Konnected Minds Podcast with Derrick Abaitey

Derrick Abaitey

Konnected Minds: Success, Wealth & Mindset. This show helps ambitious people crush limiting beliefs and build unstoppable confidence. Created and Hosted by Derrick Abaitey YT: https://youtube.com/@KonnectedMinds?si=s2vkw92aRslgfsV_ IG: https://www.instagram.com/konnectedminds/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@konnectedminds?_t=8ispP2H1oBC&_r=1 Podcast in Africa | Podcast in Ghana | Podcast in Nigeria | Best Podcast in Nigeria | Africa's best podcast

  1. Segment: Stop Living Paycheck to Paycheck - Creators Need Entrepreneurship, Not Just Platform Money

    12 hr ago ·  Bonus

    Segment: Stop Living Paycheck to Paycheck - Creators Need Entrepreneurship, Not Just Platform Money

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down with Amir Debra — one of Ghana's pioneering bloggers and influencers with 20 years in media — for a conversation that dismantles the myth that content creation alone will secure your financial future without serious planning, investment thinking, and business systems that work when you can't. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why state pensions abroad pay only $600 to $1000 a month and it's never enough, why our good days as content creators are very short and we must prepare for the day we can't work anymore, why contributing to social security is not just about immediate benefits but about statutory requirements and long term thinking, why financial literacy must be taught early because at 20 you don't see the need but at 40 you realize you should have started sooner, and why content creators making $40,000 a month can end up with nothing if they treat platform payments like paychecks instead of building real businesses. From thinking about business ideas in the shower and realizing that anytime the mind is challenged it stays sharp, to ordering products from China at 17 and selling to classmates because money has always been about making life easier and ensuring it grows with age, to learning from a 70 year old General who upgraded his chair as he aged because comfort and health require money and planning, to watching a content creator who made $40,000 a month for eight months end up with nothing because the next month mentality killed entrepreneurship — this conversation is proof that visibility and virality are not wealth. Wealth is what you build with the money while the platforms are still paying you. The conversation also dives deep into the mindset gap that separates content creators who survive from those who collapse: why crypto and investment feel far off and intimidating to many creators, why it seems like you need a certain mindset to understand trading and money management, why the question of when you're ready is the wrong question because you prepare now or regret later, and why spending time with people who think long term and read constantly sharpens your cognitive performance and keeps you from being boxed into one way of seeing the world. From being anti social and closeted but still building a 20 year career by grabbing every opportunity that came his way, to never having a marketing arm but getting emails and calls because the work spoke louder than any pitch, to believing in luck and chance but understanding that preparation and execution are what turn opportunity into outcome, to learning that when your mind is not challenged as you age you lose cognitive performance which is why reading and engaging with wisdom is non negotiable — this episode is a masterclass in building a content career that doesn't end the moment the algorithm changes or the platform stops paying. This episode is for every content creator who thinks the money will keep coming, every influencer who treats platform income like a salary, and every young person who believes visibility equals security. Amir Debra proves that longevity in content creation is not about followers or virality — it's about financial literacy, long term planning, and building businesses that run even when you can't show up anymore.

    10 min
  2. How a 17-Year-Old Made Over GHS 1 Million During COVID and Never Went Broke Again

    1 day ago ·  Video

    How a 17-Year-Old Made Over GHS 1 Million During COVID and Never Went Broke Again

