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  • #NairaLife: How Did She Grow Her Income By 400% In 2 Years? Networking

    This week鈥檚 Naira Life is brought to you by Quick credit. With Quick credit, you not only get the funds you need instantly, but you also get to pay back at the lowest interest rate in Nigeria. Between 2019 and 2021, this 22-year-old investment analyst grew her income by almost 400%. What鈥檚 her trick? Going after […]

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    Every week,聽91大神 seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it鈥檒l be revealing.

    This week鈥檚 Naira Life is brought to you by Quick credit. With Quick credit, you not only get the funds you need instantly, but you also get to pay back at the 


    Between 2019 and 2021, this 22-year-old investment analyst grew her income by almost 400%. What鈥檚 her trick? Going after the right internships, building important relationships and leveraging her network.

    What鈥檚 your oldest memory of money?

    It was my primary school allowance for me. I started getting pocket money for school in 2005. I was six years old at the time. The money was a nice touch because I took lunch and was driven to school. It started with 鈧30 and increased in the subsequent years. When I left secondary school, I was getting 鈧250 to school every day. My friends thought I was rich because I always had money in my pocket. But I didn鈥檛 understand what they meant for the longest time. 

    Baller. Why didn鈥檛 you think you were rich though?

    I grew up in a small town and went to a cheap school. I thought if my parents were rich, I would go to a more expensive school. I started to understand why they thought I was the rich girl as I grew older. A car dropped me at school while others took the school bus. In comparison to most of my classmates, I had money. 

    To be honest, I never lacked anything growing up even though my family is a large one 鈥 my parents have five children. The first time I got familiar with lack was after I finished secondary school and found out that I couldn鈥檛 go to my dream school because we couldn鈥檛 afford it. 

    Tell me more about that.

    I wanted to go to uni abroad. I got an admission offer and a 70% scholarship. But my mum insisted that I wrote JAMB. Later, she sat me down and told me that I couldn鈥檛 go. I was like, 鈥淏ut I have a 70% scholarship.鈥

    Wiun.

    She said the best they could at the time was to send me to a private university in Nigeria. My father even kicked against that for a bit and told me to consider a federal university. 

    Why?

    He was managing a family business and farming on the side. I grew up in a civil service state and the governor wasn鈥檛 paying salaries; that affected pretty much everybody in the state, so there was nobody to sell his farm produce to. There were also a series of unfortunate events 鈥 his farm flooded one time and he was dealing with family disputes as well. 

    My mother, on the other hand, was an administrator at a manufacturing company and she was still working and getting promoted. Anyway, we eventually decided that I would go to the private university.

    So uni?

    I got my allowance at the beginning of each semester, and when I broke it down, it was 鈧15k a month. By the time I was in final year, it was 鈧25k. There were other allowances too courtesy of my aunts and elder siblings. 

    I was careful with money in university. I only spent on essentials. For example, the cafeteria food was terrible, but I went there anyway because we had paid for it.

    I got a scholarship in my second year that paid me 鈧100k every session until I left uni. I also started going after internships in my second year.

    Your first work experience?

    Yes. I went for the first one in 2017. I wanted to intern with one of the 鈥 but it didn鈥檛 work out. I found work in a family friend鈥檚 audit firm and spent the two-month session break there, earning 鈧15k per month. I didn鈥檛 incur a lot of expenses because I took food to work and transportation in the town was cheap. 

    The second internship happened in my third year. This time, it was with an asset management firm in Lagos. They paid me 鈧60k per month. Most of my earnings went into transportation, a little into flexing, and the rest went into my savings. I returned to school after the internship for my final year and got elected into the student council. This came with a 鈧100k allowance every semester. 

    Your school paid you to be on the student council?

    Yes. 

    Greatest Gba Gba is shaking.  What did your finances look like when you left uni?

    I had about 鈧400k in savings. One of my sisters had warned me that my allowances would stop coming the moment I finished from uni and she was right. I hadn鈥檛 even gotten a job when my parents cut me off. 

    Lmao. When did you find a job post-uni?

