Product Engineer | AI, SaaS, & Enterprise Solutions | Building Desktop & Web Experiences | Member of Technical Staff @Nexendahq

Joined November 2021
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2026: Growth and Structure
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Victor Okeke retweeted
Take note.
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Victor Okeke retweeted
The last consultation job I got two days ago is from someone with 22 followers on Twitter. Twenty Two followers… Your help can come from anywhere anyone at anytime.
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This is gold
These engineering blogs have leveled up my tech skills more than any bootcamp, course, or conference. Here are the ones worth bookmarking:
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Victor Okeke retweeted
STOP SAYING "HOPE YOU'RE DOING WELL." IT'S THE MOST FORGETTABLE EMAIL OPENER EVER. HERE ARE 10 BETTER WAYS TO START A CONVERSATION 👇
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Lfg 🚀
Spent part of today learning about CV optimization and effective job application strategies through a practical online masterclass today hosted by @AnambraTechies x @Anambraweb3. Thank you @icodejsx & @TechProVee for today’s solid session with real value. 🚀
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Yes, I am an asset and I treat myself as one.
Replying to @TechProVee
@TechProVee "I am an asset and treat myself as one."
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Spent part of today learning about CV optimization and effective job application strategies through a practical online masterclass today hosted by @AnambraTechies x @Anambraweb3. Thank you @icodejsx & @TechProVee for today’s solid session with real value. 🚀
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Stop getting ghosted after job applications. Today at 8PM WAT, I’ll show you how to fix it. It will be hands-on training on CVs, ATS systems, and positioning for opportunities. I would show you a cheat code. Free. Online. Practical. Join: meet.google.com/dmq-xvji-xhg

GM Everyone One major issue we identified at Logos Circle Awka is that many talented people are not getting opportunities not because they lack skills, but because they are not properly positioned or industry-ready. As part of our first “winnable solution”, we are hosting a practical training session on: 📌 CV & Job Application Process You will learn: ✅ ATS CV systems ✅ How to apply for jobs properly ✅ How to position yourself for opportunities ✅ What the industry expects Date: Wednesday, May 28th, 2026 Time: 8:00 PM WAT Venue: Google Meet Guest: TechProVee Join link: meet.google.com/dmq-xvji-xhg This is a small step towards solving real problems in our ecosystem 💜 @Logos_network @AnambraTechies
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Talented people aren’t the problem. Positioning is. That’s what we’re fixing on May 28th with @Logos_network Circle Awka. Join me for a practical session on CVs, applications, and industry expectations.
One of the biggest problems we identified during the @Logos_network Circle Awka conversations was this: 👉 Talented people in Anambra are struggling to access opportunities not because they’re not skilled, but because many are not properly positioned or industry-ready. As part of our first “winnable solutions,” we’re hosting a practical CV & Job Application training session to help talents better understand: ✅ ATS CV systems ✅ Job application processes ✅ Positioning for opportunities ✅ Industry expectations 🗓️ Wednesday, May 28th, 2026 ⏰ PM WAT 📍 Google Meet Guest: @TechProVee 🔗 Join here: meet.google.com/dmq-xvji-xhg Small consistent solutions like this can create real impact over time 💚 This is what community-driven problem solving looks like. This is Logos Circle Awka 🚀
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Victor Okeke retweeted
This Nigerian lady who teaches at a school in Japan broke down the Japanese style of learning that makes them very intelligent and productive. I think this is smart learning. It will be helpful to Nigerian students, if it is adopted in our educational system.✍️
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Victor Okeke retweeted
The first thing that will happen once Peter Obi enters Aso Rock next year is, the ministries will go on a strike against him for trying to sanitise and digitise the system, and closing every loophole. The National Assembly will threaten him with impeachment proceedings, if he doesn’t revert back to the old system. The Lagos-Ibadan media will instigate national protests, be on CNN with Amanpour to analyse how weak and wicked he is. Seun Okinbaloye will be bending neck like Turkey to ask “tough” questions he couldn’t ask current APC government. At the end of the day, the system will be sanitised and the criminals will be dealt with decisively. He has done it before in Anambra state, he will do it again at the national level. Go and verify. Peter Obi is coming!
