Best Business School Lessons After Spending $60,000 And 2 Years On My MBA

Are MBAs worth it? It depends on many factors, like whether you have the money, time and willingness to commit.

In 2015, I enrolled in The University of Florida’s online MBA program, all while working a full-time job in finance. The degree cost me $60,000 and took two years to complete, but it gave me the confidence to take business risks, improved my decision-making skills, expanded my network, and even boosted my salary.

It also taught me several valuable lessons about business and money:

1. Contracts don’t have to be complicated

Having a contract for any business deal you make can save you from emotional distress and financial losses. It doesn’t matter if it’s with close friend or family member — anything that involves a chunk of your time and money should come with a contract.

Also, the mere act of proposing a contract is a good stress test: If the other party gives long-winded reasons not to sign, you should probably move on.

Even a short and simple handwritten one can go a long way. Here are the most essential elements to include:

  1. The “offer”: Something needs to be offered.
  2. The “consideration”: Something needs to be exchanged for it (usually money, otherwise it is a gift or a promise, rather than a contract).
  3. An “acceptance”: Both sides need to accept the terms of the contract.
  4. The “mutuality”: Both sides need to agree to the conditions and understand that they’ve entered into a contract.

2. The trick to persuasion

Aristotle’s three key components of persuasion, which I learned in my Business Writing and Negotiations class, gave me the tools and methods I needed to succeed at selling myself and winning people over:

  1. Ethos (ethics): Cite your moral standing and credibility.
  2. Example: “I am a wife, a mother, and a taxpayer. I’ve served faithfully for 20 years on the school board. I deserve your vote for [X].”
  3. Pathos (emotion): Tap into the emotional impact of your argument.
  4. Example: “My opponent wants to hurt [X] by doing [X]. Imagine how frustrated you would be if [X] were to happen.”
  5. Logos (logic): Craft your message with facts, such as evidence, analogies, statistics or even hypothetical scenarios.
  6. Example: “We do not have enough money to pay for improvements to [X]. And without improvements, the [X] system will falter and thus hinder our economy. Therefore, we should do [X] to pay for better [X].”

Best Business School Lessons After Spending $60,000 And 2 Years On My MBA

3. Too many options can be a bad thing

More than once, I’ve gone into a store, looked at rows of the same product in varying colors, brands and sizes. They all seemed like great options, but I felt paralyzed and couldn’t decide.

Psychologist Barry Schwartz captured this experience perfectly in his book, “The Paradox of Choice,” in which he argues that the more choices people have, the more likely they are to become dissatisfied with their choices later on, or feel stuck and don’t make a choice at all.

The number of options you present to a customer is extremely important and can affect your bottom line. Don’t overwhelm them.

4. Time in the market beats timing the market

In business school, we reviewed a study with a simple insight that replays in my head every time I make an investment decision: Investors who buy and hold tend to perform significantly better than those who trade often.

Our professor cited legendary investor Warren Buffett, who wrote in his 1991 shareholder letter that “the stock market serves as a relocation center at which money is moved from the active to the patient.”

I know, it isn’t sexy. But it was also the message of Jack Bogle, the founder of index fund giant Vanguard Group: “Time is your friend; impulse is your enemy.” Whenever markets were down and anxiety up, his advice was “don’t just do something, stand there.”

5. How to be a better negotiator

Advanced Negotiations was one of the hardest classes I took, partly because it pitted students against one another — and the outcomes affected our grades.

In one case, I represented Canadian zoos and wanted to borrow pandas from Chinese zoos. Working out the cost and duration of the panda visits caused a long standoff between me and my classmate.

But it taught me a few things about how to get what I want:

  • Statistically, the first person to make an offer in a negotiation tends to do better (they “anchor” their number first). But if you get too greedy, it could embitter the other party and hurt you.
  • Before going into a negotiation, do some scenario planning: What are all the things that might happen? How will you react? What are your walkaway terms?
  • Touch on things that will benefit the other person and what you can easily give them. Try to roll it all into your deal as a negotiation: “I can’t offer that salary, but I can let you work from home if you’d like.”

