Financially Incorrect

Financially Incorrect

Money doesn't have to be intimidating. The Financially Incorrect Podcast is a fun and informative way to learn about personal finance. Host Barrack Bukusi debunks money myths and reveals the truth behind common misconceptions. Join him with a different guest every week as he helps you achieve your financial goals.

  1. 7 HR AGO

    Ogutu Okudo: On Oil, Power, Politics And Money

    Ogutu Okudo did not enter Kenya’s energy sector through engineering or petroleum science. She studied foreign policy and diplomacy, then made a sharp pivot after Kenya’s 2012 oil discovery and positioned herself inside one of Africa’s most competitive and male dominated industries.In this episode Ogutu breaks down the realities behind oil and gas, the politics of energy investment, why Kenya lost the regional pipeline advantage to Tanzania, and what most people misunderstand about money, networking, and long term career building.She speaks candidly about earning KSh 15,000 in her first role, quitting jobs that undervalued her skills, surviving industry downturns after studying oil and gas in Aberdeen, and building influence through strategic relationships instead of chasing quick money.Ogutu also shares the painful lesson of negotiating what she believed was a 15 million deal only to receive 1.5 million because the contract terms were misunderstood, a mistake that permanently changed how she approaches money, paperwork, and negotiations.Beyond energy, this conversation explores investment discipline, farming economics, leadership, gender inclusion in African industries, and the difference between visibility and real value creation.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Timestamps:00:00 Why Kenya Lost The Pipeline Deal02:11 Ogutu Okudo’s First Business At 1305:34 The Money Lesson That Changed Her Early08:27 Why Kenya’s Oil Discovery Changed Everything12:46 Finishing University In 2.5 Years16:03 Betting Her Career On Oil & Gas20:41 Moving To Aberdeen During Industry Chaos25:58 The Reality Of Studying Oil & Gas Abroad30:22 Coming Back To Kenya With No Clear Path34:17 Earning KSh15K In Her First Role38:46 Why She Kept Leaving Jobs Early43:02 Building Women In Energy Africa48:29 Networking That Actually Opens Doors53:44 How She Positioned Herself Around Power58:36 Why Experience Pays More Than Salary01:03:58 The Contract Mistake That Cost Millions01:09:12 Kenya vs Tanzania Pipeline Politics01:15:08 Why Kenya Is Still A Frontier Oil Nation01:20:47 The Business Of Oil, Diplomacy & Influence01:25:14 Investing In Avocado & Vanilla Farming01:29:33 The Harsh Reality Of Export Markets01:32:41 Why Women Struggle In Energy Sectors01:35:04 Her Philosophy On Money & Wealth01:37:02 Final Advice For Young Professionals

    1hr 37min
  2. 3 DAYS AGO

    Building a Tax Advisory Firm From Zero | Waithera Mugo

    Waithera Mugo did not build a tax law firm at the right time. She built it when there were no clients, no savings, and the world had slowed to a halt.In this business edition, Waithera Mugo, founder of Ithera Africa, breaks down what it actually takes to survive and scale in one of the most complex, high pressure legal specializations, tax.From defending multi million shilling tax disputes to navigating the evolving enforcement environment driven by Kenya Revenue Authority, this conversation moves beyond theory into the real mechanics of law, money, and resilience.We get into the economics of legal practice, why most lawyers struggle with cash flow, how tax enforcement is quietly reshaping business in Kenya, and what founders consistently misunderstand about compliance, structure, and risk.This is not a conversation about law in isolation. It is about leverage, positioning, and building a business where precision matters more than noise.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters00:00 Introduction01:18 Why she chose law at six03:42 University years and first business06:55 Unpaid internships and early pressure10:12 Entering the legal profession13:40 Leaving roles to prioritize growth17:05 Starting Hydera Africa during COVID20:48 No clients, no savings, early reality24:10 The role of mentorship in survival27:35 Discovering tax law as a niche31:20 First major tax case breakdown35:05 Inside high stakes tax disputes39:10 How Kenya Revenue Authority enforces compliance43:25 Understanding ETMS and its impact47:40 Why compliance is getting harder51:30 Common tax mistakes founders make55:15 Structuring your business properly59:05 Transitioning into tax specialization01:02:40 Charging premium legal fees01:06:15 Managing cash flow in a law firm01:10:05 Separating business and personal finances01:13:20 Building and managing a legal team01:16:45 From lawyer to business leader01:20:10 Simplifying tax for everyday businesses01:23:30 The future of tax enforcement01:26:10 Advice for founders and professionals01:28:00 Closing thoughts

