• Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.


    Put your money to work with as little as ₦5,000. Invest Naija’s SEC-registered Money Market Fund delivers quarterly income, liquidity, capital preservation, and returns that beat savings and fixed deposits. Start here.


    Nairalife 338 bio

    What’s your earliest memory of money?

    This is probably not my earliest experience with money, but I remember how I used to get ₦100 daily for snacks in secondary school. Then I switched to a boarding school in SS 3, and only got access to cash on Sundays. 

    The school didn’t allow students to spend money during the weekdays, so getting my ₦500 – ₦1k bursary allowance every Sunday was my only opportunity to buy what I needed. 

    What about the first time you worked for money?

    This was also in secondary school, but wasn’t exactly “work”. I’ve always liked fashion, and my parents allowed me to explore my interest. So, I started learning fashion design during the holidays in JSS 3.

    My lawyer dad lived and worked in a different state, so whenever I spent school holidays with him, I continued my fashion design training in a different institute. I went to about three places in total. The practicals usually involved sewing simple designs and clothes, and I sold some to family. I mostly wore the rest of the clothes I made, though. 

    I got into business proper when I entered the university.

    Tell me about that

    I started a scarf business in 2023 when I was in 200/300 level. The business idea didn’t come out of necessity; my mum convinced me to try a business. 

    I received a ₦5k/week pocket money from home, and my parents still paid for my food, gas and school printing needs. So, I didn’t really need extra money. 

    My mum, though, is a businesswoman and she thought it’d be good for me, too. Also, I love scarves. I thought, “If I’m going to do this, it might as well be with something I like.” 

    I told my dad about my idea, and he gave me ₦100k to start. I can’t remember how much stock the money got me, but it was a lot. I got everything from crinkle scarves to jersey scarves, pashminas, and scarf accessories. 

    You were all set for business

    I was, and business was good at first. My customers were fellow students, and my school is in a predominantly northern state, so sales were lucrative. I could buy a jersey scarf for ₦2500 and sell it for ₦3500. 

    The problem started when I needed to replace the items I sold. Almost every time I called my supplier for a replacement, she said that the price had increased by ₦500. 

    I also didn’t keep proper financial records or separate my profit from the business capital. I was just spending the money small small; ₦500 here, ₦1k there. I held on to the business for a year before stopping in 2024. 

    Did you try another business?

    I didn’t, but by then, I’d found a different hustle: social media management and content creation.

    Let me backtrack a bit. In 2023, I joined my school’s Google Developer Students community and volunteered on the media team for an event they held. I connected with several tech people in that community and became interested in opportunities in the industry, specifically front-end development. I like design, and the idea of coding something that could turn beautiful appealed to me. 

    I applied for a free training program, but the problem was that they taught us both front-end and back-end development together. The HTML and CSS part of the training was fine, but I got confused when we reached Python Programming. At some point, the training organisers brought out another option for just front-end development, and I joined, thinking I could start afresh. Then I heard the criteria were that prospective learners needed to know how to use the React programming language. I didn’t know that either, so I gave up. 

    Then I turned to Udemy courses and YouTube tutorials. But that was so stressful. Imagine watching tutorials and coding for hours, only to get a result different from what you just watched. I kept trying for about six months, but it became difficult to juggle it with schoolwork. So, I paused my learning efforts. 

    However, I maintained my participation in the Google community, and towards the end of 2023, I applied to be a core member of the management team. I got in, and my role was to help with content for the social media platforms. Interestingly, around the same time, I got another role to lead the social media team of another tech community in school. 

    Did you have any experience with social media management at this point?

    Not exactly, which is why it was surprising that I got those roles. To be fair, I’d started creating random content on Instagram and TikTok, so I guess the community took it to mean I could lead a social media team. 

    I also had some knowledge from a beginner social media management course I took a while back. I didn’t know things like content strategy, but at least I knew the different platforms, and together with my team from both communities, we made it work. Wherever we attended events, we’d post summaries on LinkedIn and share the links on our WhatsApp statuses. 

    We also had different content types for different days of the week. For instance, we’d do motivational posts on Mondays, tips on Thursdays, spotlight people on Fridays, and so on.  

    These were volunteer roles, right?

    Yes. I didn’t get paid for either, but it was valuable experience, and I learnt I was good at social media management. I also applied what I had learned to my personal social media pages and created better content. 

