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Matongo blog team offer some advices and design business plans for young business person.

AT UNIVERSITY

College`s students organization leaders 2014/2015 ,

Monday 11 September 2017

WHY UCASH HAS SHARP PEAKING

There only few things that ucash we have been going through to ensure continued business exist and achieve our goals.
Actually;
When you start a business you should be able to predict the future and plan for a target and KPI's on such achievements (unless your finished )
These herein 16 poSsible ways you can go through for your business to prosper too. Enjoy
1. Have a plan
Developing a well thought-out strategy helps you visualize your future success. If you don't have a plan you believe in, you will fall short of your expectations
(c)matongo
2. Take time to understand your finances
Understanding the nitty gritty of your finances is crucial in business. Sit down once a month, whether it’s with your finance manager, accountant or by yourself, and review your income, expenditure and cash flow for the prior month. Look out for changes, patterns and trends that will help you plan and budget for the year ahead.
3. Grow personally
You can never know enough in business so it’s vital to keep learning. Read a book, take a course, adopt a mentor or reach out to someone in a similar position but a different industry and soak up the advice. The advice, guidance and experience you can learn can really catapult you and your business to the next level, at a far greater speed.
4. Build your professional network
Sometimes in business it’s as much about who you know as what you know. Growing your network, whether online or face-to-face, will help you land that new job or new contract, learn from others and keep your finger on the pulse.
5. Be passionate
Make sure you’re doing something that you are eternally passionate about. Passion is the reason you get out of bed in the morning. It will help you get through the bad times and achieve your dreams.
6. Believe in yourself
‘Whether you think you can or think you can’t – you’re right’, and I think that’s so true. Whatever you’re doing in life, whether you’re selling or pitching in business, if you don’t believe in yourself nobody else will.
7. Take calculated risks
If you want to succeed and grow in business you have to be prepared to take calculated risks. The best business leaders understand the difference between a calculated risk and a foolish one. Don’t be adverse to risk, just do your homework first.
8. Invest in digital
The digital revolution is impacting the way we work - from how we grow, sell, market, recruit, network and generally operate. If you’re going to invest in any part of your business in 2016, make sure it’s digital.
9. Never underestimate the importance of a strong team
As Steve Jobs once said: "Great things in business are never done by one person, they're done by a team of people." No matter how strong you are, you won't be able to go it alone. Surround yourself with people you trust, who are with you for the journey and can support you in achieving your dreams.
10. Don’t be limited by last year
Don’t worry if you didn’t achieve everything you set out to in 2015. 2016 is a new year. Use it as an opportunity to set new goals. Write them down and share them with others. Those who do consistently outperform those who don’t.
11. Don’t let others stop you
When I told people I was setting up a business after university, they told me I was mad, it wouldn’t work and to go and get a proper job. There was no encouragement or optimism. If you have a dream in business, don’t let others stop you.
12. Don’t be disheartened by setbacks
Setbacks are inevitable in business, but it’s how you deal and move on from them that is important. Embracing them as an important part of business evolution and learning lessons along the way, will help you and your organisation be stronger in the future.
13. Be prepared to work hard
Nothing beats good, old fashioned hard work, grit and determination. You need to get on that treadmill and keep on running. You need to be prepared to work harder than your friends, your colleagues, in fact everyone else around you to make something happen.
14. Trust your gut
When having to make important decisions, you have to trust your instincts. If it feels right it often is right and if it doesn’t, it is something to step away from.
15. Never stop evolving and adapting
Listen to what your customers have to say, see what your competitors are doing, change, develop, grow and adapt according to customer needs and market demands.
16. Take time out to focus on you
The most important part of your business is you. Don’t underestimate how important it is to take the time to recharge and refresh yourself. All work and no play is a recipe for mental and physical disaster.




Friday 15 April 2016

Kuanzishwa kwa Microfinance,Historia yake nzima

FINANCING DEVELOPMENT

Microfinance - Background



Microfinance consists of the provision of financial services in small increments, typically to very poor people. 

