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If shopping online makes you excited and ready to splurge, then you must have wished for at least 3 things on this list.
Genies might not bring them to life, but God of miracles will come through. Amen?
1. Miraculous delivery
Sometimes, after adding things to your cart, the delivery fee alone can give you hypertension. If only that wasn’t a thing, you’d probably shop online more often. Thankfully, as an OurPass user, you get to enjoy free delivery when you shop using the app. Say hello to free deliveries here, dear.
2. Instant checkout
Nothing makes the online shopping experience as seamless as fast checkout. All that time you use to fill out long entry forms can be channeled into watching your favourite show or chatting with your boo.
3. Discounts
Spending money is sweet when it’s not your own nau. Don’t lie, you’ve wished to come across those awoof 50% or 75 % discount whenever you’re shopping. At least if you save some money, you can boldly tell Musa to sell 5,000 Naira Suya for you in the evening.
4. No “what I ordered versus what I got” moments
Especially when it comes to items like wearables, gadgets and beauty products. That gown looks great in the photo, but what are the odds that it won’t end up being a night gown on delivery? God no go shame us oh.
5. That hackers should not see your money
God forbid that hackers should mess with your favourite shopping platform and wipe out the small 10k you want to manage till month end. It won’t be funny. If security is something you’re very particular about, you’ll like using OurPass.
With this app, you no longer have to share your card details, shipping address and phone number on multiple websites. Simply add money to your OurPass account and pay with your wallet at checkout in just a few moments.
About OurPass
OurPass is the easiest, fastest and most secure way to shop online. It allows you to checkout in one click on any website that has OurPass installed. No need to enter your personal and card details across multiple websites.
Simply click and chill; OurPass makes it faster to shop online. As a business owner, you can integrate OurPass into your e-commerce website as well to increase seamless checkouts and sales. If this sounds like a plan, click here to start.
Kuuzza, a decentralised sales network set to empower thousands of Africans to earn money online.
BrandMobile Africa, creators of Kuuzza announced the launch of its decentralised sales platform, developed specifically for businesses to connect seamlessly to motivated sellers. Business owners now have the opportunity to expand their businesses to reach new demographics faster without the interference of middlemen or multiple retailers while sellers can earn money by selling products on the virtual inventory without any upfront capital.
In effect, Kuuzza is automating the traditional person to person commerce that is often driven by personal relationships, word of mouth and social commerce.
“It is with great happiness and genuine excitement that we announce the release of Kuuzza,” said Toby Nwanede, CEO and co-founder of Kuuzza at the brand launch.
The Gap Kuuzza is Bridging in The Retail Industry
Kuuzza provides a risk-free, exciting, profitable & sustainable business for young, agile and entrepreneurial Nigerians looking for an alternative source of income.
Kuuzza’s solution touches manufacturers, distribution companies, logistics providers, fulfilment centres, credit/loan facilitators, etc. Kuuzza combines retail, tech, escrow payment integration and logistics in order to attain customer fulfilment. With Kuuzza, everyone’s a winner. Every stakeholder, be it the vendor, seller or end-user, everyone gets value for every sale.
Why choose Kuuzza?
Business owners can manage and keep track of their inventory. Products are available to resellers at no upfront cost. Sellers can access thousands of products on the go. Payments are processed using a secured, frictionless payment channel that is accessible by all. Resellers can select any product on Kuuzza, decide and add their desired profit themselves before selling directly to customers.
For every product sold on Kuuzza, resellers earn points that can be redeemed for airtime, vouchers and cash. All these benefits and more are available to all stakeholders on the Kuuzza platform.
‘’Today has been a proud and humbling day as we launched Kuuzza in a small but wonderful event” said Toby Nwanede, CEO and Co-Founder, Kuuzza. He continued, “I am deeply grateful to my team at BrandMobile Africa who have worked tirelessly to put this product together. Kuuzza isn’t just a powerful solution, it represents a significant project for us. What is more powerful is that every single thing that you are selling on this platform can be tracked in real-time through your Kuuzza dashboard. Vendors can see who is selling their products, and how their product is performing – these are real data that can be used to make quick intelligent decisions”.
