10x Engineer @NethermindEth || AWS Community Builder ||Ex Microsoft Intern ||Google Scholar👨🏾‍💻.. Believer! Lead @logosgeneration || Building @usefiilar 🛠️

Joined October 2020
259 Photos and videos
Alas! I said I was going to post a learning path to get STARTED as a DevOps/Cloud Engineer. N.B: I'll keep populating this list as time goes - DevOps & its implementation aws.amazon.com/devops/what-i… - Version Control & Programming language youtube.com/playlist?list=PL… 1/...
Good morning Guys! So I promised to curate a well structured path for learning as beginners and intermediates. I’d be posting that soon, so watch out for my tweet. 👍🏾
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This Morocco’s number 6 is a baller!! Bring to Man U 🤧
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We make mistakes, we learn, we fail forward! Either ways, God is at work! 🤍
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Azure & AWS Boy👨🏾‍💻 (ScriptureToServer) retweeted
Always remember to pray for the Christians in Nigeria🙏
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An African country might just win this World Cup 🌝
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I really don’t like that we don’t hold Muslim clerics accountable the same way we hold Pastors by the neck… If nothing, the Islam leaders should be the ones speaking up the most on these issues. Also really pathetic that we want religious leaders to do what government ought to do! Ridiculous and shamefully misplaced anger! 🤧
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Azure & AWS Boy👨🏾‍💻 (ScriptureToServer) retweeted
pov: being ignorant of your ignorance
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So those of you that were partying and clubbing with Seyi Tinubu, those of you that personally have his number and can call him at any given time no longer have his number to call him Abi??? Over 40 kids have been kidnapped for days, and no one has been able to call ST even if the Father has turned a deaf ears to us!????!! Bunch of clowns! #saynotokidnapping
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Azure & AWS Boy👨🏾‍💻 (ScriptureToServer) retweeted
Perhaps it is time we give credit as much as we criticize. I have been very critical of the institutional church bodies in Nigeria. But lately, PFN Youth, under this man's leadership, has started doing the very things we complained they were not doing. The AGO's message, which we all lauded, came from the conference PFN Youth organized. The conference was held in Abuja. I do not need to tell you what that costs. It runs into millions. But the cost is not even the main thing. The impact is. Now I saw him standing behind Pastor Yemi Davids, leading a protest regarding the killings of Christians in Nigeria. Again, that is no small thing to do, considering the kind of socio-political relationship the church has historically had with the government in this nation. I am saying that if we were critical, and still are, then we should also give massive credit and massive support when our representatives are doing the right things. Well done, Apostle Immanuel Iren. And well done to PFN Youth too. You have our support.
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Brunooooooooo!!!🔥🔥🔥
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Azure & AWS Boy👨🏾‍💻 (ScriptureToServer) retweeted
About last night. Truly honoured, @theofficialfwa 🙌
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One act of kindness to someone today might be the reason they never give up on you tomorrow. Be kind always! 🫶🏾
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I told y’all! 🧏🏾‍♂️😂😂
Bruno is getting an assist today
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Bruno is getting an assist today
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Azure & AWS Boy👨🏾‍💻 (ScriptureToServer) retweeted
To be very honest, in the middle of our thanksgiving excitement, this was such a sobering moment for us😩 Our guest minister @thepastortim_ indeed brought the balance We were so honored to have you, thank you sir! 🙌🏻 See you on 16th May, 2026 for our next physical meeting 📌
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Respect to you and Moniepoint for the training programmes (DreamDevs, Women in Tech, 3MTT partnerships etc.) — that work is real and necessary. But I have to respectfully disagree on the core diagnosis: Nigeria DOES have senior technical talent resident here. What we don’t have is enough of them applying to Nigerian companies. Reason #1 — Compensation reality. Tech is a global skill. A cracked senior engineer (5–8 yrs, strong in system design, cloud, scalability, product impact) can work remotely for a US/EU company and clear $5,000–$10,000/month (some even higher). Local fintech/bank offers? Most still hover between ₦700k–₦2M per month at the absolute top end for seniors, with the average far lower. That gap is 8–15x. Bro, these guys aren’t stupid. They’re not “unavailable” — they’re rational. They see the Japa math and choose global pay while staying in Nigeria (or they’ve already optimised for remote). The talent is here; the local market just isn’t competing on a global scale. Reason #2 — Hiring process and interviewer culture is broken. I’ve done loops with international companies (remote FAANG-tier, global fintechs) and local ones. The difference is night and day. Nigerian interviewers too often turn the process into an ego battle: • Interrupting mid-answer • Asking weird, off-role “depth check” questions just to flex • Coming across like you’re trying to steal their job instead of solve problems together • Straight-up rude energy It feels like they want you to fail so they can later say “see, no talent.” International processes? Professional, collaborative, structured. You leave feeling respected even if you don’t get the offer. Top talent ghosts Nigerian companies after one bad experience. That’s not a talent problem, that’s a hiring culture problem. The senior talent pipeline gap is real in the applicant pool, but the root causes are economic incentives and poor candidate experience, not an absolute shortage of skilled Nigerians still living here. Fix the pay to be globally competitive (or go full remote-hybrid with dollar salaries) and train your interviewers to park ego at the door, and you’ll see the “shortage” shrink fast. Talent is here. We just need companies to stop treating the market like it’s 2015. Let’s compete properly.