    By March 2024, I started applying for social media management jobs and internships. I wanted to experience working with an actual organisation and gain outside-school experience. I got a couple of rejections and unsuccessful interviews, which were understandable, as I was essentially a self-taught social media manager. But whenever an interview went badly, I went back to read up on the things I missed. I also learned how to perform better in interviews and maintain confidence. 

    My efforts paid off. In May, I landed a social media manager role with a book club. My job was to handle Instagram and TikTok, co-handle YouTube with another social media manager and manage the WhatsApp community.

    How much was the pay?

    ₦30k/month. Honestly, I was happy because I wasn’t even looking for pay. I wanted something to validate my skill and was prepared for an unpaid internship. 

    Besides managing the social media platforms and communities, I often created short videos for the book club. Since I didn’t have an iPhone, I’d use my roommate’s phone to record the videos and send them to the book club’s video editor. 

    While at this job, I also managed schoolwork, two community leadership positions, a few other student communities, and my scarf business (which I stopped around the end of 2024). 

    How did you manage all these?

    I like working in an overstimulated environment. I don’t know how to explain it, but I always want my brain to be active.

    In July 2024, I added another content creation role to my list of responsibilities. I’d seen the vacancy on one of the communities I’m part of, and I applied with a portfolio of videos I’d created for my personal page. The portfolio was just a Google Drive where I dumped the links of every video I shared online. The job paid ₦50k, and I had to show up at the office once or twice weekly to shoot videos. 

    When I first started, I had to borrow my friend’s iPhone to shoot videos. I eventually gathered ₦100k to buy an iPhone XR (it cost about ₦250k, and my dad paid the rest), but there was a lot of back and forth I had to do in the beginning, so that I could create good videos. 

    I worked there until January 2025, when my employer let me go because they wanted someone who didn’t have to divide their time with school. I’d also left the book club a month earlier because I wanted something bigger. 

    So, you didn’t have any paying jobs at this time?

    I was doing several stints at different places. I’m not sure there was a point when I had just one job or none at all. 

    Back in September, I had a one-month stint with someone who was supposed to pay me ₦100k/month to manage several social media accounts and create video moodboards to guide the video editor. I say “supposed” because I didn’t get any salary. 

    After I completed the first month and didn’t see any money, I asked, and they said they paid salaries at the end of the following month. This meant I wouldn’t get my September salary until the end of October. Funny enough, they’d noted this in the employment contract, but I somehow overlooked it. Anyway, I just told them I wasn’t doing again. 

    When I left the book club in December, I tweeted about manifesting a new job and got two jobs from that post. Around the same time, someone else also referred me to another job. I resumed all three jobs in January. Two were social media management roles, and one was for video editing. 

    Mad o. I’m still trying to wrap my head around why and how you do multiple gigs at once

    Haha. Like I said, I just like being active. It’s not like I need the money for survival. I’m just building the life I want. I can manage multiple roles at once, so I do them. 

    There are sometimes downsides to doing so many things simultaneously, though. For instance, I only spent about five months altogether at the three jobs I started in January. I was getting overworked, and the pay wasn’t great. 

    The video editing one paid me ₦50k/month to edit one YouTube video and four shorts weekly. I still designed thumbnails and carousels. One of the social media management roles paid ₦70k/month, and I was also something like a virtual assistant. I left that one in the same January.

    The third job paid me ₦80k/month to manage three platforms, but I did far more than what I was employed to do. Also, the communication process was draining. I’d need something urgently, and no one would respond. By May, I’d left all of them. 

    Phew. How many jobs are you juggling these days?

    I’m currently working two jobs: a ₦150k/month social media management role I started in May and a ₦75k/month video editing role I started in June. Also, I often get paid for influencing on my personal page. Most of this “pay” is PR packages, but I did get a ₦200k gig sometime in March. 

    Additionally, I offer training sessions based on request. The last one I held was a content creation class for six people, and I charged ₦50k per person. I still need to figure out a proper structure for these classes, so I’m not pushing them aggressively yet. Maybe next year.

    Then I maintain my social media team lead role at one of my tech communities in school, but I’ve mostly scaled down my community volunteering. 

    I should mention that I still get a weekly allowance from my parents, which has increased to ₦8k weekly. 

    What kind of lifestyle does your income afford you?

    I typically don’t spend from my income; most of my money goes into savings. Now that I earn ₦225k, I save about ₦150k and divide the rest across app subscriptions, data and maybe takeout when I feel lazy to cook. I don’t really spend money like that.

