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Segment: Your Presence in Business Changes Everything-How He Built a Supply Business From Nothing

Segment: Your Presence in Business Changes Everything-How He Built a Supply Business From Nothing

Published 5 days, 9 hours ago
Description

From sanitation business opportunities to distribution logistics to the brutal truth about why coming down your ego and showing up every day at every customer's shop is the only way to build a business that lasts, the Koforidua sanitation problem where they have nowhere to dump refuse because the dump site is full creating an opportunity for someone to buy a tricycle, visit 100 houses every morning collecting refuse at five cedis per house making real money that nobody wants to touch because they want white collar office jobs, the logistics challenge of using Mr. Frempong's pickup truck that gets stopped at police barriers because it's loaded beyond the legal limit proving that transportation is the bottleneck when demand is higher than supply capacity, the warehouse expansion problem because the business is growing so fast that storage space is running out, the competitors who don't know where to get the product but try to be smart and steal customers anyway, the loyal customers like the woman and Antinana who called to say "some people brought some of your brand but we told them you are here so we buy from them" proving that relationships and showing up every day builds loyalty that competitors can't break, the Christmas move of buying goods and supplying them to all 180 customers including people he had never seen before because some customers he only met for the first time when he delivered the Christmas goods to Akyiatia, the daily routine of visiting every customer in Koforidua every single day because doing business with your presence and doing business with your absence are two completely different things, the Akyiatia trip where customers refused to give money to his sales person saying "if he has traveled he would be back, when he comes we will pay" proving that being present is the only way to collect payments in a market where money issues are common, the grandmother's advice to "come down your ego and money will look for you" like the driver playing loud music who gets angry when a passenger asks him to lower it and the passenger gets down losing the driver money in that moment, the best advice from Mr. Frempong to "just be truthful, don't spoil your reputation because that's why I stood for you from the start, that's why they brought the goods, so don't disappoint me," the motivation over discipline approach because gathering 180 customers in one and a half years when it's difficult for a customer to change their supplier means doing something exceptional like going to their shops to help them sell and fostering good relationships, the decision to leave friends behind and only keep one childhood friend Debenezer because if you call him it must be about things that will make him someone in the future, legit business investment opportunities, not here or there nonsense, and why the ultimate truth is this: there are so many problems in Ghana people can solve whether it's sanitation in Koforidua or distribution of essential goods, money is in Ghana but they don't like the dirty work, they want to be in offices earning 800 a month when that sanitation business visiting 100 houses a day at five cedis per house is actually a lot of money, but you must be present every day, visit your customers, help them sell, build relationships, and understand that being there and not being there is two different things.

In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with a young entrepreneur who dismantles the dangerous "I need a white collar office job to make money" mentality that keeps graduates stuck waiting for 800 cedi monthly salaries, revealing the exact moment when loyal customers in Antinana called to say competitors brought his brand but they refused to buy because "you are here so we buy from you," when visiting every customer in Koforidua every single day built relationships so strong that customers in Akyiatia refused to pay his sales

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