The ideal position is for both parties to walk away and feel like they got the deal of the century.

How Long Does It Take To Rank In Google? (A Study By Ahrefs)

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The common response to this question is obviously, “It depends,” because there are just too many variables to consider: website strength, competition, budget, skills, etc.

But here at Ahrefs, we decided to sift through the petabytes of historical ranking data that we have and give you a slightly more quantifiable answer, something more concrete than simply, “It depends.

How old are the top-ranking pages?

For starters, we identified how old the current top-ranking pages are.

We took 2 million random keywords and pulled data on the Top10 ranking pages for each of them. Which resulted in this beautiful graph:

SIDENOTE. The “age” is calculated from the date when Ahrefs crawlers first saw the page. But since we crawl the web at a pretty staggering speed, the actual age of the page should be very close, if not identical, to our records. 

As you can tell from this graph, the average Top10 ranking page is 2+ years old. And those that rank at position #1 are almost 3 years old (on average).

In fact, only 22% of pages that currently rank in the Top10 were created within 1 year:

So the next thing we wanted to know is what percentage of pages at each ranking position were less than 1 year old:

This doesn’t look too promising, right? The SERP is clearly dominated by “old” pages.

How long does it take for a page to rank in Google?

To answer this question, we randomly selected 2 million pages that were first seen by Ahrefs crawler a year ago.

We then tracked the position history of each page for any keyword it’s ranked for.

Which resulted in this graph:

Only 5.7% of all studied pages ranked in the Top10 search results within 1 year for at least 1 keyword.

How Long Does It Take To Rank In Google? (A Study By Ahrefs)

Pages from websites with a high Domain Rating (DR) performed way better than those with a low DR. Which shouldn’t come as a surprise, because Ahrefs’ Domain Rating metric (shows the strength of a website’s backlink profile) correlates well with Google rankings.

We then zoomed into these 5.7% of “lucky” pages to see how quickly they got from nowhere to the Top10.

The majority of them managed to achieve that in approximately 61–182 days.

By looking at this graph, you might think that, on average, it takes a page anywhere from 2–6 months to rank in Google’s Top10.

But that conclusion isn’t valid here, because this data only represents the 5.7% of pages that were lucky enough to rank in the Top10 within a year — while almost 95% of all the pages we studied didn’t make it to the Top10 within that timeframe.

We also re-calculated the numbers based on monthly search volume of the keywords:

Only 0.3% of pages ranked in the Top10 for a high-volume keyword in less than a year.

And here are the dynamics of these 5.7% “lucky” pages, broken down by search volume of the keyword that they ranked for:

Clearly, you can rank for low-volume keywords in a very short time, while the high-volume ones take almost a year to get into the Top10.

But again, don’t forget that this data only applies to 5.7% of “lucky” pages that ranked in the Top10 within a year. The vast majority of pages don’t perform that well.

What does this all mean?

Did our study give a definite answer to “how long does it take to rank” question?

No.

But at least we’ve shown that almost 95% of newly published pages don’t get to the Top10 within a year.

And most of the “lucky” ones, which do manage to get there, do it in about 2–6 months.

Actually, I shouldn’t be framing these pages as “lucky,” because the reason they got to the Top10 in less than a year is most likely hard work and great knowledge of SEO, not luck.

Check out these tips from Sam Oh if you want to rank #1 in Google quicker:

Here’s to hard work and dedication!

Midea Boosts Global Manchester City Partnership

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Midea and Manchester City today announced an amplification to its global partnership which kicked-off in January 2020. Throughout this partnership, Midea has produced engaging digital content, which has been extremely popular with City fans around the world.

 

Most notably, the #MideaHomeChallenge that kept fans entertained during lockdowns when several Manchester City players challenged fans to show their football skills interacting with their home appliances in unique ways.

