanzania lakini watu wenu ni maskini sawasawa na watu wetu akawapa wabunge hao changamoto ya kufanya huo uchumi wao mkubwa unashuka kwa wananchi!! Hakuna cha Kenya wala Tanzania sisi wananchi ni maskini kiasi kile kile! Those f**king GDP figures do not touch Malindi or Mbeya peoples!
 
Kenyans as usual brother!! Maneno mingi while uchumi wao umeshikwa na foreigners na si wakenya wenyewe! Nyie Wakenya tunamatatizo yanayofanana tusichekane bali tuungane kukata wezi wa resources zetu.Mwl Nyerere aliwahi kuliambia Bunge la South Africa kuwa nchi yenu inauchumi mkubwa sana kuliko Tanzania lakini watu wenu ni maskini sawasawa na watu wetu akawapa wabunge hao changamoto ya kufanya huo uchumi wao mkubwa unashuka kwa wananchi!! Hakuna cha Kenya wala Tanzania sisi wananchi ni maskini kiasi kile kile! Those f**king GDP figures do not touch Malindi or Mbeya peoples!


Sorry, I posted what I thought was an article which had an interesting take on Kenyan socio-economic development. Your compatriots, instead of engaging with the information provided started bringing in issues of hunger etc etc as if we must never say anything positive about our countries as long as we have problems. It's the same thing you've done in your post. Time and again, this is the response we get on this forums when someone says something even mildly positive about Kenya. That has derailed the thread into another slanging match rather than a discussion of the issues contained within the article in the OP. How is that, "Kenyans as usual" when it's obvious that it is due to some of your compatriots who harbour a deep dislike of Kenya and Kenyans and will take any opportunity to attack Kenya and Kenyans such that it is almost impossible to discuss anything pertaining to Kenya on this forum?

We are aware that we have problems and I don't think any Kenyan here would dispute that. The thing is though, we are working on them and I believe we have started to make some headway, slowly but surely. To say, as you do, that GDP figures don't mean anything or do not touch the ordinary mwananchi is, quite simply, wrong. If you look at this study by the African Development Bank from last year, you'll note that Kenya has one of the larger populations of those that could be described as "middle class" in sub-saharan Africa. This "rise" has happened mostly in the last 10 years and is a function of the increase in GDP size...so, these figures matter my friend, they matter a lot and they reflect changes in the circumstances of "Malindi and Mbeya" people (well, Malindi ones at least).

P.S. that African Development Bank report is quite fascinating if you'd care to go into it...I would but I already know what that would turn into so i'll just urge everyone who's interested in this kind of thing to have a gander.
 
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