    In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Sammy Adjei - the founder of GigMann Medicals, known across Ghana as "The Medical Landlord" - who dismantles the biggest lie young Ghanaians believe about money: that you need capital to start. Sammy started selling sobolo and groundnuts to his classmates at 12. By 17, still a student training as a physician assistant in Kintampo, he turned a COVID gamble into over a million cedis - buying nose masks at 16 cedis and selling at 90, then flipping 1,000 gun thermometers and watching prices explode from 130 to 1,500 cedis each. But this conversation isn't about luck. It's about the system behind it. Sammy breaks down why credibility - not cash - is your first currency, why he refused a government posting despite finishing with first class, how he raised serious money from 20 friends using debentures most people have never heard of, and how he now owns stakes in 12 hospitals and a chain of pharmacies without lifting a finger - the model he calls medical real estate. If you've ever said "I don't have capital," "I don't have connections," or "I'm waiting to be posted," this episode will take away every excuse you have left. This is one for the entrepreneurs, the hustlers, and anyone who's tired of waiting for permission to build. 🎟️ Konnected Minds Live - Kumasi, KNUST Great Hall, September 9th Get your tickets: https://www.konnectedmindslive.com/ Chapters 00:00:00 Introduction: The 17-Year-Old Who Made Over GHS 1 Million During COVID 00:02:50 Early Business Ventures: From Pen Drives to Medical Supplies 00:07:36 The COVID Breakthrough: Turning Crisis Into Opportunity 00:08:11 Building Credibility: The Foundation of Business Success 00:12:56 Strategic Decisions: Choosing a Shop Over a Van 00:14:51 Expansion Strategy: From Campus to Nationwide Supply 00:26:44 Working With Friends and Family: Breaking the Taboo 00:35:24 No Plan B Philosophy: Why Option A Must Work 00:37:46 Innovation vs Laziness: What Gen Z Really Lacks 00:59:47 Medical Real Estate: Building a Revolutionary Business Model 00:52:27 Raising Capital Without Banks: The Debenture Strategy 01:04:02 Systems and Structures: Preventing Partnership Conflicts 01:06:58 Mentorship: The Number One Capital You Need 01:20:52 The Mosquito Principle: Living Below Your Means 01:24:20 Final Thoughts: Building Wealth in Ghana Guest: Sammy Adjei IG: https://www.instagram.com/_sammyadjei/ Fb: https://web.facebook.com/p/Gigmann-Medicals-100064189747488/ Tel: +233 20 095 9014 ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎙️ ABOUT THE HOST Derrick Abaitey is a Ghanaian entrepreneur, podcast host, and personal development advocate. IG: https://www.instagram.com/derrick.abaitey

    1hr 25min
  3. Segment: Stop Waiting For Jobs - Create Businesses That Work When You Can't

    3 days ago ·  Bonus

    Segment: Stop Waiting For Jobs - Create Businesses That Work When You Can't

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down with Amir Debra — one of Ghana's pioneering bloggers and influencers with 20 years in media — for a conversation that dismantles the myth that waiting for perfect opportunities or clinging to old strategies will keep you relevant in the rapidly changing world of content creation and digital media. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why sitting at home for seven years waiting for a job is wasting the most productive years of your life, why early social media created real entrepreneurs selling products on Instagram while today's creators chase virality instead of building sustainable businesses, why the platforms are changing and if you don't adapt your content strategy you will be left behind no matter how loyal your audience is, why blaming algorithms is easier than accepting that your content needs to evolve with the times, and why being old school is fine but refusing to meet your audience where they are now will kill your visibility and your income. From watching early Instagram become a marketplace for online shops and creative entrepreneurs to seeing the shift toward content creators who prioritize viral moments over entrepreneurial creativity, to feeling the frustration when loyal followers say they haven't seen your content even though you post every day because the algorithm simply doesn't show it, to realizing that musicians face the same problem when they become one hit wonders not because they stopped creating but because the platform stopped pushing them — this conversation is proof that longevity in media is not just about consistency. It's about visibility, adaptation, and understanding that the rules of engagement are constantly changing. The conversation also dives deep into the reality of multi platform survival: why Instagram may not be working but Facebook is thriving, why TikTok felt unnecessary until realizing it's where the next generation of entrepreneurs are building online shops and making sales, why resisting new platforms out of principle is costing you reach and revenue, and why Konnected Minds Podcast became popular because of TikTok even though the host initially resisted the platform. From planning for a future where the work can continue without you by building businesses and systems that run independently, to contributing to social security not because of immediate benefits but because of statutory requirements and long term thinking, to asking diaspora contacts how much they receive in state pension and realizing $600 to $1000 a month is never enough which is why financial literacy and planning are non negotiable — this episode is a masterclass in thinking beyond today, building for tomorrow, and accepting that our good days in any industry are shorter than we think. This episode is for every content creator who thinks posting consistently is enough, every entrepreneur who refuses to adapt because they believe their way is the right way, and every young person who believes waiting for the perfect opportunity is safer than starting with what you have right now. Amir Debra proves that survival in media is not about loyalty to one platform or one strategy — it's about evolving, diversifying, and preparing for the day when you can no longer do the work yourself. Mark your calendars: Kumasi Konnected Minds Live is happening on September 9th at Grace Hall, KNUST. Last year Accra showed up. This year it's Kumasi's turn. You need a seat to attend. Vendors are welcome. Details are in the description and comments. Let's make this one unforgettable.