    June 2019 鈥 about two months after I left uni. It was an internship at one of the Big 4s and it paid 鈧60k. I was there for two months before I left for NYSC. And I鈥檇 gotten a job elsewhere before I left. This is how it happened: during my internship days at school, I networked a lot and maintained relationships with the people I worked with. Right as I was preparing for NYSC, one of those  people texted me to inform me that she was leaving her job, and they were looking for someone to replace her. She wanted to know if I was interested in the role. The company was well-known in the finance industry and I was like, 鈥淵eah, sure.鈥 The interview was a breeze. My offer letter followed. 鈧70k net. 

    Lit. 

    I earned 鈧103k during NYSC 鈥 鈧70k from the company and 鈧33k from the federal government. As my service year drew to a close, it started looking like I wasn鈥檛 going to get a full-time offer at the company. My boss was saying that he wanted me on the team but HR wasn鈥檛 saying anything. I started looking for a new job in June 2020 though my service year was going to end in October. I filled out tons of work applications, got a couple of interviews, but none of it came through. Companies were still trying to navigate Covid, so recruitment was weird. Anyway, I had no job when NYSC ended. 

    Wiun. How long were you unemployed for?

    Three long weeks. I didn鈥檛 have a lot of money saved up anymore. I live with two of my siblings but I鈥檇 started contributing more towards housekeeping because their incomes were fluctuating. I had 鈧300k saved up but during those weeks, the only thing I was thinking about was, 鈥淲hat will I do when this money finishes?鈥

    Thankfully, that didn鈥檛 happen before I got my next job. I actually got two offers almost at the same time. 

    Again, my relationships with people helped me here. Someone else I knew was leaving a company and left my name as a possible replacement. I was still serving when I got a Linkedin request from someone at the company. The man who reached out said that they were looking for someone to fill the role and were wondering if I would be interested in having a chat with them. Of course, I was even though I didn鈥檛 think I qualified for the role. The first interview happened, then the second. But nothing happened after that, so I thought they went with another candidate. 

    A month after, they reached out and went, 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not who we were looking for but we like you. Do you want to join our team?鈥

    My heart.

    My God, I was so excited. I think I almost cried. The second offer came in the same week. 

    Let鈥檚 talk about benefits.

    The first company isn鈥檛 Nigerian owned and they offered me a gross salary of  鈧5m/annum. My take home every month would be 鈧337k. The second company wanted to start with 鈧2.5m per annum. That鈥檚 about 鈧150k/month. 

    I decided to go with the first company. The money wasn鈥檛 the only factor that made me choose them though.

    Fair enough.

    Right before I resumed work at the company, I contributed 鈧220k towards rent for 2021. I was at square 0 when I started work in December 2020. There was hardly anything in my savings. 

    What鈥檚 happened between then and now?

    I was hired as an investment analyst and was on probation when I started. Then someone left the team and an opportunity to take some of her responsibilities presented itself. I wasn鈥檛 sure if I could do them, but I said yes when they asked me if I wanted to. They were impressed with my work and when it was time to confirm me, they increased my pay by 20%. My gross annual salary shot up to 鈧6m. My current net is 鈧400k per month. 

    Mad. You鈥檝e come a long way in such a short time. 

    I鈥檝e been fortunate. When I graduated from uni in 2019 and moved to Lagos, I carried one box of luggage because I wasn鈥檛 sure if I was going to stay but it鈥檚 been about two years and I鈥檓 still here. Also, I鈥檓 lucky I had siblings who could house me. I think I got a soft landing. 

    However, I won鈥檛 discount the work I鈥檝e put in. I graduated from uni with a first class. When I was in uni, I sacrificed my session breaks from my second year up to my final year for internships. The work experience looks good on my CV. Also, I networked ridiculously. I鈥檓 here because people have reached out to me when they were leaving their roles or put my name on the potential candidate list when their company is hiring. Another good thing that has helped me is that people are comfortable telling me their salaries, so I know what to ask for during negotiations. 

    Oh, I also get 鈧50k-鈧150k from contract work from time to time. This mostly comes from the more experienced people I have worked with when they need an extra person on their projects. 

    Lit. What does 400k/month do for you?

    I put 鈧62k aside for my accommodation expenses because my living arrangement will change next year. At the moment, I contribute 鈧50k for things we need in the house. When I first started living with my siblings, I wasn鈥檛 contributing anything at all. Bit by bit, I started contributing some money because I realised that resentment can begin to set in if I wasn鈥檛 pulling my weight. As my income increased, my contributions increased.  