    Let’s break down these expenses in a typical month

    Nairalife 338 expenses

    I don’t have a fixed amount for food and transportation because I spend as I go. My transport costs are typically for when I need to move around school, and that’s just about ₦100 a day.

    I hired a virtual assistant in June because I needed help with work due to a class I had at the time. She’s quite efficient, and I plan to increase her pay. The only thing keeping me from doing that now is that I still struggle with delegating tasks, so she doesn’t do so much. 

    How would you describe your relationship with money?

    I think I save a lot because I don’t have a big spending need at the moment. Again, I don’t need to earn to survive or pay school fees or anything like that. I’m just earning money because I have a skill and can’t just leave it lying around. 

    I currently have about ₦730k saved up. It’d be more than that, but I dipped into my savings a few times between December and June to buy a Redmi tab and content creation tools like tripods (mini and normal size), LED lights, and a microphone. The tab cost me about ₦320k (including a keyboard and stylus pen), and the others cost about ₦104k in total. 

    I haven’t explored investing yet, but I might do so soon. 

    Do you think digital creation is an income source you’ll continue to explore after school?

    I think I will, but I’m a little conflicted. I’m a law student, and by the time I graduate, I’ll have to give up all my jobs to focus on law school. I’ll probably return to creative work, but I want to practice law, too.

    I also plan to restart my business soon, and my savings will be handy when I’m ready. I think I’ve learned from my early business mistakes, and I know better now, so I have a better shot. 

    Is there an ideal amount you think you should be earning?

    I don’t earn badly, but considering my experience and how much I put into work, ₦700k – ₦1m monthly should be a decent amount. That said, I’m not actively job-hunting just to increase my income. I’m open to opportunities to increase my income, but I’m no longer just taking any job for the sake of it. 

    I have much more clarity on what I do and how to charge for my work. I’m no longer taking jobs where I have to manage multiple platforms, and if I have to, I should get paid well for that level of work. 

    I get that. Is there anything you want right now but can’t afford?

    Travel. I want to travel and see places, but I can’t afford that now. However, I’m doing well for my age, so I don’t want to rush myself. I have time to grow into that level. 

    How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1-10?

    Right now, it’s a 5. Around the beginning of the year, all my multiple jobs brought my income to around ₦500k, so ₦225k feels like a downgrade now. 

    However, I have two more gigs lined up for September, so my income should reach the ₦650k mark by the end of the month. That’s good, I guess. 


    If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.

    Find all the past Naira Life stories here.

    Subscribe to the newsletter here.

    Get More Zikoko Goodness in Your Mail

    Subscribe to our newsletters and never miss any of the action

    [ad]

  • You may think you are a true Nigerian creative, but the only way to prove it is to get at least a 12/20 on this quiz.

    Check all that apply to you:


    [donation]

  • There are few things that compare to our beloved Jollof rice in this life, and one of them is being a digital artist. *Pauses to inhale the scent of artistry* Before you try to argue, go through the 5 reasons we’ve listed out below. займ безработным

    1. More room for self-expression

    With digital art, there’s ample room for you to fully express your creativity without being overly cautious of irrevocable mistakes. Unless the mistake looks like this sha.

    2. Wider reach, which can attract more clients…

    …and more clients equals more coins. It’s possible for millions of people to come across amazing art on the streets of Twitter, Dribble, Pinterest, or Behance while seated in their rooms compared to a physical showroom (except you’re Da Vinci). Yay technology.

    money
    Portrait happy man exults pumping fists ecstatic celebrates success screaming under money rain falling down dollar bills banknotes isolated gray background with copy space. Financial freedom concept

    3. Cool tools and softwares

    Unlike traditional art where physical paint and brushes are like bread and butter, digital artists have a wide variety of digital tools to aid their creative process. Little wonder their art turns out fabulous.

    4. Saves money

    Gadgets can be bought once, but you see paint, brushes and canvas? You will keep buying till Jesus comes. Wahala for who no be digital artist o.

    5. A means to drive social change

    Creating art is more than an action, it can also spark a movement for the good of all. Digital artists are no strangers to this fact.

    For the love of art!

    If you are a digital artist between ages 18 – 30 who loves good vibes and seeks to drive positive social change through art, then The Absolut Creator Competition will interest you. It’s a perfect opportunity to share your aspirations for a better Nigeria through your digital art works.