Also, the Midea #WorldClass Awards campaign that celebrated the Club’s, and especially players’ #WorldClass performances during the 2020/21 season. Midea’s innovative, humorous, and funny awards show, moderated by City legends Paul Dickov and Shaun Wright-Phillips, attracted millions of views and engagements from global fans when nine different #WorldClass trophies were voted on, and subsequently awarded to, their favourite City players.

 

This season, hand in hand with the Etihad Stadium’s new top-notch and world leading two-tier LED display system, Midea now has 12 LED slots at every Manchester City home match to showcase their extensive range of smart home appliances across all categories to over hundreds of millions global consumers and football fanatics.

READ ALSO: Midea Expands Partnership with Manchester City & City Football Group

“Midea’s global visibility is still fairly small compared to our ambitions. Partnering with Manchester City – awarded the most innovative sports team in the world and with their philosophy to combine playing the most attractive football to watch, with a very successful outcome – gives us great global visibility in front of over hundreds of millions of fans, and a business partner with the same high ambitions towards the future.” said Eric Wang, VP Midea Group and President & CEO of Midea Group’s International Business Division.

 

“There are 55,000 fans in the stadium, but hundreds of millions of Manchester City fans among the 3.5 billion football fans all around the world watching on TV and Social Media at home – and home is where we are. Hence, in Midea we are delighted to showcase our commitment and ambitions to millions and billions of fans who are enjoying football from their homes.

 

“We aim to show all City and football fans our wide range of smart home appliances that enable them, as our slogan states ‘make yourself at home’ to ‘feel even more @home’. Therefore, apart from bolstering our global brand presence, we are looking forward to igniting excitement to our global consumers throughout the entire season and bringing people closer together, enjoying their homes even more – also especially during these still unprecedented times.” Wang continued.

 

“Manchester City’s partnership with Midea has gone from strength to strength and we are delighted to further deepen our relationship. Midea has shown great understanding in how to engage with City fans around the world by producing some of our strongest performing social media content in recent seasons and we’re now looking forward to expanding this partnership into community outreach and further smart product integration.” said Roel de Vries, City Football Group’s Group Chief Operating Officer.

 

Midea will also extend its relationship to help support the community by partnering with the Club’s renowned ‘City In The Community’ programme, to explore ways to tackle social challenges. Over the coming months, the Club will also be integrating industry-leading Midea smart home appliances across the Etihad Campus to provide enhanced facilities for players and fans alike.

 

In addition to the commitment with the Manchester City Men’s team, Midea is also the exclusive global Home Appliances, White Goods and HVAC partner of the Manchester City Women’s team and a main partner of Manchester City’s City Football Group sister club, New York City FC which plays in the MLS.

 

 

Breaking: Multichoice Vs FIRS: Tax Appeal Tribunal Rules In Favour Of Multichioce

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The Tax Appeal Tribunal sitting in Lagos has ruled that Mulitchoice Nigeria has met the conditions necessary to pursue it appeal against the huge Tax sum levied on it by the Federal Inland Revenue Service, FIRS.

Details later…

Nestlé Sees Nine-Month Sales Boosted By Coffee, Raises 2021 Guidance For Second Time

Nestlé has reported organic sales growth of 7.6% for its first nine months and raised its guidance for the second time this year.

In July, the Swiss food giant raised its sales guidance to 5-6% and it has now said that it expects full-year organic growth of 6-7%, after reporting “strong” organic growth in the first three quarters of the year.

For its first nine months, the company’s total reported sales stood at CHF 63.29 billion ($68.59 billion approx.), representing a 2.2% increase on last year’s CHF 61.91 billion figure.

Like its competitors, Nestlé is facing rising input costs but price increases – which accelerated to 2.1% in the third quarter – have helped to mitigate input cost inflation.

By product category, coffee was the biggest contributor to organic sales growth. The first nine months saw strong momentum for the Nescafé and Nespresso brands, as well as Starbucks products, which posted 15.5% growth, with sales reaching CHF 2.2 billion ($2.38 billion approx.) across 79 markets.

