Konnected Minds Podcast

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: Your Presence in Business Changes Everything-How He Built a Supply Business From Nothing

    3 HR AGO · BONUS

    Segment: Your Presence in Business Changes Everything-How He Built a Supply Business From Nothing

    From sanitation business opportunities to distribution logistics to the brutal truth about why coming down your ego and showing up every day at every customer's shop is the only way to build a business that lasts, the Koforidua sanitation problem where they have nowhere to dump refuse because the dump site is full creating an opportunity for someone to buy a tricycle, visit 100 houses every morning collecting refuse at five cedis per house making real money that nobody wants to touch because they want white collar office jobs, the logistics challenge of using Mr. Frempong's pickup truck that gets stopped at police barriers because it's loaded beyond the legal limit proving that transportation is the bottleneck when demand is higher than supply capacity, the warehouse expansion problem because the business is growing so fast that storage space is running out, the competitors who don't know where to get the product but try to be smart and steal customers anyway, the loyal customers like the woman and Antinana who called to say "some people brought some of your brand but we told them you are here so we buy from them" proving that relationships and showing up every day builds loyalty that competitors can't break, the Christmas move of buying goods and supplying them to all 180 customers including people he had never seen before because some customers he only met for the first time when he delivered the Christmas goods to Akyiatia, the daily routine of visiting every customer in Koforidua every single day because doing business with your presence and doing business with your absence are two completely different things, the Akyiatia trip where customers refused to give money to his sales person saying "if he has traveled he would be back, when he comes we will pay" proving that being present is the only way to collect payments in a market where money issues are common, the grandmother's advice to "come down your ego and money will look for you" like the driver playing loud music who gets angry when a passenger asks him to lower it and the passenger gets down losing the driver money in that moment, the best advice from Mr. Frempong to "just be truthful, don't spoil your reputation because that's why I stood for you from the start, that's why they brought the goods, so don't disappoint me," the motivation over discipline approach because gathering 180 customers in one and a half years when it's difficult for a customer to change their supplier means doing something exceptional like going to their shops to help them sell and fostering good relationships, the decision to leave friends behind and only keep one childhood friend Debenezer because if you call him it must be about things that will make him someone in the future, legit business investment opportunities, not here or there nonsense, and why the ultimate truth is this: there are so many problems in Ghana people can solve whether it's sanitation in Koforidua or distribution of essential goods, money is in Ghana but they don't like the dirty work, they want to be in offices earning 800 a month when that sanitation business visiting 100 houses a day at five cedis per house is actually a lot of money, but you must be present every day, visit your customers, help them sell, build relationships, and understand that being there and not being there is two different things. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with a young entrepreneur who dismantles the dangerous "I need a white collar office job to make money" mentality that keeps graduates stuck waiting for 800 cedi monthly salaries, revealing the exact moment when loyal customers in Antinana called to say competitors brought his brand but they refused to buy because "you are here so we buy from you," when visiting every customer in Koforidua every single day built relationships so strong that customers in Akyiatia refused to pay his sales person saying "when he comes we will pay" because presence is everything in a market where money issues are common, when buying goods and supplying them to all 180 customers at Christmas including people he had never seen before proved that generosity and relationship building create loyalty competitors cannot break. Host: Derrick Abaitey

    8 min
  2. Segment: 'White Collar Jobs Don't Pay in Ghana' - Why I Left the Interview Process to Start Selling

    1 DAY AGO · BONUS

    Segment: 'White Collar Jobs Don't Pay in Ghana' - Why I Left the Interview Process to Start Selling