    Follow these steps to participate:

    1. Find the Absolut bottle outline and brand logo tagline here and incorporate them in your design.
    2. Create your vision of a better Nigeria using Absolut Nigeria’s theme: “Everyone should be free to express themselves” and incorporate the Absolut bottle outline.
    3. Visit the www.absolutcreator.ng to sign up and submit your artwork.
    4. Enter your name, email address and relevant social media handles in the submission box.
    5. Finally – Upload your design or artwork and click on ‘submit’.

    To improve your chances of winning, follow these guidelines:

    1. Artwork should be based on stated theme only.
    2. Artwork must include the Absolut Bottle outline from top to bottom.
    3. Artwork must include the brand logo and campaign tagline at the bottom.
    4. Artwork must be developed in portrait format – not dimension specific.
    5. Avoid multiple silhouettes within your artwork.
    6. Artworks must embody the theme in a Nigerian context.

    Stand a chance of winning the following prizes if you make it to the finals:

    • A MacBook Pro Laptop
    • One-year premium subscription of Adobe Creative Cloud
    • The Absolut Creator merch
    • One-year internship with a creative agency

    Good luck and happy creating!

  • In this story, we’re speaking with a super-talented lady who is torn between learning the ropes in a structured environment and looking for how to earn more.

     

    But quick one: This week’s story was pulled off in collaboration with mycashestate.com–they’re making it ridiculously easy for everyone to grow money by investing.

     

    Age: 21

    Occupation: Multidisciplinary Creative

    Net Income: ₦100,000/month

    Rent: Nil

    Do you remember the first time you made money?

    Is this like actual money or…?

    Okay, actual money. When I was in Primary School. My aunt travelled Abroad and came back with a lot of Haribo–those gummy bear sweets–so I took them to school and started selling them one by one. I used to sell them like 10 each at the time.

    Also, I used to make tiny little cards and people would pay me. I remember one boy wanted to buy for two girls at the same time, so I sold them for 50.

    To be honest, I had no real use for the money, so I’d just save it up till my parents decide to help me keep it.

    That’s an early start.

    But actual money, that’d have to be in Secondary School. Blackberries were a thing, so I used to play around with photo editing apps. Like, I don’t really know why people didn’t really care to research these things, but they sha wanted me to edit for them.

    So I started to charge them.

    Like, I’d design today and they’d pay me the next day. Also, my parents used to give me 150 to school every day. To be honest, I think I just always had money.

    Next, people started throwing secondary school parties, and I learned how to design flyers. So I started charging like 5k-15k.

    But by the time I charged my highest for a flyer, ₦20k, I was already in 100-level at University.

    And then I was suddenly introduced to this new world where everyone was a hustler. There were better designers and people just killing it.

    A whole new level.

    Then I was like “oh there are already too many good designers, I’ll try Print.” I had plugs in Mokola–which is like the print capital of Ibadan–so I used to get really good deals.

    My first major gig was this woman who needed books and souvenirs, and I got paid 400k. I was 18 at the time. It was supposed to be for an event, and when the people at the event saw my work, they gave me another gig.

    That one? 1.5 million. But then I had to settle labour costs, and my cut was 950k.

    Bruh.

    As I collected that money, I bought matching shoes for my friend and I. Bought an iPhone. Bought a Macbook. Even fixed my friend’s phone sef–that’s after she refused to let me buy her a new phone. Paid my sister’s school fees–my mum said she’d pay back but she never did. I rented my own BQ–had air-conditioning and everything. Bruh, I was balling.

    In 400-level, my mum made me move to the hostel, because “how will you go to Uni and not even stay in school at all?” That’s actually when many other students first knew me.

    I was still getting gigs and all, but nothing met that ₦950k. Also, I used to give a lot of that money out because I just felt I could always make it back.

    Mad ting.

    One time in Church, they talked about this challenged family. I was shy to give them, but my mum helped me hand them the money. She was probably like, “so you this girl, you have this type of money?”

    How much?

    400k.

    I was about to enter 400-level. Which is weird, because that’s when it started to take its toll. The stress of running around and walking about to get stuff printed was getting to my health. In fact, I actually fell sick. The solution to that was to find a plug to do the running around.

    No matter how plugged in the person is, they won’t be loyal. Because they have their own shit to worry about.

    Also, I started modelling just around that time, so I stopped pretty much. Although it felt like a downgrade, going from 200k to 10k design work.

     

    Modelling?