History

The beginnings of the microfinance movement are most closely associated with the economist Muhammed Yunus, who in the early 1970's was a professor in Bangladesh. In the midst of a country-wide famine, he began making small loans to poor families in neighboring villages in an effort to break their cycle of poverty. The experiment was a surprising success, with Yunus receiving timely repayment and observing significant changes in the quality of life for his loan recipients. Unable to self-finance an expansion of his project, he sought governmental assistance, and the Grameen Bank was born.  In order to focus on the very poor, the Bank only lent to households owning less than a half-acre of land. Repayment rates remained high, and the Bank began to spread its operations to other regions of the country. In less than a decade, the Bank was operating independently from its governmental founders and was advertising consistent repayment rates of about 98%. In 2006 Yunus was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
The success of the Grameen Bank did not go unnoticed. Institutions replicating its model sprang up in virtually every region of the globe. Between 1997 and 2002, the total number of MFIs grew from 618 to 2,572. Altogether, these institutions claimed about 65 million clients, up from 13.5 million in 1997 and still growing at 35% a year. The amount of money flowing to clients also continues to climb rapidly and the Grameen Bank has extended over $750 million worth of credit in the past two years alone.
Alongside the explosion of the microfinance industry in absolute terms, there has been a steady growth in private financing for MFIs. The bulk of microfinance funding is still provided by development-oriented international financial institutions and NGO's. Yet estimates place demand for unmet financial services at roughly 1.8 billion individuals. Even at its current growth rates, it is clear that microfinance will only be extended to meet this enormous demand by leveraging private capital, flows of which dwarf all other potential sources. Commercial financing has grown most rapidly in Latin America, where regulated financial institutions now serve 54% of the continent's microfinance clients and, importantly, are now responsible for 74% of the region's loans. Overall, 2005 saw private lending to MFIs jump from $513 million to $981 million.
This jump in investment is a reflection of an increasing number of sustainable MFIs worldwide.  In addition to earning a profit, sustainable microfinance providers are in a better position than their subsidized peers to expand their operations and share of the market. Thus in a study by the Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP) in which operationally-sustainable MFIs represented only 46% of the sample, they accounted for 77% of borrowers served.  The push towards sustainable institutions and the resulting growth of commercial financing raise some important questions about the true mission of MFIs and how best to expand their reach. These issues are further developed in the materials below.

Benefits of microfinance

The very poor are unusually susceptible to income shocks. Death, illness, natural disaster, or other catastrophes can have devastating effects on households existing at or just above a subsistence level. With no asset base on which to draw in the crisis, they may be forced to severely reduce their level of consumption, which can be dangerous if it means forgoing basic healthcare and nutrition. Additionally, they may sell off important, income producing assets, exacerbating their economic difficulties well into the future.
Financial services that allow poor people to save in times of prosperity and borrow or collect insurance when necessary allow them to maintain a consistent level of consumption without selling off income-producing assets.  Microfinance can also provide an opportunity for expanding or pursuing new business opportunities that allow poor people to increase or diversify the sources of their income.  
It has also been argued by advocates that microfinance can also promote the development of a traditional financial sector. Most obviously, by alleviating poverty, microfinance can deepen the market for more traditional financial services.  In addition, MFIs and their clients can lobby for the creation of clearinghouses for information on borrowers' credit histories, easing of interest rate controls, greater foreign ownership of financial institutions, and opening local capital markets beyond a country's political elite, among other reforms. Such improvements could strengthen the financial sector as a whole, creating a feedback loop that could serve to lift even more families out of poverty.
Microfinance can also generate important non-economic benefits. For instance, many microfinance programs are aimed specifically at women.  It has been suggested that access to financial services enhances women's power and influence in the household. Their ability to make decisions over certain purchases and their new status as important household earners has been linked not only to increased bargaining power, but also to a decreased incidence of domestic violence. (Lower incidences of abuse could also be the result of third party scrutiny from loan officers and, in the case of group lending, fellow borrowers.) Furthermore, the opportunity to pursue business opportunities may make women more likely to use contraceptives and lower fertility rates. 
In addition, many MFIs couple their loan programs with educational efforts.  For example, loan officers may provide information on contraceptive use or disease prevention or domestic economics as well as methods of controlling saving and spending habits and various aspects of small business management.