If Peter Obi wins the 2027 election, his first 100 days would probably shake Nigeria in ways many people are not ready for. Not miracles. Not overnight change. But visible disruption. Here are 20 things most likely to happen early: 1. Government spending will reduce aggressively. Expect fewer convoys, fewer luxury expenses, fewer unnecessary foreign trips. 2. Ministries and agencies may face serious audits. A lot of hidden contracts and inflated budgets could suddenly become public conversations. 3. Subsidy discussions will return immediately. Nigerians may face short-term pain before any long-term structure appears. 4. The naira might react emotionally first before economically. Supporters will celebrate. Investors will watch cautiously. 5. Some politicians who survived on “connection money” may suddenly go quiet. 6. Young Nigerians will become unusually hopeful again. Social media energy alone could change national mood temporarily. 7. There’ll be strong resistance from powerful interests inside government institutions. 8. Expect tension between old political elites and a reform-driven presidency. 9. Federal appointments may become less “godfather based” and more competence focused — at least publicly. 10. ASUU, universities and education funding may receive faster attention than usual. 11. Nigerians abroad may start reconsidering returning home if policies look stable. 12. Corruption cases could increase dramatically in headlines during the first months. 13. Some governors may suddenly become “friends of transparency” overnight. 14. The civil service could experience pressure to digitize operations faster. 15. There may be attempts to cut waste in National Assembly spending, and that alone would create national drama. 16. The stock market may respond positively to stability signals, especially if foreign investors regain confidence. 17. Fuel prices may still remain painful initially, which could disappoint people expecting instant relief. 18. Media attacks against him would intensify heavily once reforms start touching powerful pockets. 19. Nigerians would become more politically divided online than ever before. Supporters and critics would clash daily. 20. The biggest change may not even be money. It may simply be Nigerians feeling like leadership is finally trying to look responsible again. A New Nigeria is Possible.
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Victor Okeke retweeted
The current President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio: 1. Investigated for 108B Akwa Ibom fund 2. Implicated in a 40B & 86B NDDC fund 3. Alleged to have tried bribing EFCC boss Bawa with $350k 4. Currently leads the most corrupt senate in the history of Nigerian democracy
I’ve spent the past couple of weeks building Looters: a public archive of Nigerian political corruption since the 1990s. Governors, ministers, shell companies, Swiss accounts, the Jersey trusts, — one searchable graph. You too can connect the dots: 1000reasons.vote/looters
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Victor Okeke retweeted
I’ve spent the past couple of weeks building Looters: a public archive of Nigerian political corruption since the 1990s. Governors, ministers, shell companies, Swiss accounts, the Jersey trusts, — one searchable graph. You too can connect the dots: 1000reasons.vote/looters
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Victor Okeke retweeted
The first project I managed in Shell was a $750K that I got because no one in the room wanted it - it was too small for them. We were upgrading the Firewater System in an old oil producing platform seating in 3,000 feet of ocean water. By the time we were done, the project ran into over $1M and it was such a success that it put me on the radar. If you are trying to break into a new role, sniff around for the job no one wants and take it. Like a deadly striker all you need is a half-chance to score. Take those half-chances.
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Victor Okeke retweeted
There are too much opportunities in this world for me to be poor.
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Victor Okeke retweeted
This time, I got wings. Happy Birthday King Victor.
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Victor Okeke retweeted
If you've been thinking about learning — this is your sign. 🔗 Ready to start? Secure your spot here 👉 selar.com/buildwithvictor Only 20 slots — Early bird: ₦400K | Flexible payment available. Starts April 17th. @TechProVee
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😂 Hmmm
Cybertruck is an APC from the future
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Victor Okeke retweeted
Count your blessings when you are honored at home, because only a few receive that privilege. My alma mater, Federal University of Technology Owerri (FUTO), and the uncontested (lol) Africa’s finest technical university has honored me many times, and I remain deeply grateful. When I received the IGI Global “Book of the Year” award, the University invited me to deliver the Public Lecture, making me the first alumnus in its history to mount that podium. That moment was profound. Yet, even more special was when my professors and alumni community recommended me to return to deliver the 32nd Convocation Lecture. Standing before men and women who helped shape my professional journey was truly humbling. I recently came across a publication where the University documented that speech, and it brought back many memories. FUTO gave me confidence, discipline, and a belief in merit. The system we experienced was deeply rooted in excellence and merit. When companies came to recruit, Heads of Department presented their very best, and we knew that hard work would open doors to organizations like Shell and Schlumberger. I still remember when Prof. S.O.E. Ogbogu raised the bar even higher, requesting that top students be hired without interviews, out of respect for FUTO’s standards. Indeed, many of us received job offers months before graduation, without sitting for a single interview. That was the power of institutional credibility built on merit. “Ekekwe, I have accepted a job for you,” Prof. Ogbogu told me. I received it, nine months before graduation. Then came another instruction on another job: “You must go to Trans Amadi and formally decline the offer.” That directive gave me my first flight, from Lagos to Port Harcourt, just to turn down a job, all to protect the reputation of our school. FUTO, I sincerely appreciate all you have done for me. Next year, I will return to honor this journey by investing in the next generation, contributing in a meaningful way to deepen excellence and expand opportunity. I came as a village boy from Ovim, and you prepared me for the world. Now, I will play my part in ensuring the rise of many, not just a few, in Nigeria. Nigeria worked for me; Nigeria is working for me. It MUST WORK for all.
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