Prepared dishes and cooking aids posted high-single-digit growth, as did confectionery, while dairy and water posted mid-single-digit growth.

Meanwhile, vegetarian and plant-based food offerings saw double-digit growth, as Nestlé continued to expand its product portfolio. Earlier this month, the company announced that it was introducing vegan egg and shrimp alternatives under its Garden Gourmet brand.

Sales in Nestlé Health Science grew at a double-digit rate, reflecting strong demand for vitamins, minerals and supplements.

Meanwhile, lower birth rates in the context of the pandemic impacted infant nutrition, which posted a sales decline for the first nine months. However, in Q3, growth in infant nutrition was positive outside of China.  

By channel, retail sales saw organic growth of 6.6%, e-commerce sales grew by 17.2%, while organic growth in out-of-home channels was 22.8%.

According to Nestlé, growth was broad-based across most geographies. Nestlé’s Zone Americas unit posted organic sales growth of 8.4%, while reported sales decreased by 1.5%, reflecting the impact of foreign exchange and divestitures.

Nestlé’s Europe, Middle East and North Africa (EMENA) unit recorded organic sales growth of 7.2%, supported by product innovation and strong momentum in e-commerce and specialist channels.

Meanwhile, organic growth was 4.1% year-over-year for Nestlé’s Zone Asia, Oceania and sub-Saharan Africa (AOA) unit in the first nine months, amid a “difficult economic environment with regional lockdowns”.

“We are pleased with Nestlé’s strong organic growth in the nine months, driven by broad-based contributions from most geographies and categories,” said Nestlé CEO, Mark Schneider.

“The relentless focus of our teams on local execution and agility enabled us to navigate input cost inflation and supply chain constraints.”He added: “In the third quarter, we increased pricing in a responsible manner, while maintaining strong real internal growth”.

Nigeria’s Electricity Invoices Average N720b Yearly, Says NBET

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Nigerian Bulk Electricity Trading (NBET) Plc has stated that it processes an average of N60 billion worth of electricity monthly from the national grid, translating to about N720 billion every year.

Managing Director of NBET, Dr Nnaemeka Eweluka, who disclosed this also noted that about N1.3 trillion has been managed by the agency as funding by the Federal Government to support the sector.

Privatised in 2013, the nation’s power sector has been struggling to spark optimism as infrastructure challenges compound with technical capacity and other issues to cripple the performance of the sector.

Though President Muhammadu Buhari recently sacked the Minister of Power and replaced him with Abubakar Aliyu, most Nigerians, who currently struggle to pay for the increased electricity tariff, are tirelessly looking forward to improvement in electricity supply.

Nigeria’s Electricity Invoices Average N720b Yearly, Says NBET

Eweluka, who had played host to the Minister of State for Power, Dr. Goddy Jeddy-Agba reassured the Minister of the agency’s readiness to continue to work in synergy with the ministry and other stakeholders to improve their services.

Dr Jedy-Agba said although the work done in the sector, especially by NBET is commendable, “Nigerians expect more because until the country achieves stable and sustainable power supply, we can’t rest.”

He insisted that expectations were high for results as there is a lot to do for Nigeria to achieve projected goals of the power.

While reiterating the importance of power supply to the country’s development, he noted that “you remain a key player in our industry and regardless of where you are, this administration’s objective is one as Mr. President wants to leave an indelible mark in every sector of the economy. We must work together to achieve this aim because the President and Nigerians will hold us all responsible if we fail.”

NBET’s General Manager, Corporate Services, Abba Aliyu, stated the agency parades the best brains in the commercial electricity value chain in the country.