    1hr 29min
  3. 1 MAY

    From Banking Trainee to Fintech Industry Leader | Esther Waititu

    What does it take to move from traditional banking into shaping the future of financial inclusion across an entire continent?In this episode of Financially Incorrect, we sit down with Esther Waititu Chief Financial Services Officer at Safaricom to unpack a career that spans banking, international markets, and now fintech at scale through Safaricom.From earning between Ksh 9k - 15k a month earlier in her career to negotiating executive compensation structures, Esther shares the decisions that defined her trajectory, including the career step back that expanded her leadership capacity and the financial mistake she still reflects on today.We explore how Kenya’s financial ecosystem has evolved, the role of competition in forcing innovation, and how platforms like M-Pesa and new investment tools like Ziidi Trader are quietly reshaping access to wealth-building for millions.This conversation goes beyond personal finance. It is about strategy, discipline, and how institutions are redefining what participation in the financial system looks like.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters00:00 Intro01:18 Meet Esther Waititu03:42 Growing Up Firstborn08:15 Early Money Lessons14:27 Starting Career on Low Salary20:54 Becoming CEO Minded Early28:11 Career Risks That Paid Off36:45 Marriage, Twins and Budgeting44:03 Buying a Car Instead of Property51:36 Saving Before Borrowing58:12 Negotiating Executive Pay01:06:41 South Africa and Zambia Lessons01:15:20 Why Kenyan Banking Changed01:24:07 Safaricom’s Financial Future01:34:22 Ziidi Trader Investing for Everyday Kenyans01:44:10 What Success Really Means01:50:33 Final thoughts

    1hr 58min
  4. 28 APR

    Film Paid Me More Than 20 Years in Corporate | Matthew Nabiswo | Uganda Edition

    What does it actually look like to walk away from stability and build something of your own?In this Uganda edition episode, Matthew Nabiswo breaks down a journey that most people never see clearly until it is too late to turn back. After two decades in corporate, rising from a $100 salary to $1,000 a month, he found himself pushed out at a moment that could have easily defined the rest of his life. Instead, it became the turning point.We get into the uncomfortable middle. The year where income dropped to almost nothing. The pressure of debt, expectations, and visibility. The quiet decisions that do not make headlines but determine outcomes. And how he and his wife built a film production company from the ground up with no safety net, just relationships, consistency, and a deep understanding of who actually pays.This is not just a story about film. It is a masterclass in positioning. Why NGOs became his first real clients. Why government contracts nearly broke momentum. Why professionalism, not talent, became the differentiator that unlocked $20,000 and $40,000 deals.We also get into the structural realities of Uganda’s film industry. The distribution bottleneck. The gap between talent and monetization. And why local audiences remain the most undervalued opportunity in African media today.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Tagore Living Apartment - https://share.google/o2fVbZApFQ1tGWd7nFor all your production needs in Uganda: Contact: +256705098317 / +256786312218 | https://www.cinemaug.com/Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_IncFor all your production needs in Uganda: Contact: 0705098317 / 0786312218 | https://www.cinemaug.com/💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters0:00 Intro1:14 Meet Matthew Nabiswo3:52 Childhood lessons about money7:48 Paying his own way through university12:36 First jobs and surviving on low salaries18:55 Building a 20-year corporate career26:42 The setback that changed everything32:18 Why he left employment38:07 Starting a production company with his wife44:12 The toughest financial season49:36 First major breakthrough contract55:48 Making more in 6 years than 20 years employed1:00:22 Fame vs real financial pressure1:03:47 Uganda’s film industry opportunity1:07:12 Why real estate is the next move1:09:18 Final thoughts on money, risk and growth

