CWG Boss, Austin Okere just back from Columbia
Business School, New York, where he participated as an instructor at the Steve Blank “Lean Launch
Pad” Class, plans to bring the novel concept to Nigeria.
The Lean Launch Pad is joining forces with Startup
Weekend, Udacity, TechStars and Startup America to offer some of the
world’s most effective experiential entrepreneurship education.
By combining content from the world’s leading expert
in customer development with local mentors and leaders in an intensive
flipped-classroom style course, the movement has been able to create a unique,
effective experience for teams of entrepreneurs that are serious about growing
a customer-driven startup.
The program is already being offered in 15 cities
around the world, with another 25 programs launching in February. The goal is
to expand the program to more than 100 cities in 2013.
Thus far, seasoned entrepreneurs such as Steve Blank
are teaching NEXT in Silicon Valley, Andy Sack (TechStars Seattle founder) in
Seattle, Alex Farcet (founder of Startupbootcamp) in multiple European cities,
Eric Koester (founder of Zaarly) in Washington, DC with countless others
joining.
The Eugene Lang Entrepreneurial Center at CBS, where
Okere has been a guest lecturer since 2009, conveyed in their invitation their
belief that his experience and contribution to entrepreneurial ship in emerging
markets will provide unparalleled contribution to the class of aspiring
entrepreneurs.
The Computer Warehouse Group, whose case study is a regular feature at
Columbia Business School and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston,
as well as many other institutions in Africa, including the prestigious Lagos
Business School, chronicles the trials, challenges and triumph of
entrepreneurship in the challenging environment that characterizes Sub Saharan
Africa.
The Lean Launch Pad course provides real world, hands-on learning on
what it is like to actually
start a high-tech company. It is a practical class where the goal is to
create an entrepreneurial experience with all of the pressures and demands of
the real world in an early stage start up.
The syllabus for the course is drawn majorly from the bestselling book,
The Startup Owner’s Manual, co-authored by serial entrepreneurs Steve Blank and
Bob Dorf, and the revolutionary new book, Business Model Generation co-authored
by Alexander Osterwalder and Yves Pigneur.
These two books provide insights into powerful, simple, tested tools for
understanding, designing, reworking, and implementing business models, through
a business model canvas, that defines unique value propositions for specific
customer segments, and the relationships and channels to deliver these to the
customer to maximize revenue. It also helps the entrepreneur identify key
resources, partners and key activities to be performed and at what cost.
The course provides a comprehensive step-by-step guide to getting
startups right. It walks entrepreneurs through the customer development process
that gets them out of the building to develop wining products that customers
will buy.
There is an increasing global focus and emphasis on entrepreneurship as
the most viable vehicle for job creation. According to the Global
Entrepreneurship Monitor (GEM) 2011 report, there is an upsurge in
entrepreneurship around the world, with a total number of about 400 million
spread across 54 countries. The GEM in its 2006 report revealed that there was
a systematic relationship between a country’s level of economic development and
its level of entrepreneurial activity. It noted that countries with similar per
capita GDP tend to exhibit similar levels of entrepreneurial activity.
At low levels of per capita GDP, industrial structure is characterized
by the prevalence of many very small enterprises. As per capita income increases,
industrialization and economies of scale allow larger and established firms to
satisfy the increasing demand of growing markets and to increase their relative
role in the economy.
On his involvement in the Block Week Course at Columbia Business School Okere
said “I believe that it is better to have a thousand millionaires than a ten
billionaires. It is better still to have a million people with access to a
hundred thousand dollars, if they can be taught how to nurture and grow it
through entrepreneurial endeavor; and I intend to do something about it, so
when I was invited, I did not hesitate in accepting, with a view to bringing
the concept to Africa”.
Okere whose entrepreneurial advocacy has taken him on similar teaching
expeditions across Africa; through Nigeria, Kenya and Tanzania also remarked “I
like to put the story of the Computer Warehouse Group out there because such success
stories contribute immensely to the attraction of capital to the region, which
combined with the entrepreneurial acumen and the youthful population unleashes
waves of economic boom, which in turn lifts the pile at bottom of the pyramid
into the more desirable networked economy of the emerging global village.
Besides, it provides the perfect opportunity to be a brand ambassador for
Africa”.
Okere,
one of Nigeria’s foremost entrepreneurs has made quite a name for himself over
the past 20 years, growing the Computer Warehouse Group into a $130 million revenue
company, with 650 staff spread across Nigeria, Ghana, Uganda and Cameroon. In
2012 he was named ICT Man of the Decade by ICT Watch Africa Digital Network,
and CWG was named Conglomerate of the Year. The organizers cited CWG’s immense
contributions toward the growth and development of Information and
Communications Technology (ICT), youth empowerment through ICT education, and
nation building.
In 2011 Austin was equally named the ICT Personality of the year by
Technology Africa, and the most outstanding ICT Personality of the Decade in
2010 by ICT Watch Africa. He has also received the IT Personality of the Year
award by the Nigerian IT and Telecom Awards, among many others.
The Computer Warehouse Group was recently ranked among the top 50
Technology Companies in West Africa, and also bagged the Award of the ICT
Company of the Year 2012 by Technology Africa.
Okere who shall be participating at the Economist Group’s Nigerian
Summit in March intends to take his entrepreneurial advocacy very strongly to
the Forum to attract the much needed focus.
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