    9 min
  4. He Stopped Waiting for a Government Job in Ghana - Now He Hires Graduates

    4 days ago ·  Video

    He Stopped Waiting for a Government Job in Ghana - Now He Hires Graduates

    He doesn't sell popcorn - he sells happiness. And it built him a multi-branch business empire in Ghana. 🍿 While 137 of his classmates waited for government jobs after KNUST, Kwabena started selling popcorn out of a single machine his mum gave him. Today he runs Favry — 3 branches, 12 employees, and up to 1,000 sales a day — with ZERO investors. Every cedi came from reinvested profit. In this episode of the Konnected Minds Podcast (Youth Segment), Derrick Abaitey sits down with Kwabena Owusu Bright to break down exactly how a student side hustle became a real business: the numbers behind a GHS 2.50 cup that sells for GHS 15, why he gave his creative director shares instead of a salary, how he protects his recipe, and why he believes young Ghanaians need to stop waiting and start building. If you're a student, a hustler, or anyone who's been told you're "too young" to make money — this one is for you. Konnected Minds Event - Kumasi - https://www.konnectedmindslive.com/ Chapters 00:00:00 Introduction: From Student to Popcorn Entrepreneur 00:03:31 The Birth of Favorie: Starting with Two Popcorn Machines 00:04:30 The Power of Partnership: Finding the Right Circle 00:12:32 Campus Depression and Creating Happiness Through Business 00:09:55 The Economics of Popcorn: Breaking Down the Numbers 00:10:59 Expansion Strategy: From One Stand to Multiple Branches 00:24:52 Dealing with Doubt: Overcoming the Young Success Stigma 00:30:44 The Third Partner: Giving Equity to Keep Talent 00:29:26 Planning for Sustainability: Lessons from Family Experience 00:32:54 The Investor Pitch: Revenue Projections and Expansion to Accra Follow Favorie - https://www.instagram.com/favorie_/?hl=en Web: https://www.favoriefoods.com/ ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ 🎙️ ABOUT THE HOST Derrick Abaitey is a Ghanaian entrepreneur, podcast host, and personal development advocate. IG: https://www.instagram.com/derrick.abaitey

    37 min
  5. Segment: Stop Blaming The Algorithm - You Need To Adapt Or Die In Media

    5 days ago ·  Bonus

    Segment: Stop Blaming The Algorithm - You Need To Adapt Or Die In Media

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down with Amir Debra — one of Ghana's pioneering bloggers and influencers with 20 years in media — for a conversation that dismantles the myth that you need a clear path, perfect qualifications, or massive funding to build a lasting career in content creation and media. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why switching from science to publishing was a gamble that paid off, why doing your national service at a magazine instead of a government office can change your entire trajectory, why being an introvert in a loud industry can actually be your advantage, why observing what everyone else misses is how you create content that stands out, and why 20 years in media means adapting constantly or becoming irrelevant. From winning best publishing student and using that opportunity to secure national service placement at Ovation Magazine, to planning a publishing business with his father that never materialized after his father's death, to building a career in blogging and influencing before most Ghanaians even understood what those terms meant — this conversation is proof that media is not just about popularity. It's about business sense, adaptability, and turning content into something sustainable. The conversation also dives deep into the realities of content creation in Ghana: why having followers doesn't mean having a business, why blaming the algorithm is easier than adapting your content strategy, why most influencers and musicians have the popularity but the business sense is not switched on early enough, and why content alone is not a path that pays enough unless you learn to monetize your attention and build multiple streams around your influence. From being part of the Writers and Debaters Club in secondary school while studying general science, to realizing publishing was more about book making than the broad media work he imagined, to capturing moments at events that everyone else missed because he was calm, observant, and positioned differently — this episode is a masterclass in how personality, timing, and the ability to see what others ignore can build a two decade career in one of the most unstable industries in Ghana. This episode is for every young person who thinks content creation is just posting and going viral, every aspiring influencer who believes followers equal income, and every creative who wonders how to turn years of visibility into actual business. Amir Debra proves that longevity in media is not about luck alone — it's about fate, preparation, adaptability, and knowing when to pivot before the industry leaves you behind.