    There are skin care expenses, but it doesn鈥檛 happen every month. There are courses I pay for too.  I spend money on food when people invite me out for stuff, so that鈥檚 also not fixed. I clear the basic bills first and whatever remains after this can go into whatever comes up. 

    How do you approach wealth-building tools, especially savings and investments?

    My savings and investments are looking good right now. I have a target to build my wealth portfolio to 鈧2m by the end of the year. So far so good, I have a little over $1000 in dollar savings, a few hundred dollars in crypto. There鈥檚 another 鈧60k in cash and 鈧100k in stocks 鈥 about 鈧800k in total naira value. All of this is separate from my rent savings which is in mutual funds

    I plan to save at least 鈧150k every month and when I鈥檓 comfortable with my liquid cash position, I can expand my investment portfolio to dollar stock and maybe increase my crypto holdings.

    How has your experience shaped your perspective about money?

    I know that because of my background in finance, I don鈥檛 spend money anyhow. I want to buy things I like, but I can鈥檛 let go. Yes, I鈥檓 still very anxious about money. Like what would happen if I lost my job?

    But I also know that I can be financially independent with a 9-5 though a lot of discipline will come into play. I believe money is a tool I can make work for me. Also because of my work in asset management, I鈥檝e seen how rich people deploy their funds. I鈥檝e heard an asset manager talk about portfolios worth over 鈧500m, and I was like, 鈥淚n this same Nigeria?鈥

    Haha. How has your work in finance influenced the way you manage money?

    I already have my personal stock portfolio, and I use the skills and knowledge I learn on the job to manage it. I鈥檓 wiser with the way I approach what I earn and what I spend. Now if I earmark an amount of money to something, it has to go into it. I trust my financial decisions because a lot of thought goes into them. 

    Interesting. How much do you think you should be earning now?

    That鈥檚 tricky. I鈥檓 earning above 鈧200k-鈧250k, which is the industry average for my level of experience.  There are companies that can pay me as high as 鈧800k. The only problem is the options are limited to a few places and it鈥檚 hard to get into those companies. If I leave my current company now without a good exit strategy, I鈥檇 most likely get a pay cut. When I was looking for a job, I went to an interview and told them that my salary expectation was 鈧200k, and the guy burst into laughter. I鈥檓 good right now but to put it out there to the universe, 鈧800k-鈧1m will be great. 

    Where do you see all of this in five years?

    I hope I鈥檓 out of this country. I want to go for my MBA in 2023. I鈥檒l spend two years in grad school, so in five years I should have gotten a better paying job and be earning about $150k/annum. 

    I鈥檓 saving hard right now so I can raise something for my MBA 鈥 at least for the application fees and initial deposit. Most of the rest will come from scholarships and loans. There are that give international students loans and they start to get their money back when you get a job.

    What part of your finances do you think you could be better at?

    I鈥檝e noticed a pattern in the last two years 鈥 I save a lot of money then something comes along and deflates my savings. It was my phone in 2019. It was the rent contribution in 2020. I think I should have a separate emergency fund, so I won鈥檛 have to touch my core and long term savings if something comes up. I need to build that armour tank. 

    What鈥檚 something you want right now but can鈥檛 afford?

    I want a bone straight wig but my mind won鈥檛 let me rest if I take the money out of my account. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 a good use of my resources at the moment. I also need an AC for my room but I can鈥檛 buy it yet 鈥  maybe in a few months.

    Hmm. Anything you bought recently that improved the quality of your life?

    A headset. I鈥檓 in a lot of work meetings, and it鈥檚 made the experience much better. It鈥檚 only 鈧10k but serves me well. 

    On a scale of 1-10, how will you rate your financial happiness?

    5. I hate that I have to think and plan a lot before I spend money on things I want or even need. For example, my accommodation arrangement is going to change next year. Although I鈥檝e set up a separate savings plan for it, it鈥檚 still a big expense and that makes me a bit uncomfortable. I鈥檓 not really sure if I will stop being anxious about money. My biggest fear is becoming a burden to the people that care about me.

    But I think earning between 鈧800k and 鈧1m can improve my financial happiness and take the number to an 8. It鈥檚 very rare for people in my experience level to earn up to that, but it鈥檚 possible. I probably won鈥檛 leave my current employers if I get an offer like that. I鈥檓 careful about my career choices and I really like my job. But I can use an offer like that to negotiate a higher pay.


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