While speaking at the event, Habeeb Aremu, COO and Co-Founder, Kuuzza had this to say:
‘’Kuuzza will be among the most significant platforms empowering Africans (businesses and individuals) in the next 5 years. The objective is to ensure that for individuals it becomes a lifestyle application and for businesses, it becomes an enabler.’’
Gbemiga Jacobs, Founder, All Things Adire, a vendor on Kuuzza.com, who was present at the event, shared his thoughts on the platform, ‘’It’s awesome, this is really awesome, and a good one and makes my life easier, because I get to focus on producing while giving other chains to others including delivery. I will really also love to see more vendors onboarded and I am talking to 5 other people at the moment.’’
Hassan Tukpe-Ajikobi, Project Manager, Home Et Al shared his thoughts on Kuuzza’s referral program, ‘’I think the referral program will be a huge boost because those who are in the small and medium scale businesses will usually have downlines and if you can find a way to encourage them, they can bring more vendors.’’
How to sign up on Kuuzza.com
Getting started on Kuuzza.com is as easy as these few steps:
1. Create an account
Sign up at no cost and access our inventory immediately.
2. Find a product, decide profit and market
Find and market products to potential buyers via social media or any other channel of your choice, sell.
3. Getpaid
After selling, we handle the payments and logistics. You get paid.
About Kuuzza
Founded by BrandMobile Africa, Kuuzza presents an opportunity for businesses to expand and reach into multiple regions without costly physical set-ups while providing a decentralized selling experience for Nigerians where everybody wins.
To get a better understanding of Nigerian life, we started a series called ‘Compatriots’, detailing the everyday life of the average Nigerian. As a weekly column, a new instalment will drop every Tuesday, exploring some other aspect of the Nigerian landscape.
This week, we have a natural born salesman narrate the thrills of working in sales in Nigeria and his journey to becoming a professional.
Think about the most potent high you’ve ever felt: the numbing goodness of an intense orgasm; the clouding weight of great marijuana; the rapturous feeling of cocaine — if you’re into any of these, multiply that feeling by three, add one-half for good measure and maybe, just maybe you’ll get a fifth of the thrill that comes with working in sales in Nigeria.
The thing is, we all work in sales. You’re selling the threat of a lost trade when you convince that butcher to sell you meat at a 35% markdown. You’re selling the promise of a changed heart when you persuade your ex to return after cheating. And you’re currently doing a wonderful job, selling yourself dreams if you choose to remain in a country that won’t love you as well as Canada can. But while sales to you might spell intermittent domestic triumphs, to me, it’s a daily professional target — convincing individuals and companies into taking bargains, purchasing products and buying up ad spaces they don’t really need, and yet somehow making it out to be that I’m a hero doing them a favour by taking their money.
My career in sales began like most careers in sales do – as a means to an end. I was fresh out of university with a B.Sc in cell biology. I was in need of a job that wouldn’t peer closely at my lack of experience. An internship role at an e-commerce firm surfaced; I was to handle product placements on their website, which is shorthand for saying: I had to make sure products were arranged in a way that encouraged impulse buying and made purchasing sense.
When I first took the job, I wasn’t entirely sure what product placement entailed. What I originally thought was to be the alphabetical arrangement of merchandise on the site, soon turned out to be hours spent poring over inventory, trying to determine what items would make the sense adjacent to a pink waist trainer and a gym water bottle shaped like a dumbbell.
At the time, I didn’t consider my role to be in sales. Sales was the man in the bus convincing you to buy his all-curing, all-enhancing powder. It was the broadcast on the radio shouting at you to secure land; that TV advert nudging you to purchase butter. Who knew sales and advertising weren’t one and the same thing? And a few product re-arrangements at the backend of a company website could produce a 25% bump in earnings for the month?
By my third month handling product placements and bringing the same positive results, I was promoted (still as an intern), to the floor of the company’s retail store, with the directive that I produce the same results. Without the safety of a computer screen, I did what any salesman worth his salt would do: I winged it. I sang for customers, I tried clothes on for them, I gave heaps and heaps of undeserving compliments. If they wanted my blood, I probably would have injected and drained it on the spot! I did achieve the bottom-line goal to the applause of my supervisors.
While I wasn’t in any way adequately compensated for my efforts, what I lacked in a healthy account balance, I gained in a sense of pride that my work was being recognised. I really was good at this sales thing!