Manulife launches holistic ‘Medical Professional Support Service’ to help customers through cancer treatment

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New service in strategic partnership with CUHK Medical Centre provides customers with priority access to specialists in oncology

HONG KONG SAR – Media OutReach – 21 October 2021 – Today, Manulife Hong Kong announced the launch of a new holistic ‘Medical Professional Support Service’ for customers diagnosed with cancer or suspected cancer. Manulife customers with selected medical plans[1] can now have their cases reviewed by dedicated, in-house healthcare professionals or qualified nurses. This team will be uniquely placed to aid customers throughout the medical treatment process, providing personalized care and professional support, follow ups on claims-related matters and pre-approval services, and recommendations on medical service providers based on their needs.

Platform for Collaboration on Tax Strengthened Support to Countries During the COVID-19 Pandemic

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The Platform for Collaboration on Tax (PCT) – a joint initiative of the IMF, OECD, UN and the World Bank – enhanced its support to countries in the area of domestic resource mobilization during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to the PCT Progress Report 2021.

The report, released today, highlights that the PCT Partners are committed to deepening their tax collaboration further with a revamped work program to help countries develop resilient tax systems and better fiscal policies in response to the crisis.

The PCT Progress Report 2021 examines activities that the PCT has undertaken in five focus areas since July 2020: medium-term revenue strategies (MTRS), COVID-19, tax and sustainable development goals (SDGs), international taxation, and coordination. The new workstreams reflect the changing global tax landscape and the challenges of the pandemic for governments and policymakers as countries around the world try to balance the increased spending and lower revenues due to the COVID-19 crisis.

During this period, the PCT Partners increased their support to countries through the release of joint knowledge products, technical assistance concerning tax-related responses to the crisis, and workshops on critical issues, as the report reveals. The PCT released the final versions of two toolkits on Transfer Pricing Documentation and Tax Treaty Negotiations with virtual consultations and public workshops, hosting over 1,300 participants from governments and other stakeholders. Additionally, the PCT Secretariat collaborated with the African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to hold three regional workshops on MTRS, which provided 53 governments from Africa, Asia and the Pacific with a platform to exchange information on how the MTRS can benefit their tax system reform in the face of the pandemic. The PCT Partners also raised awareness on the role of taxation in promoting gender equality and growth through a joint blog and a public workshop.

The report illustrates that the PCT website continues to serve as a global resource on international taxation for tax officials from developing and emerging economies with its enriched content. The MTRS resource page, the e-learning calendar of the PCT Partners’ tax-related courses and the regularly updated Online Integrated Platform, which is the public database of domestic resource mobilization activities and projects of the Partners, are among the new and existing products that provide countries with capacity-building support and transparent information.

Looking ahead, the PCT Partners will, in the coming months, focus on areas where coordination brings the most value by identifying new priorities and activities for their work in light of the recent developments in the global tax agenda. Further activities on the interconnection between tax and SDGs, more and improved resource pages on the PCT website and expanded engagement with countries on the PCT toolkits and MTRS are among the future PCT initiatives that aim to offer tax officials more capacity-building tools and resources.

FG Officially Scraps DPR, PPPRA, PEF, For New Agencies, Sacks Their CEOs

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The Federal Government has officially announced the scrapping of the Department of Petroleum (DPR), the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) and the Petroleum Equalization Fund (PEF).

This is coming after the take-off of the Nigerian Upstream Regulatory Commission (NURC) and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority (NMDPRA) following the implementation of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) after the recent signing by President Muhammadu Buhari

This disclosure was made by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, while speaking on the side-lines of the inauguration of the boards of the NURC and NMDPRA in Abuja, according to Punch. He however, said that workers at these 3 agencies would have their jobs protected, while their Chief Executive Officers had been relieved of their various appointments.

What the Minister of State for Petroleum is saying

Sylva explained that with the passage of the Petroleum Industry Act, the NPRA and NURC had taken over the functions of the DPR, PPPRA and PEF.

The Minister in response to a question on what would become of DPR following the inauguration of the board of NURC, Sylva said that it is now a matter of law.

He said, “The law states that all the assets and even the staff of the DPR are to be invested on the commission and also in the authority. So that means the DPR doesn’t exist anymore.