    10 min
  6. Segment: Stop Chasing Jobs, Create Them - Entrepreneurship Beats 9-5 Slavery Every Time

    6 days ago ·  Bonus

    Segment: Stop Chasing Jobs, Create Them - Entrepreneurship Beats 9-5 Slavery Every Time

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down with Ebenezer Kajou Sakka Aroumeza — CEO and founder of Sakka Homes and five other businesses most people don't know about — for a conversation that dismantles the myth that you need massive capital, a perfect degree, or connections to build real wealth in Ghana. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why your idea is worth more than capital, why credibility is the currency that opens doors when banks won't, why waiting for the perfect job is killing your potential, why entrepreneurship is tough but it's yours and nobody can fire you from your own dream, and why real estate in Ghana is not going to get cheaper so stop crying about prices and start making more money. From carrying a photocopier to university while classmates carried suitcases, to starting a photocopy business in first year after spotting the opportunity weeks before school started, to watching his mother save for retirement only to die at 61 without enjoying a single day of it, to losing two fully built houses in court and choosing to walk away, to learning early that the 9 to 5 grind wasn't the life he wanted after working as a clerk at SSNIT — this conversation is proof that wealth is built by people who see opportunities others ignore and who value their reputation more than quick money. The conversation also dives deep into the mindset shift young Ghanaians desperately need: why going to school should teach you to create jobs not chase them, why studying developed countries shows you the gaps you can fill right here in Ghana, why your thoughts become your reality so you must be careful what you constantly think, why learning never stops even when you have three master's degrees, and why if he was 19 again he would dream bigger, believe more, and push harder because the information he has now would have made everything easier. From growing up in an ordinary home but attending Achimota where he met kids with air conditioners in their bedrooms and parents with five cars, to visiting their homes and workplaces and realizing that level of life was possible, to being raised by parents who never forced him into anything and let him roam freely at 15 building street connections across Accra — this episode is a masterclass in how exposure, independence, and hunger shape the entrepreneur before the business even begins. This episode is for every young person who thinks they need to travel abroad to make it, every graduate sitting idle waiting for a white collar job, and every aspiring entrepreneur who believes capital is the problem when the real issue is credibility, vision, and the refusal to start small and build steady.

    12 min
  7. Segment: Real Estate Won't Get Cheaper - Stop Crying About Prices and Start Making Money in Ghana

    31 May ·  Bonus

    Segment: Real Estate Won't Get Cheaper - Stop Crying About Prices and Start Making Money in Ghana

