Zainab Ayodimeji is a 27-year-old data scientist who’s worked at Spotify for a year. In 2011, she realised agricultural engineering wasn’t going to earn her much money. Now, she’s helping Spotify teams make important decisions for users and shares how the journey was a mix of vibes, strategy, and pure luck.
10 results for "what she said"
Jemima Osunde is a 26-year-old physiotherapist and actress. Fed up with the chaos of medical school, she decided to pursue acting on the side. She called her big break pure luck, but through her story, we found out what it’s like to hustle as a newbie in Nollywood.
We had to get this interview with Dollar to explain why Nigerians have to pay ₦680 for ordinary $1 and we got a history lesson with big insort.
“We were planning to get a place on Victoria Island, but the best deal we found was ₦2.5m. We kuku went to face the mainland.” How much does it really cost to wed in Lagos? Five women speak about their experiences.
Owo Anietie started out as a 10-year-old selling art for ₦30 to his school friends. Now, he’s funding a project to usher in the next generation of creatives in Nigeria. Our one question: How?
To every horror story, there’s always a beginning. Here, NYSC corpers share their first taste of horrible bosses in Nigeria.
Nothing prepares you for the Tinder swindlers and Anns of the world. Sometimes they’re disguised as Instagram vendors. Other times, as friends we’ve known for a long time.
“The sales attendant told me to think about the fact that I came to the store trekking.” These five Nigerians shared their stories of being wrongly broke shamed in public.
You want to start Ajo this year abi? Come and see the wahala that can happen inside Ajo groups before you drop that ₦10k. Be guided.
Let your village people rest this year. Avoid these six things at your next interview and you'll see that nobody is holding your destiny.
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