Bamidele Omotunde Alabi, a chartered accountant, resigned from a banking job to become self employed. He is now a successful entrepreneur and a source of inspiration to young Nigerians who want to take that big leap from pay-slip to profit making.

Bamidele Alabi
He holds a B.Sc (Hons) degree in Sociology from the Ondo State University, now University of Ado-Ekiti, a Masters degree (MBA) from the University of Lagos and another Masters degree in Marketing from the same university.
His initiative is to engender entrepreneurial spirit among hordes of Nigerian youths, particularly the unemployed. He is our role model of the week.
Why he left his banking job
I retired from banking for a number of reasons. The most important is that I had always purposed in my heart to stop labouring in other people’s fields, helping them to build their barns from the age of 40. I had resolved to stop working for salary and start aiming for profits from that age.
Essentially, I stopped working at the time I did because the words of Zig Zigler which says “The chief cause of failure and unhappiness is trading what you want most for the lifetime for what you want at the moment”.
Not only that, I quit my job because I needed to heed the counsel of Dr. Benjamin Carson that “Anyone who refuses to test his limits, anyone unwilling to move out of his/her comfort zone, is destined to live life inside the envelope”. Specifically, I knew I had to leave when I did because I had gotten to such point on the job that my morale had dipped so badly that the “the job” became “the task” and I found I was merely labouring to stay on.
His inspiration
The need to rouse the consciousness of people in this generation to entrepreneurship is what inspired me. I have come across many young people who possess massive talents and are highly innovative. They have no business being in paid employment. It also beats my imagination that I find people with great skills which they can turn into money making ventures and yet they complain about not being employed.
It is the need to transform the tragedy of “civil servant, salary dependent” orientation with which this generation has been imbued, that is my greatest inspiration. Ours is a generation that is not primed for self-determination and the reason is not far fetched.
All we are taught is to go to school, get multiple qualifications, and go out looking for where to be employed! We all go to school to be taught “how” and we do not get curious to find out “why”. “We do not realise that, according to Dwight D. Eisenhower, “the person who knows the “how” will always have a job, but the person who knows the “why” will always be his boss”.
I am inspired by the desire to provide alternative education unlike the kind of education the system presently offers, which do not teach us to be goal-oriented and self motivated people. My motivation also stems from my realisation of the fact that the time has come for my generation to shift their paradigm from payslip to profit.
Challenges
The first challenge came from a lot of the people around me, many of whom thought I was out of my mind to have quit my job at the time I did. Only a very few gave me the boost that I needed. I got zero support as some of them scorned me, made snide remarks and treated me with disdain. Not many people applauded or encouraged me.
Many of them handed me fore-warnings – things to let me know before hand that I would not get their sympathy if anything went wrong since they expected me to play it safe and I did not”. You know the Nigerian environment and a whole lot of the systemic failures we endure. The system is so not predictable that planning, goals setting and all that are a real challenge for budding entrepreneurs.
There was also the challenge of finding good and willing mentors. It was quite difficult as many potential mentors did not care or they honestly did not have the luxury of time to spare for mentoring or were suspicious of one’s real motives; not forgetting the challenge of finances. This, unlike in the more developed climes, is not readily available and accessible to a budding entrepreneur. There was also the challenge of patronage.
You really always have to know somebody in places before you can get patronage in such places and that should really not be the case. Indeed, the challenges are legion but we do not see them. Instead, we see the opportunities in those challenges. Napoleon Hill did say that “every negative event contains within it the seed of an equal or greater benefit”.
How he intends to spread the message
My book “Burst the Myth of Self Employment” is a well researched and insightful prose with a motivational and inspirational theme. Its distinctive message borders on fostering self-employment and entrepreneurial spirit amongst hordes of Nigerian youths, particularly the unemployed.
The book is the first in a series, and it attempts at awakening the consciousness of young Nigerians to self-employment and entrepreneurship vide the vehicle of Small and Medium Enterprises, which undoubtedly is the way of the future for Nigeria’s Economic growth and development.
It is on record that there is an obvious nexus and conjunction between entrepreneurship and the economic growth of many wealthy nations of today. It is more appropriate to say the book attempts to preach paradigm shift-from pay-slip to profit.
I hope to be collaborating with the people-oriented government of my state (Ondo) in a not too distant future in unleashing these initiatives. We hope to work with the government to have entrepreneurial curriculum and training infused in the educational curriculum at all levels, undertake training for different set of people, for instance, civil servants who would ultimately retire and have something they can retire into, we would have made significant impact in spreading and imparting the message.
How to reach one’s potentials
There are a number of factors that can help one reach one’s potentials. Though they are not exhaustive, the following will be highly imperative: Constant deep personal reflection; a chronic optimistic attitude; goals setting; self motivation; development of personal Philosophy; assertiveness; objectivity; doggedness; consistence; persistence; perseverance; stoicism etc.
However, by far the most important factor is the person aiming at reaching his/her potentials. This assertion is chiefly underscored by the legendary Henry Ford who once said “Whether you believe you can or you believe you cannot, you are absolutely right”. Without a doubt, reaching ones potentials is not such an easy task and one can easily get distracted or discouraged along the way but I have often heard people say that “If you find a path with no obstacles, it probably doesn’t lead anywhere”.
Values for successful entrepreneurs
It doesn’t take too much. Nonetheless, anyone wishing to be self-employed will be a spontaneous, and a persistent (calculated) risk-taker who will love challenges and not be afraid to fail. Such people will possess the will to succeed and be open to different ideas and be comfortable in experimenting with new ways to do things as well as adapting to changing circumstances.
They will be curious and intuitive, always willing to learn something new and explore unfamiliar terrains. They will possess a positive attitude and are able to recover quickly from emotional setbacks particularly when things become challenging. For the successful entrepreneur, going the extra mile at all times should be the core value because not many people ply that route.
Profile:
NAME: Bamidele Olugbenga Omotunde Alabi
AGE: 45
Project: Entrepreneur skills
SCOPE: Providing inspiration, motivation and
guidance for the unemployed to
become entrepreneurs.
Disclaimer
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