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down for a conversation that dismantles the myth that real estate in Ghana will ever become affordable by waiting or hoping for cheaper prices. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why homes are not going to get cheaper in Ghana, not today, not tomorrow, why when something is too good to be true in real estate it's always a scam, why diaspora Ghanaians keep falling for fraudulent developers promising miracle prices, why a four bedroom townhouse in East Legon selling for $580,000 makes perfect sense and is actually worth it, and why the only real solution is to stop crying about prices and start strategizing on how to make more money. From building three homes in one year after receiving compensation from a road expansion, to selling two and moving into one while flipping another property, to watching scam real estate companies paste billboards across Accra promising three bedrooms at ridiculous prices and knowing they would crash, to telling diaspora friends to avoid the trap and being ignored until months later when they called asking how he saw what they didn't see — this conversation is proof that real estate is called real estate because it's the only estate that is real, and even if the house burns, the land remains valuable. The conversation also dives deep into why real estate scams thrive in Ghana: how developers use slang, technology, and marketing to fool diaspora buyers who think they're lucky to find cheap deals, how content creators are paid to advertise fraudulent land deals with funny prices, how over 800 homes were promised by one company and buyers are still in court today, and why anyone who thinks they can buy prime property for less than market value is not lucky — they're a fool. From explaining why we import most building materials from the universal marketplace which drives on competition and price, to breaking down why the only variation in real estate cost is the price of land and finishes, to revealing that he sold 15 houses in the same area for 270 to 300 thousand dollars and apart from one Nigerian and two diaspora buyers everything was purchased by regular Ghanaians with regular income — this episode is a masterclass in understanding the real estate market, doing proper due diligence, and accepting that if you want to own property in a developed area like East Legon you need to make more money, not wait for miracles. This episode is for every young person who thinks real estate will magically become affordable, every diaspora Ghanaian who believes they can outsmart the market by finding cheap deals, and every Ghanaian who refuses to accept that the solution is not cheaper houses — it's higher income, better infrastructure like the Big Push agenda, and the discipline to strategize and save instead of falling for scams.

    11 min
  8. Segment: Good Ideas Attract Money - Focus on Solutions, Not Capital Excuses

    30 May ·  Bonus

    Segment: Good Ideas Attract Money - Focus on Solutions, Not Capital Excuses

    In this raw and unfiltered episode of Konnected Minds Podcast, Derrick Abaitey sits down for a conversation that dismantles the myth that you need massive capital, a perfect degree, or connections to build real wealth in Ghana. This episode breaks down the brutal truths most young Ghanaians refuse to hear: why waiting for the perfect job is killing your potential, why a university degree should teach you how to think differently not just how to follow orders, why selling pure water in traffic with a certificate is smarter than sitting idle waiting for a white collar job, why most people are not desperate enough for money to do what it takes, and why the darkest part of the night is closest to the morning so you should never give up when success is right around the corner. From delivering water in tankers wearing shorts and t-shirts while classmates avoided him, to being insulted by clients and choosing to protect the business instead of his ego, to buying land for $2,000 that's now worth $45,000 per plot just 20 years later, to living in Dansoman and Domi Parako while building wealth step by step — this conversation is proof that the real path to wealth in Ghana isn't about avoiding struggle. It's about starting small, staying disciplined, and climbing one step at a time without rushing. The conversation also dives deep into the mindset shift young Ghanaians need: why the average salary of $1,500 to $2,000 can't sustain life but that same person can start a business selling pure water, fruit, or kelewele and make $2,500 a week, why most of us are thieves and crooks because we refuse to start small and build honestly, why a good idea is more important than capital because investors will fund a solid concept, and why motivation and discipline must work together because motivation gets you started but discipline keeps you going. From playing the Mega Millions every time he travels to America because he believes one day he will win, to reading Seven Habits of Highly Effective People as the book that changed his life, to constantly going back to school not just for knowledge but to build his network and meet more people — this episode is a masterclass in resilience, humility, and the power of starting where you are with what you have. This episode is for every young person who thinks they need to travel abroad to make it, every graduate who believes their degree should exempt them from dirty work, and every entrepreneur who's afraid to start small because they think it's beneath them. This conversation proves that wealth is built by people who are willing to climb, not jump.

    11 min

Trailer

About

Konnected Minds: Success, Wealth & Mindset. This show helps ambitious people crush limiting beliefs and build unstoppable confidence. Created and Hosted by Derrick Abaitey YT: https://youtube.com/@KonnectedMinds?si=s2vkw92aRslgfsV_ IG: https://www.instagram.com/konnectedminds/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@konnectedminds?_t=8ispP2H1oBC&_r=1 Podcast in Africa | Podcast in Ghana | Podcast in Nigeria | Best Podcast in Nigeria | Africa's best podcast

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