    1hr 11min
  5. 24 APR

    Lessons From Losing Everything And Starting Again | Alemu Emuron

    Alemu Emuron has spent over two decades building campaigns across 34 African countries for brands like Coca-Cola, Airtel, Unilever, and Diageo — winning Cannes Lions and Grand Prix awards along the way. But before the continental footprint and the accolades, he was a broke young creative sleeping between a Kampala office and a bar, surviving on credit and stubbornness, watching his advertising career get pulled from under him just eight months into his best-paying job yet.In this episode, Alemu sits down with Financially Incorrect for one of the most honest creative industry conversations we've had. He breaks down how a childhood in Uganda learning to negotiate pocket money with a mother who only gave you half of what you asked for became the financial foundation that eventually funded his own agency without a single external investor. He talks about the difference between dreaming big and being delusional, what it actually costs to be a Group Creative Director in Kenya, why great advertising without organizational alignment is a lie, and how the death of a close friend with cancer permanently changed his relationship with money.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters00:00 Introduction to Alemu Emuron04:23 The Optimistic Pessimist Mindset06:26 Why Advertising Is Broken10:07 The Greatest Kenyan Ad Campaign11:55 Why Brands Must Act Not Advertise16:17 Why Brand Events Are Booming19:05 Money Lessons From His Mother24:11 Why Money Means Protection27:24 His First Job and Salary31:37 First Big Career Breakthrough35:24 Fired and Financially Struggling45:00 Living Between Office and Bars48:44 The Comeback Begins53:50 Salary Growth and Work Ethic57:23 The Rhino Tinder Campaign01:01:24 Why He Returned to Nairobi01:05:24 Scanad vs Ogilvy Culture01:11:17 Why Consistency Is Rare01:17:28 Marriage Changed His Finances01:23:24 Creative Director Salaries in Kenya01:24:31 Starting His Own Agency01:28:52 What Financial Success Means01:30:15 Lessons for His Children01:32:09 Working With Netflix01:33:58 Sell a Fridge to an Eskimo01:35:13 Final Advice

    1hr 37min
  6. 21 APR

    From Almost Nothing to 4,000 Airbnb Listings | Ivy Nairobi Spaces

    Ivy started out earning 100 KES a day doing laundry during COVID. She got docked down to 6,000 KES a month as a supermarket cashier. She tried crochet, braiding, web development, and forex trading none of it stuck. Then she noticed something nobody else was paying attention to: Nairobi had thousands of empty Airbnb units and zero one-stop place to book them.Today, Nairobi Spaces manages access to over 4,000 listings, hosted 3,500 guests in 2025 alone, and pulls in between 200K–300K KES per month without owning a single property.In this Business Edition episode, Ivy breaks down exactly how she built it: the TikTok post that started everything, the con that cost her 70,000 KES, why property management almost tanked the business, and the model that actually works.If you're thinking about getting into the short-term rental space in Kenya or building any kind of business in the middle of a market gap this one is for you.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters00:00 Intro01:00 Airbnb Scam That Cost 70K03:08 Growing Up With Little & First Jobs11:08 Why She Left College16:42 Forex Trading & Mentorship Income19:19 How Nairobi Spaces Started23:57 How The Business Makes Money32:23 Building a Host Network35:54 Why Customers Choose Nairobi Spaces37:22 Why Property Management Failed40:45 Making 200K–300K Per Month42:49 Taxes, Regulation & Safety46:45 Growth Plans & Expansion58:00 What Makes a Profitable Airbnb01:03:53 Mombasa & Watamu Expansion01:06:26 Final Advice & Closing

    1hr 8min
  7. 17 APR

    What Women Actually Need to Build Wealth | Mumbi Ndung’u, Dorothy Ooko & Moonika Jurgenfeldt