But by my fifth month, that pride had taken quite the fall. Despite putting in the work and hours of full-time staff, my employers kept me on an intern’s salary, which may have been payment in exposure for all it was worth. I had to accept the game really was the game when, rather than offer me the staff role I was so obviously qualified for, my employers put on their shiniest sales hats, and tried to get me to buy the idea of an additional three-month internship ‘trial period’ before awarding me a full-time position. I took my experience, walked out of their doors and never looked back.
It didn’t take a month to find a job. This time, it was as one of the recruits to the sales team in one of Nigeria’s newest e-commerce giants. While some merit played a role in finding a job easily, the reality is — sales in Nigeria is such a never-ending cycle of vacancies and resignations, it would have been difficult to not find employment within that time.
Here’s free advice, if you want to be successful in sales in Nigeria, forget what they say about 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration. Sales will break that equation and introduce three new variables: looking and talking a big game, while of course, being able to back it up
In my first month of employment, I was with a team of fresh recruits that had bachelors and masters degrees in sales. These guys rode in cars I had bookmarked for my five-year goals and spoke in accented sentences punctuated with enough “wanna” and “gonnas” to get the typical Nigerian employer all hot and bothered. If they walked into meetings with their Macbooks, accents and car keys, soliciting 7-figure deals, they’d probably have left with 8. I was left wondering if I could make the cut, I felt like a minor character playing in their show. Appearance really was everything, or so I thought …
By the end of that first month, more than half of the sales team had resigned. Here’s why:
When you’re just one of Nigeria’s leading e-commerce sites, setting its sights on the number one spot, there are a number of things you will subject your sales team to:
Individual weekly targets and mid-week progress meetings, so a slacking member of the sales team can explain to the Managing Director and supervisors present, why only ₦ 50,000 had been made by Wednesday when the week’s target was ₦ 1 million.
A reward system so only high-performing members of the team ride to meetings in company cars. The rest can sort their way out on a miserly ₦ 4000 weekly transport allowance.
Promise a 20% commission for employees able to meet their monthly targets, but right before they achieve it, switch the game on them and double the goal.
In my first month, say the monthly target was ₦ 4 million in sales, by the third week, it doubled to ₦ 8 million. You cannot imagine the flurry of resignation letters.
In that month, I saw grown men have panic attacks at the thought of going into weekly meetings and explaining why their numbers were running short. People so jittery with fear they couldn’t even muster the strength to go into client meetings for fear of continued failures. Every week brought a new set of resignations. It felt like playing musical chairs with opponents who, rather than wait for the music to stop, thought it best to run, kicking and screaming away from the prize.
And yet somehow, in spite of all the chaos around me, I was thriving! I made my first million from a client I somehow convinced her to advertise her products on every single platform we owned – newsletter, website, banners and ad spaces. From there, I was on a roll. You cannot imagine the thrill of closing in two ₦250,000 deals the day of your mid-week progress report, or the high of entering into a client meeting, coming out with more than you bargained for. Even though I was probably just a cog in the capitalism wheel, I luxuriated in those highs, looking forward to my next fix — the next scheme, the next deal.
After the purge of the first month, my views changed from being small fry in a pool full of sharks to being an equal amongst thieves. Thieves because there is absolutely no honour in a gathering of salesmen.
For the rest of my time in this company, it was routine to steal clients from co-workers. Your colleague was taking too long to land a client? Undercut him by reaching out to the same client, and offering a discount of whatever rates are in negotiation. Think your associate is on the brink of reeling in a high-income organisation? Sabotage his ass by reaching out to someone higher than his contact in said organisation, and promising a sweeter deal. There is nothing a salesman wouldn’t do to land a deal. I’ve made promises I had no guarantees of keeping and taken the time to plan meticulous ‘chance encounters’ with clients in restaurants, church and even a child’s birthday ceremony.
Even with 6 years in the game, these are some schemes I still find myself pulling.
These days however, I’ve moved on from that e-commerce giant, on to the sales department of an architecture firm before my current employ as the sales lead in an entertainment firm. But even after all this time, there’s nothing quite like that first thrill of a potential client in sight, the rush of reeling them in and that eternal high of landing them.