    From three years of job rejections to building a distribution business on credit and integrity, and why the brutal truth about Ghana's job market is that it's a cartel where 90% of positions are filled internally before they're even posted, the assistant brand manager interview at Verbe Company in 2023 where he qualified for the second stage but the hiring manager resigned and five months later they reposted the job and rejected him again proving the system isn't fair to youth looking for their financial breakthrough, the sales manager interview where he answered all the questions but the manager refused to answer two simple questions about a new brand saying "I'll only answer when you're part of us" which triggered the realization that "I need to start doing something different myself because how I think is different from how they are thinking," the moment he got rejected for a manager position and then rejected again for a sales executive role at the same company even though he had the qualifications and they weren't asking for experience, the reality that white collar jobs don't pay in Ghana and money is in trade because you can go to the market and see market women who can buy goods worth 100,000 cedis and pay cash with no higher education while graduates sit home waiting for government jobs that never come, the decision to accept 1,000 cedis salary from a man just to get working experience and build a brand from scratch moving from market to market trying to convince customers to buy when it's difficult for a customer to change suppliers because of existing relationships, the woman at Abowa who said "this woman will help me achieve my target" after he kept showing up at her shop every single day until she finally bought five packs and told him "go here, go here, go here, tell them Abowa said she'll come" which opened doors to 10 new customers in one day, the liquidity issues between his boss and the company that cut supply and left him home for two months until his friend Debenezer said "Kinsley, go for it" standing at the roadside, the call to the money manager saying "I want to handle the distribution with my boss's consent but I don't have money to buy the goods, if you give me a week I will sell and bring you the money," the integrity move of dividing profits with his boss and paying the company on time which built trust so they increased credit from one week to two weeks, the customer Mr. Patrick at Suapre Point who said "if you want to start something for yourself I have a warehouse, bring your goods in," and why the ultimate truth is this: the system in Ghana is not giving way for the average youth to think beyond white collar jobs, the unemployment rate is higher than jobs available, recruitment is like a cartel where they already have someone they want to pick and use interviews as formality, jobs posted online are 90% for internal recruitment and they only go outside when they want top manager positions like marketing manager or director, but if you're willing to build relationships, show up every day, sell on credit, pay back on time, and operate with integrity even when liquidity is tight, you can turn zero capital into a distribution business that grows because customers need the product and suppliers trust you to deliver. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with a young entrepreneur who dismantles the dangerous "wait for a white collar job to save you" mentality that keeps graduates stuck in three year job searches, revealing the exact moment when getting rejected for an assistant brand manager position at Verbe Company after qualifying for the second stage, then seeing them repost the job five months later and reject him again, then getting rejected for a sales manager role and rejected again for a sales executive position at the same company proved the system is a cartel where HR departments are friends with recruitment agencies and 90% of jobs are filled internally before they're posted. Host: Derrick Abaitey

    12 min
  3. Segment: Zero Capital, 4.5 Million in Sales - The Power of Separating Your Business Accounts

    2 DAYS AGO

    Segment: Zero Capital, 4.5 Million in Sales - The Power of Separating Your Business Accounts

    From accepting 1,000 cedis salary to building a 4.5 million cedi business in six months, and why working for money you earn is better than free handouts because there's nothing free in this world, the brutal truth about why everyone has an opportunity to make money but it takes wisdom to turn 10 cedis into 15 cedis while most people just spend what they get, the three-account system that separates failing businesses from growing ones: reinvestment account, buffer account, and personal account, because if you make 50,000 a month and spend 40,000 on yourself you're not helping the company grow, the December that brought 400,000 cedis in sales proving the festive season is real money, the decision to pay himself only 1,500 cedis a month while reinvesting everything else because serving yourself to a standard where you can't resist taking money from capital is how businesses die, the young guy from TikTok who came with 2,640 cedis and walked away with 12 packs after the profit margin was split in half so he could sell and build his own, and why the ultimate truth is this: 1,000 cedis can buy five packs of product, sell them retail at 80 cedis profit per pack instead of 20 cedis wholesale, and turn that small capital into real money if you're willing to do the work, help people climb up, and understand that money is funny—you can get it today and tomorrow it's gone unless you invest it into something lucrative. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with a young entrepreneur who dismantles the dangerous "wait for free money from family" mentality that keeps young people broke, revealing the exact moment when accepting 1,000 cedis salary from his boss gave him something to show at the end of the month instead of begging aunties for 300 cedis here and 500 cedis there, when working and earning something is better than someone giving you money for free because even delivering something to the station and getting transportation is payment for what you did, when the realization hit that "I'm a man, I actually need to do something for myself" instead of always asking people for handouts that vanish within the blink of an eye because you're just spending them. This isn't motivational business talk from Instagram influencers, it's a systematic breakdown of why everyone has an opportunity to money but limited people can turn 10 cedis into 15 cedis profit because most people see money as something to spend not invest, why tracking your business from June to December and selling goods worth 4.5 million cedis proves that paying attention to stocks and spending is how you know if you're actually making money, why the three-account system from chat GPT separates businesses that fail from businesses. Host: Derrick Abaitey

    9 min
  4. Segment - How I Built a Distribution Business Selling Essential Goods on Credit