“And, of course, the law specifically repeals the DPR Act, the Petroleum Inspectorate Act, the Petroleum Equalisation Fund Act and the PPPRA Act. The law specifically repeals them. It is very clear that those agencies do not exist anymore.

On what would happen to the chief executives and employees of DPR, PEF and PPPRA, Sylva said, “The law also provides for the staff and the jobs in those agencies to be protected.

“But I’m sure that that doesn’t cover, unfortunately, the chief executives, who were on political appointments.

FG Officially Scraps DPR, PPPRA, PEF, For New Agencies, Sacks Their CEOs

He stated that the process for aligning the workers of the defunct agencies with the new regulatory bodies had already commenced, as the staff had to be rationalised adding that the inauguration of the boards will mark the beginning of the successor agencies.

He said, “The authority has its staff coming from the defunct PEF, PPPRA and DPR. The commission has staff coming over from DPR and the process is going on for the next few weeks.

The PIA provides for the upstream regulatory commission and the establishment of the midstream and downstream authority.

“So far, the chief executives of these agencies have not been in place, but of course, Mr President in his wisdom made the appointment a few weeks ago and they went through a rigorous process of confirmation at the National Assembly.

“The agencies have now taken off because they now have clear leadership and today’s event marks that beginning for the new agencies.

What you should know

  • Recall that the senate earlier in October, confirmed the appointments of the Chairman, Chief Executive and other board members of NURC and NMDPRA
  • The Federal Government had earlier announced the setting up of the Nigerian Upstream Regulatory Commission and the Nigerian Midstream and Downstream Petroleum Regulatory Authority to take over the responsibilities of DPR following the signing of the Petroleum Industry Act by President Muhammadu Buhari.
  • The Federal Government had in August, inaugurated the steering committee that would implement the PIA

Innovation And Partnership Opens Up New Banking Facilities For Shoprite Group Customers

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The Shoprite Group’s Money Market Account, which previously only enabled customers to deposit funds to pay for utilities and buy groceries, now provides customers with new transactional banking options including sending money and making withdrawals.

Money Market Accounts offer banked and unbanked consumers, many of whom are regular customers at the Group’s stores, access to basic transactional banking activities that are specifically aimed at their needs.

The account gives them:

  • Simplicity and transparency, as there are no fees and no physical forms (all digital);
  • Low-cost banking with no unwanted fees (no monthly fees, no load fees, no transactional fees, only a R5 withdrawal fee);
  • No debit orders or deductions, so customers are in full control of their money;
  • Easy access – on any mobile phone (feature & smart phones); and available for free via the Shoprite app, USSD (*120*3534#), WhatsApp (087 240 5709) or the Xtra Savings card.
  • Retail hours – at all Shoprite, Usave and Checkers supermarkets – seven days a week enabling customers to transact when they want and make one trip instead of going to a store and a bank.
  • Anyone can register for a Money Market Account as customers just need a South African ID or any passport and a South African cellphone number.

    The Money Market Account has been running for over a year in its initial phase and has attracted over 530 000 users, indicating that customers see its value and prompting the Group to move to the next level – to enable customers to withdraw money and send it to family and friends.

    Now customers will be able to send and withdraw money, and as they do not only have to spend the money at stores, they can start using the account as a savings account.

     

    “The development and roll out of the account have been driven entirely by customer needs. They wanted a straightforward account which allows them to be in full control of their money and does not surprise them with any hidden fees.”

    – Jean Olivier, General Manager: Financial Services

     

    While the Money Market Account has increased its banking functionality, facilitated by a partnership with Grindrod Bank, the Shoprite Group has no intention of becoming a fully-fledged bank, but rather to use its size and reach and technology to provide basic transactional banking and solve basic transactional banking issues for its customers.

    To get a Money Market Account, register for a free account in-store or:

    • Download the Shoprite app from the App Store or Google Play Store
    • Dial *120*3534#
    • Add Shoprite (+27 87 240 5709) or Checkers (+27 87 240 5385) as a WhatsApp contact and follow the prompts