    Yep. With all of that. So, imagine in my final year–I’m trying to model, not doing well with school work, commuting from Lagos to Ibadan. Crazy times.

    The first show I ever did, I got paid ₦120k. Agency takes their cut and you get 90k. My second gig paid more, and my cut was ₦120k.

    The thing about modelling is that it’s highly competitive, and if it’s something you really want to do, it makes you highly driven. If not, you’re going to drop out. It makes you hustle, because everyone looks like you, the same height as you. Standing out is hard.

    Anyway, I got another gig that paid ₦80k. Then I started to worry about consistency because there wasn’t really any order. You just get a random call for a job, or you don’t.

    I was going to quit, then I started to worry about being a quitter. Like, I felt like I’d been quitting too many things; first design, then the slowdown on printing etc.

     

    Ah, that fear.

    What’s interesting is, I was making videos all this time and not showing anyone. It was also the thing I cared about the most, so I never really thought it was good enough. But I knew from the beginning that videos were exactly what I wanted to make for life.

    As soon as I finished school, I stumbled on a job, I got a ₦100k offer. This is where it gets really interesting because when they were like ₦100k, I was like oh okay, shouldn’t be bad. Problem was, I was judging Lagos ₦100k with Ibadan brain.

    The thing with Lagos is that everything is too cost. Ah. Like, when I first came to Lagos, I was paying tithes, but now I can’t even afford it. See ehn, I hope God understands.

     

    Okay, let’s break down that ₦100k.

    I barely see my friends because I’m broke. They ask me to hang out and I’m like “no thanks”, but they never understand that I’m not coming because I don’t have money like that. Some of my friends think I have a lot more money, but I don’t.

    Last-last, I know I won’t make ₦100k for the rest of my life, I mean, I sold Haribos. I know I’ll make more. So I think I’m just being intentional and learning as much as I can. Also, I have NYSC allowee money that I can’t touch–some issue with my bank or something. So I know at the end, there’ll be at least ₦200k waiting for me.

    You’re serving?

    Yeah, started at my job, then NYSC called, and I just posted myself to where I was already working.

    Let’s talk about zero rent.

    A scam–because I live with good people who I’m not exactly comfortable with. But I need to earn more if I’m going to even attempt moving out. That’s that.

    Transport nko?

    I used to take a bus in the morning, and Uber at night because of safety. Now I do ridesharing with colleagues, but still, I don’t know where the money goes. People ask me why I still take Ubers, but it’s just like a 400 difference per day, compared to public transport. What just stresses me is that I’m broke all the time.

    What does broke mean to you?

    I mostly save just so I never get stranded, so being broke means when I have to dip into my savings, or even worse when I don’t have them anymore.  Broke for me is living to survive. Everyone is living to survive, but in this case, your money is in a box. This box is just survival and nothing else.

    Just randomly remembered that I can’t find all the shoes I bought.

     

    Talking about those shoes, what has changed about your perspective–then and now?

    First of all, it’s like my life went down. I mean, I was earning more. Only thing now is that there seems to be more purpose and intention with the things I create.

    How much do you honestly feel like you should be earning?

    Are we looking at my talent or just experience? I mean, I have a friend who does exactly what I do and earns ₦250k. Maybe I should be earning 250k.

    Buttt, if you want to pay me for my talent, that’d be a whole different conversation.

    How much would be great money right now?

    Maybe like ₦300k? ‘Don’t really know–I haven’t had ₦300k in Lagos. I think ₦300k. Maybe that.

     

    What’s your life like in 5 years?

    I’ll be 25 right? Every time I think about this, I just think about being rich for the people around me. Also, I want to be making a lot of music videos. But most importantly, I really just want to be comfortable enough to make the people around me comfortable.

    I want to be able to live alone. And be able to travel a lot. As much as I want to do my own shit, I always want a steady income, except I’m established enough to pay myself every month. Quite frankly, I don’t see myself being in that place in 5 years.

    Also, I don’t ever want to retire. I want to die making videos. At least that’s how I feel now.

     

    If you’ve never considered retirement, I’m guessing you’ve never thought about a pension.

    Nope. I mean, I’ve had a conversation once, but I’ve never really thought about it.

     

    What’s something you want but can’t afford?

    A camera. It’s complicated, but I can explain. I got a camera but it’s not the one I wanted. So if I say right now-now, I need a new phone. Wait, what am I saying? I want a house. I need a house. I need to move.