    4 DAYS AGO · BONUS

    Segment - How I Built a Distribution Business Selling Essential Goods on Credit

    From jobless graduate to distribution powerhouse solving problems in Ghana's essential goods market, and why putting your degree aside to sell toilet rolls and fabric softener door to door is the only way to make money when the system isn't giving opportunities to youth, the three-year job search that ended with the realization that "if I don't get this job, I'm going to create my own" using skills learned from the market and school, the strategic move of offering customers lower prices than their current suppliers even at zero profit just to break even and build long-term relationships because "it's difficult for a customer to change his supplier," the godfather moment when Mr. Frempong's integrity and network with CDage manufacturers opened doors to 100 packs of fabric softener on credit without paying upfront, the first sales girl hire and the Muslim imam Muhammad Tahiro who knew customers in Koforidua and Abram and sold 250 boxes on his first day proving "this guy can really help me," the 800-box minimum policy from suppliers that keeps small retailers locked out but creates opportunity for distributors who buy in volume and break it down, and why the ultimate truth is this: money in Ghana is in trade, not in white-collar jobs, because the market woman who takes goods worth 15,000 cedis and pays cash that same day proves that if you want to make money you need to solve a problem whether it's sanitation or essential goods or communication, and putting your ego aside is the only way to unlock the wealth that's hidden in the dirty jobs nobody wants to do. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with a young entrepreneur who dismantles the dangerous "I need a white-collar job to be successful" mentality that keeps graduates stuck in three-year job searches, revealing the exact moment when taking 10 packs of fabric softener on credit from a supplier, selling them to customers in Koforidua, and returning the money after a week while earning 40 cedis per pack became the foundation of a distribution business built on integrity, relationships, and the willingness to do the work nobody else wants to do. This isn't motivational business talk from Instagram influencers, it's a systematic breakdown of why solving a problem is the only way to make money whether you're Elon Musk with internet connections or a young Ghanaian selling toilet rolls and washing powder because essential goods are money, why prospecting customers and offering them lower prices than their current suppliers even at zero profit builds long-term relationships that pay off when you're ready to scale, why Mr. Frempong's integrity and recommendation opened doors to 100 packs of Safari Mini Jumbo fabric softener on credit from CDage manufacturers without paying upfront because "the man stood in and because of his integrity they brought it," why the power of recommendation comes when your integrity leads you and people you've been truthful with open doors you couldn't open yourself, why poverty's best friend is information asymmetry like two people in a race where one knows taking glucose and steroids makes you run faster and the other has no idea so the one with information wins, why bringing in Muhammad Tahiro the imam who had worked with Mr. Frempong before and knew customers in Koforidua and Abram led to 250 boxes sold on the first day proving the right hire changes everything, why suppliers do volume with 800-box minimums and policies that say "a car no move unless you pick 800 packs" which locks out small retailers but creates opportunity for distributors who buy bulk and break it down for the market, why customers care about quality but ultimately it's all about pricing because suppliers aiming for abnormal profits get ditched when someone offers the same product at lower prices, Host: Derrick Abaitey

    12 min
  5. Segment: 'Don't Make Your Life's Clock Somebody's Clock' - Societal Pressure Is Ruining Your Future

    5 DAYS AGO

    Segment: 'Don't Make Your Life's Clock Somebody's Clock' - Societal Pressure Is Ruining Your Future

