A 23-year-old Nigerian entrepreneur, Chris Kwekowe turned
down a job offer to work as a software engineer at Microsoft,
owned by the richest man in the world, Bill Gates, in order to
begin his own
start-up in Lagos.
The Lagos State University computer science graduate proudly
revealed this to Bill Gates during a television interview for
Africa’s brightest young entrepreneurs in August 2016.
Kwekowe, who won the 2015 Anzisha Prize which came with a
$25,000 cheque, said he rejected the offer to build up his own
startup, Slatecube– a website aimed at helping other young
Nigerians find jobs.
"When I told him, Gates was intrigued and he smiled.
After the programme, all the directors were like, ‘Dude,
you mean you actually turned down a job at Microsoft
and had the guts to tell Bill Gates?’
Kwekowe founded Slatecube with his brother Emerald, 20, in
October 2014.
The pair funded their efforts by freelancing as
web designers and running a software solutions firm.
He said Slatecube seeks to solve that problem by nurturing the
graduates through digital internships
and so far, Slatecube has
an 80% employment rate for its users. Companies that have
used the platform, have saved over $100,000 in 2015 by hiring
skilled, ready to work employees.
In a Facebook post published last August, Chris narrated in
details of his meeting with Bill Gates:
"Oh yeah, I did meet with Bill Gates in Durban, South
Africa where we had some candid discussion about
everything - from his involvement with charitable causes
in the continent, to how he makes time to be a great
father for his kids. My favourite moments were watching
his reaction after I told him I turned down job offers
from Microsoft and the likes to pursue something more
defining for me, and how Africa's development depends
more on sustainable investments in innovative social
startups like Slatecube that solve some of the
continent's biggest problems, rather than donating
entirely to charity organisations who end up requiring
more financial injection to deal with the minutest of
issues. Anyways, we'd be working with the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation to make our value proposition
at Slatecube a pan-African privilege. Soon, you'd rather
be in demand across the globe, and engage in
companies and projects that make you better, and suits
your career goals. Nothing can really be better"
Source: Newsweek.europe/Chris Kwekowe/Facebook



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