    What do women really need to thrive today? At What Women Want 4.0, - Let's Make Money Honey session , we sat down with three accomplished leaders, Mumbi Ndung’u Founder CEO PLP, Dorothy Ooko Co- Founder WSN and Moonika Jurgenfeldt CEO FXPesa for an honest conversation on money, leadership, negotiation, confidence, career growth, and the realities women still face in professional spaces.This episode goes beyond surface-level empowerment talk. It explores why many women still ask for less than they deserve, why financial independence matters, how patience and consistency shape long-term success and why workplaces still need deeper cultural change.Mumbi Ndung’u shares lessons on persistence, boundaries, and building impact. Dorothy Ooko breaks down career leverage, broad experience, and the power of financial freedom. Moonika Jugernfeldt explains long-term thinking, investing strategically, and why broad knowledge compounds over time.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_Inc💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters00:00 Intro01:06 Meet Mumbi Ndung’u, Dorothy Ooko & Moonika Jugernfeldt03:18 Why We Take Things Personally09:42 Identity, Confidence & Leadership Pressure15:58 Investing in Yourself for Career Growth23:47 Broad Experience vs Early Specialisation31:26 Why Women Negotiate Below Their Value39:54 Money, Freedom & Financial Agency48:08 Entrepreneurship Sacrifices No One Sees54:36 Patience in Career Progression59:44 What Women Want vs What Women Need01:05:12 Advice to the Next Generation01:08:24 Final Reflections

    1hr 10min
  8. 14 APR

    From Village Teacher to Royal Wedding Photographer | James Lubinga | Uganda Edition

    Most people chase job security. James Lubinga walked away from it.In this Uganda Edition, we sit down with the CEO of Paramount Images Studio to break down how he went from being a school teacher to one of the most sought-after wedding photographers in Uganda.What started as a side hustle shooting school events quietly grew into a business pulling in more than his salary. Then came the turning point. Scaling demand. Burnout. Pricing mistakes. And the decision to stop thinking like an employee and start building a companyThis conversation goes deep into the real economics of photography. The long hours behind a single wedding. The mistake most creatives make when pricing their work. And how branding turned James from “a guy with a camera” into a business handling multiple weddings in a single weekend.He also shares how Ugandan wedding culture created a serious market opportunity. Big budgets. Multi-day events. Clients willing to pay for quality. But also a gap in professionalism that still exists today.If you’re creative, entrepreneurial, or trying to turn a side hustle into a real business, this episode will challenge how you think about money, skill, and growth.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Tagore Living Apartment - https://share.google/o2fVbZApFQ1tGWd7nFor all your production needs in Uganda: Contact: +256705098317 / +256786312218 | https://www.cinemaug.com/Access all our links in one place: ⁠https://lnk.bio/Financially_IncFor all your production needs in Uganda: Contact: 0705098317 / 0786312218 | https://www.cinemaug.com/💹 Ready to start trading?🔍 Who is FXPesa: ⁠https://shorturl.at/rWFqC🎓 Learn how to trade: ⁠https://shorturl.at/xR2Ye⁠📊 Try a demo account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/izDMc⁠💸 Open a live account: ⁠https://shorturl.at/Od2ux---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Episode Chapters0:00 Introduction0:32 Starting as a Teacher0:57 Photography as a Side Hustle3:53 Why He Fell in Love with Photography5:51 Growing Up and Money Lessons10:14 Why He Became a Teacher13:56 Buying His First Camera16:40 Making Money in Schools20:08 Leaving Teaching Behind24:08 Building the Business28:54 Learning to Improve Constantly30:17 First Wedding Experience34:18 What Makes a Great Wedding Album36:07 Scaling a Team41:56 Photography Industry Growth46:15 High Paying Weddings48:58 Business Model Today51:22 Training the Next Generation52:58 Uganda vs Kenya Weddings54:40 Market Gaps and Opportunities57:18 Money Mistakes and Lessons59:45 Final Thoughts

    1hr 2min

About

Money doesn't have to be intimidating. The Financially Incorrect Podcast is a fun and informative way to learn about personal finance. Host Barrack Bukusi debunks money myths and reveals the truth behind common misconceptions. Join him with a different guest every week as he helps you achieve your financial goals.

You Might Also Like