    From societal pressure to financial sacrifice to the brutal truth about why marriage timelines and designer lifestyles are destroying young people's futures - and why the pressure to marry at 28 as a woman or settle down as a man without having your life figured out will send you into depression for the rest of your life watching your classmates buy cars and houses while you struggle, the Instagram illusion where people see someone wearing a beautiful dress and think they bought it when the truth is designers made it and gave it to them for free, the 28-year-old man taking out loans to pay for a wedding he'll spend two years paying off because he allowed societal pressure to control his decisions instead of waiting until he was ready, and why the brutal reality is this: if you go into a relationship, settle down, have another human being to take care of when you're not ready - you will be depressed every day watching your friend Derek who was your classmate doing his podcasts, practicing his pharmacy, able to buy his car, able to buy a house, and you are wondering what's happening to me, while the real question becomes: why are you making your life's clock somebody else's clock when you don't know what they're doing with their money or what other responsibilities they have, because the pressure we felt 25 years ago should not be felt today and the children of today should not go through what we went through with the "at this age you must marry, at this age you must have your car" mentality that puts people in boxes and limits their potential. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Nana Aba Anamoah - a powerhouse media personality who dismantles the dangerous "follow society's timeline or you're a failure" mentality that pushes people into marriages, debt, and decisions they're not ready for, revealing the exact moment when the girl wearing that dress on Instagram didn't actually buy it because designers made it and gave it to her so don't go looking for money to buy what you see someone else wearing. This isn't motivational life advice from Instagram influencers - it's a systematic breakdown of why the pressure to marry at 28 as a woman or settle down as a man without having your life figured out will send you into depression watching your classmates succeed while you struggle, why people see someone on social media wearing a beautiful dress and think they bought it when designers gave it to them for free so don't go looking for money to buy what you see others wearing, why making your life's clock somebody else's clock is unfair because you don't know what they're doing with their money or what responsibilities they have, why allowing yourself to be put in a box limits your potential and lets people control your narrative, why showing up to a 9 a.m. meeting at 9:15 and waiting until 9:30 is the maximum even if you need a favor because sitting for hours while someone thinks they're big is disrespectful and you will walk out, why being consistently late is disrespectful to other people especially for important meetings, why two people with the best CVs showed up at 10 a.m. for an 8 a.m. interview and didn't get interviewed because if you don't take the interview seriously you won't take the work seriously, why you must have self-respect and standards or you're not heading anywhere, why your character must count for something because people watch and the days when God was just giving out blessings are over - now you have to work for it, why friends were buying new cars every year but the sacrifice was made to pay expensive international school fees and thousands of dollars in US university tuition instead, why wanting to give your child the best education means not buying designer bags that cost 4,000 pounds and not doing certain things for yourself, why making a pact with your son saying \"whatever you need I will provide, focus on the books, I'll buy the sneakers and shirts you want, just ace your grades\" is the commitment that requires sacrifice, and why if you have a child and want to give them the best education but you're not wealthy like other wealthy people - don't be dreaming of buying designer bags while sitting there unable to pay school fees, making sacrifice, self-respect, and refusing to let society's timeline control your decisions the foundation of building a life where your children get the best opportunities and you don't spend the rest of your days depressed watching others succeed while you struggle under the weight of choices you made to impress people who don't matter. Guest: Nana Aba Anamoah Host: Derrick Abaitey

    10 min
  6. Segment: 'Your Child Should Get Guidance From You, Not Strangers'- Being a Friend To Them Matters

    6 DAYS AGO · BONUS

    Segment: 'Your Child Should Get Guidance From You, Not Strangers'- Being a Friend To Them Matters

    From career freedom to parental control to the brutal truth about why being a parent means being a friend, a guide, and a mentor all at once - and why children who can't get support at home will seek guidance from complete strangers you have no control over, the young boy at work doing AI research who sent a long WhatsApp message explaining that anytime he comes around it's not because he has nothing to do but because he's found a new interest and wants to work part-time while still in school, when the parents don't get it and it's troubling the child so now he's talking to someone his parents don't even know instead of opening up at home, the son who wanted to be a formalist then a rapper then a graphic designer then business economics then IT and now artificial intelligence, when financing the music video and letting him put it on YouTube knowing he would come back and say "I don't want to do that again" was about respecting his choices and letting him feel free to make his decisions, when he went to university in the US and second year said "I don't think I like business economics" and the response was "whatever you want to do feel free to do it as long as I'm alive and I can take care of you no problem," when choosing a state where he didn't know anybody instead of New York where he had too many friends so he could focus on his studies, when raising a latchkey child who knows where the food is, where the fridge is, when to sleep, who can be on his own and be comfortable in his space even when his mother travels for two weeks, and why the ultimate truth is this: your responsibility as a parent is not just financial, it is emotional, it is mental, you have to be present at all times because you have decided to be responsible for another human being. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Nana Aba Anamoah - a powerhouse media personality who dismantles the dangerous "I pay the school fees so I control your future" mentality that creates distance between parents and children, revealing the exact moment parents have put a wall between them and their children, when society should not tell a woman that because she has two or three children now and her husband is making so much money she should stop working and stay at home and take care of the home, when even the men are comfortable with their wives working but it's those on the peripherals who are calling the shots because they think this is how a woman's life should be, when a woman's decision is hers to make just as much as you would make the decision for a man - you cannot say that because you have a male child and he is a male he has to do a certain job because he's a man. This isn't motivational parenting talk from Instagram influencers - it's a systematic breakdown of why you must be a parent, a friend, and a guide all at once so your child is comfortable talking to you about anything without judgment, why being present means noticing when the young boy at work stays late because he's found a new interest and needs guidance but can't get it at home so he's reaching out to someone his parents don't even know, why parents must stop imposing and superimposing what they wanted to be that they couldn't achieve on their children - wanting them to be lawyers and pharmacists and doctors because it was a dream for them they didn't achieve is not fair, why being adventurous and allowing them to go through different phases is part of growing up in a different generation that has evolved so much, why independence means letting your child make their choices and when they make a disastrous mistake they know mommy is there, uncle is there, auntie is there, why you shouldn't just be seen as a parent but as a guide and a friend from get go so your child is comfortable talking to you about every and anything without being judged, why parents who are so stuck in their ways declaring "this is what my child is going to be as far as I am paying school fees" create children who go wayward because if they're not getting support at home they'll get it somewhere else, why the most dangerous thing you can do is let your child get guidance from a complete stranger you have no control over, and why your responsibility as a parent is not just financial but emotional and mental - you have to be present at all times because you have decided to be responsible for another human being, making presence, friendship, and mentorship the three roles every child needs you to play if you want them to grow into confident, supported, and emotionally healthy adults who come to you first instead of turning to strangers who don't have their best interests at heart. Guest: Nana Aba Anamoah Host: Derrick Abaitey