    If someone secretly texts you, please tell them I need a house.

     

    What’s the last thing you paid for that required serious planning?

    A camera. This makes no sense–I just said I need a camera–but I already paid for a camera that I saved up for. So now I have two cameras, and I’m in some debt. I paid 250k for that camera.

     

    What’s your dream camera?

    There’s a lot of them, for different purposes. Technology is a scam. The gear that has everything I want is not affordable. It’s about 1.2 million.

     

    What’s the annoying miscellaneous you paid for recently?

    So, I did some freelance work and got like 30k. Before then, I didn’t have any cream and all of that. So I said lemme buy some stuff o. Also, I wanted to buy a weave. I think I look like a child too much.

     

    So you’re buying wig to look older?

    Look, I’m trying to be a babe. I’m buying this thing to be a babe, lemme not lie.

    In the end, I didn’t buy anything I wanted to buy that day and ended up buying a 20k perfume. Stupid, because that thing was expensive.

    The first time I sprayed that perf ehn, I sprayed it with vex.

    My real struggle now is: I don’t buy things because I don’t know where to go to buy them. I don’t know where to go because I can’t afford to go out. Everything is just long.

     

    If you had all the school money now, what will you do?

    I dunno, but I also feel like I would have blown it. I’d be going out more and buying more shoes. It would have gone to things that I actually need now.

    Have you ever imagined steady income without steady 9-5 hustle?

    I want work-from-home steady income. Okay?

    Have you ever invested in anything before?

    I wanted to buy a printing press in school so that all the money that went to labour costs would have been for me. That money I paid for labour, I won’t have had to pay for it again. Also, my friend built an app that I’m kind of invested in, so if that blows, I blow.

    Financial satisfaction, 0-10?

    -10. Are you wining me? After all my story?

     

    Abeg.

    Two things: 

    Check back every Monday at 9 am (WAT) for a peek into the Naira Life of everyday people. If you’d love to share your Naira Life with us, tell us here. You’ll be anon of course 🙂

     

    But, if you want to get the next story before everyone else, just subscribe here. It takes only one minute.
  • 1. When your parents friends hear you’re not a lawyer, doctor or engineer.

    “So you are wasting your life and energy doing what again?”

    2. When you try to explain exactly what you do to people and they still don’t get it.

    Na wa for you people.

    3. When after abusing you, people ask you to work for free.

    Are you mentally balanced?

    4. When you are tired of working for free, you announce it like:

    Please be advised.

    5. When people assume you don’t have to use your brain for what you do.

    You people are obviously not alright.

    6. When you meet people just like you.

    So I’m not alone in the world.

    7. When people don’t take you seriously and then try to form familiar when you are succeeding.

    Kindly move back.

    8. When friends and family start looking for excessive discounts.

    That 15% is enough please don’t be greedy

    9. When people slander your work without mercy.

    Is it all my hard work you people are rubbishing like this?

    10. The first time you get paid for your work, you’re like:

    FINALLY!

    11. When someone complains your work is too expensive, goes somewhere “cheaper” and gets absolutely rubbish work.

    “Sorry oh!”

    12. When you see someone copying your work and taking credit for it.

    Do you people have no shame?
  • Remember those good old days of buying Chocomilo, ice water, sugar and Kuli Kuli with this.

    Blissful days! Some of you are old though!

    Although this beauty can’t even buy a sip of water anymore and is going into a very quick extinction, Here are 10 ways a 50 kobo coin can still be a part of your life.

    1. Properly scratch recharge cards.

    Stop using your nails please.

    2. Pay for stuff at Shoprite.

    Now you won’t dash them your 3 Naira change anymore, thank us later.

    3. Pay for fuel.

    50 Kobo has been shaved off the fuel price so you can pay the exact amount for the fuel you buy in Naira and Kobo.

    4. Donate into this charity box at Shoprite.

    50 kobo will go a very long way in changing people’s lives if you don’t know.

    5. Teach a child how to count.

    Instead of counting with fingers and stones.

    6. Open Milo and milk tins with ease.

    That struggle can be annoying sometimes.

    7. Make really pretty jewellery.

    Slay can come really cheap.

    8. As a screw driver.

    When real screw drivers become hard to find.

    9. Charge your phone battery.

    Because, who Nepa don epp?

    10. Portraits and other artsy items.

    This is a brilliant art project idea.

    What other things do you think a 50 kobo coin can be used for?