I have followed with rapt attention the discourse that followed my conversation at the Platform Nigeria on May Day. The stark reality is this - opportunities are few and far between, unemployment/underemployment is high and sadly there are too few employers for a huge market such as ours, at least when compared to other markets such as China, India that have similar youth bulge. We Nigerians are some of the most hardworking and gritty people in the world. But we must tell ourselves the truth. Nigeria currently doesn’t have enough highly skilled technical talent resident in Nigeria to build companies that can scale globally. Interestingly, I have also read a lot of employers double down and agree with my current diagnosis around our country’s technical talent pipeline gap and confirmed it is true. Former Minister, Kemi Adeosun also referenced Africa’s richest man, Alhaji Aliko Dangote comments around finding the right quality and quantity of talents for his refinery project. Let me ask a hard question - can we say that Nigeria has enough highly skilled technical talent still resident in Nigeria? That's a huge conundrum that any organization that wants to maintain market leadership must solve for. How many engineering executives do we have remaining in Nigeria that lead a payments team that handles payments infrastructure processing tens millions of transactions daily without fail? How many senior data scientists do we have in Nigeria that can create data models to appraise millions of customers while managing prudent NPLs? How many senior growth executives in Nigeria have the experience of growing a digital apps towards acquiring 80k customers a day through digital and offline channels while maintaining prudent CACs? It is important to note that this is not about Nigerians generally, this is about senior Nigerian talents still resident in Nigeria. Nigeria is not producing enough high quality senior technical talent and the little we have are emigrating. I can explain these to be that Nigeria does not have too many feeder industries across the board. As such, there are fewer starter companies that young talent can come from to feed into senior roles in other companies. Every one then ends up fighting for the same pool of senior leaders that have experience and bandwidth to deliver and win in the market. The effect of the Japa wave has been very well chronicled and I must add that this has been a trans-generational challenge. Remember that time in the early 80s where a lot of our medical professionals left for places like Saudi and the UAE? As at March 2024, Nigeria had lost around 16,000 medical doctors to other countries, most especially the US and the UK. The quality of technical education is also falling as our standard of education is lagging behind global counterparts. Can we say we have enough senior technical talent in Nigeria to compete with global competition especially China? But Moniepoint, Dangote, Flutterwave, LemFi are competing with them. Training young talents can fill the gap for the future but is inadequate for today. Companies need senior talent and cannot wait the eight to ten years needed to get them to senior levels to compete. In training young talent, Moniepoint has seen a lot of bright spots through our various interventions that are aimed at deepening the talent pool. So we are indeed doing something about improving talent density for the ecosystem. Through our DreamDevs programme, which is in its second year, we're training talented young engineering graduates with the skills they need to enter the workforce as top talent. We have supported the government's 3MTT agenda as well as a partnership with Unilag’s NITHUB to push the HatchDev initiative. Our Women in Tech internship programme, which now in its sixth year, provides women with the access, training and opportunities they need to build careers in tech. I also personally have a scholarship program for STEM students across select Nigerian universities in every geo-political zone. Competing globally also means that you spend top dollars to retain top Nigerian talents that you have nurtured. We routinely retain Nigerians that emigrate and pay them according to their local market standards. A recent example is an exceptional first class graduate we nurtured through our women in Tech program and had to go to school just as a path to emigrate and we had to retain abroad and offer an alternative naturalization path for her. Moniepoint has over 3,500 full time employees with over 90% Nigerian talents, and we’re growing 20% YoY. We’d love a world where this is at 99% while building for the world. Self deception isn’t a virtue and we must tell ourselves the home truth - we need to raise the quantity and quality of our technical talents resident in Nigeria to compete. No organization can rise above the quality of its output and execution is everything in this game. Nigeria will be great. Let’s all do the work together. By the way, top tech talents still resident in Nigeria, we need you badly. We pay above market rates and you will make real impact. Please apply here: moniepoint.com/careers For top Nigerian talents out of the country, we hire out of the UK, Portugal, Spain, India and Pakistan. Also apply, we are building digital banking infrastructure that provides financial happiness for emerging markets.
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Women have audacity… I give them that! I want to have the kind of boldness they have ! 😮‍💨🤲🏾
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It’s my Birthday guysssss!!! 🎉🎉🎉
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What a family! What a day! Glory to Jesus! 🔥
We came to say thank you… and we meant it 😭🔥 joy like this can’t be hidden. 🔥 3 whole years. countless testimonies. one faithful God. this was our thanksgiving and it was beautiful. Thank you for coming 🫂🫂 #logosgeneration #thanksgivingservice #faithcommunity
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Please if you have anyone coming to Nigeria from the US this weekend, please send me a dm! This is really urgent!
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Dem get standing AC for their house for 2017? 🥲😂 Butty children 😂😂
What’s a Thursday without throwbacks..? Meanwhile I hope you’re not living life upside down?
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