    12 min
  7. Segment: 'You Must Be a Parent, a Friend, a Guide' - The Three Roles Every Child Needs You to Play

    23 FEB

    Segment: 'You Must Be a Parent, a Friend, a Guide' - The Three Roles Every Child Needs You to Play

    From parental control to emotional presence to the brutal truth about why being a parent means being a friend, a guide, and a mentor all at once - and why children who can't get support at home will seek guidance from complete strangers you have no control over, the young boy at work doing AI research who sent a long WhatsApp message explaining that anytime he comes around it's not because he has nothing to do but because he's found a new interest and wants to work part-time while still in school, when the parents don't get it and it's troubling the child so now he's talking to someone his parents don't even know instead of opening up at home, the son who sits for a surprise test and comes home scratching his hair saying "we had a surprise test today and it didn't go well" and instead of harsh judgment the response is laughter and the lesson that you must always be prepared because that's why it's a surprise test, and why some parents are so stuck in their ways declaring "this is what my child is going to be as far as I am paying school fees" without understanding that's not fair and that's why some children go wayward - because if they're not getting support at home they'll get it somewhere else, while the real question becomes: are you present in your child's life, do you notice when your child stays longer than usual, do you invite their friends over so you can hear their conversations and understand their personalities, because sometimes people are not looking for handouts - all they need is to be noticed and recognized, and the ultimate truth is this: your responsibility as a parent is not just financial, it is emotional, it is mental, you have to be present at all times because you have decided to be responsible for another human being. In this raw episode of Konnected Minds, host Derrick Abaitey sits down with Nana Aba Anamoah - a powerhouse media personality who dismantles the dangerous "I pay the school fees so I control your future" mentality that creates distance between parents and children, revealing the exact moment when a young boy at work doing AI research sent a long WhatsApp message that couldn't be replied to for two days because he's seen a new interest and wants to work part-time while still in school but the parents don't get it, when that young boy is now talking to someone his parents don't even know because ideally if he's unhappy with something he should be able to open up to his parents but parents have put a wall between them and their children, when the son comes home from a surprise test scratching his hair saying "it didn't go well" and instead of harsh rebuke there's laughter and the lesson that you should always be prepared because that's why it's a surprise test, when reviewing the child means acknowledging "you should have done better because the previous term you did better" but also praising what went well instead of focusing only on the negative, when inviting the son's friends over means sitting with them hearing their conversations understanding their personalities and being called Nanaaba or Ro instead of auntie because they're comfortable, when some friends would call without the son's permission saying "can I come and spend the weekend at your house" and the answer is always "why not, come, be comfortable," when some would even ask "can you call my father or my mother and tell them that you want me to come" because their own parents have created fear or are just not present or not caring enough to notice. This isn't motivational parenting talk from Instagram influencers - it's a systematic breakdown of why you must be a parent, a friend, and a guide all at once so your child is comfortable talking to you about anything without judgment, why being present means noticing when the young boy at work stays until 7 p.m. instead of leaving at 3 p.m. and saying "yo, you're still here" because that recognition makes him feel noticed when at home no one is present, instead of parents just taking the piss and always looking for faults, why being a parent is not a futile job but a fun job because you have decided to be responsible for another human being, and why the most dangerous thing you can do is let your child get guidance from a complete stranger because if they're not getting support at home they'll get it somewhere else - making presence, friendship, and mentorship the three roles every child needs you to play if you want them to grow into confident, supported, and emotionally healthy adults who come to you first instead of turning to strangers who don't have their best interests at heart. Guest: Nana Aba Anamoah Host: Derrick Abaitey

    10 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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