Challenges associated with lending to the poor

Ultimately, microfinance is designed as a tool to reach impoverish households that are not otherwise served by more traditional financial institutions. There are several reasons why it is difficult to lend money to the poor.
Hidden information
The primary problem with lending to the poor, and the main obstacle that microfinance is designed to overcome, is banks' lack of information about the inherent riskiness of potential clients.  The transaction costs of evaluating individual borrowers are very high relative to the size of the loans likely to be made to poor borrowers.  This means that to cover the expense of screening individual borrowers banks would be forced to charge correspondingly high interest rates to their clients.   Moreover, it is doubtful whether screening will provide accurate information given that potential borrowers have incentives to misrepresent their credit history and the risks of their respective projects. Without accurate information, banks will still charge high rates to cover the frequent incidence of default among the risky borrowers that will inevitably join their client base. Either way, interest rates will be high enough to drive borrowers with safe but relatively low returns out of the market. This problem is referred to as adverse selection.
Governments sometimes respond to this problem by imposing restrictions on interest rates charged by financial institutions in the form of usury laws or interest rate caps. With rates constrained, it would become impossible to provide banking services to the poor without significant and costly subsidies.
Moral hazard
Even borrowers whose projects are not inherently risky may refuse either to use their loans productively or, if they do use the loans productively, to repay their loans if their lenders have no means of enforcing their obligations.  This problem of moral hazard may arise because, for instance, local judges are biased in favor of debtors or police forces are stretched too thin to provide assistance. This problem can be exacerbated by competition among lenders, as in the absence of competition a lender can encourage repayment by refusing to provide future credit.
Absence of  credit history
In societies with developed credit markets, problems stemming from inadequate information and moral hazard are mitigated by the fact that lenders routinely investigate borrowers' credit histories. . A record of a borrower's repayment history provides lenders with valuable information about the likelihood of future repayment.  In addition, the ability to tarnish a borrower's credit history and thereby limit the borrower's access to future credit provides lenders with leverage that they can use to induce repayment.
Lack of collateral
Another response to problems of hidden information is to require that borrowers provide collateral, meaning an asset that the lender can easily seize and, perhaps, sell in the event of default.  This allows banks to charge low interest rates even in the face of poor information about the borrower's prospects.  But many of the impoverished borrowers that microfinance seeks to reach lack assets that can effectively serve as collateral. When they do have assets, they have are often illiquid. Livestock, for example, is not only subject to destruction, but can be very difficult to convert on the market for a traditional bank inexperienced in selling it. Furthermore, among these sorts of clients the only assets they have may be critical to their means of subsistence and legal or ethical restrictions may prevent banks from foreclosing upon them.

Typical features of microcredit

MFIs employ several innovative contractual devices, including group lending, progressive lending, short-term contracts, and targeting of women, in efforts to overcome the obstacles that have traditionally discouraged lending to the poor. 
Group lending
Perhaps the most important of the microfinance innovations, and certainly the one for which it has received the most recognition, is lending to solidarity groups. Though many MFIs have departed from it, the original Grameen model required that loans not be made to individuals or singular families, but instead to a solidarity group of five women. As each group member was required to vouch for the creditworthiness of the others, these women were all likely to be from the same village and would self-select one another for membership. All members received equal financing and made repayments on the same, fixed schedule. Most importantly, if one member of the group defaulted on their payments, no other member of the group could apply for another loan until the default was cured.
Group lending provides several benefits to both lenders and borrowers:
  • When the members of the group are self-selected from the same village, their knowledge of one another's habits and awareness of each member's propensity for risk will largely obviate extensive screening by the lender. Safe borrowers will select one another for membership and the MFI can avoid a highly costly and inaccurate interview process. Additionally, risky borrowers will be forced to select one another. As they will have to pay more often for their frequently defaulting peers, they will indirectly pay a higher effective interest rate. The risk for such borrowers is thus shifted from the MFI to the borrowers themselves. As a result, a lower nominal interest rate can be charged to all parties and a much wider segment of society can gain access to credit.
  • The group members can also monitor one another much more effectively than the lender,  and group lending gives them an economic incentive to do so. This monitoring can take two forms, the first being ex ante observation to ensure that group members are putting their money towards appropriate uses. Ex post, members will also ensure that returns from a loan-funded project are going towards repayment. They can report to the MFI on members who are withholding payments despite an ability to pay.
  • Group members can help lenders overcome limitations of formal mechanisms for enforcing obligations.  Members are able to exert pressure on each other, be it social, cultural, or even religious, that traditional institutions are unable to bring to bear. Also, under the Grameen model, a solidarity group of 5 women was a part of a larger village group, allowing for community leaders to pressure defaulting borrowers into repayment.
It is important to note though that borrowers only have incentives to screen and monitor their fellow group members if they expect to repay their own loan and obtain additional funding in the future. To the extent they plan to default, these incentives are no longer in place. Furthermore, if the group's losses are expected to outweigh the borrower's return on their own investment, the borrower has to no reason to attempt to cover those losses. She will lose all of her own profits, but as the loan will not be paid in full, she will see none of the gains that come with timely repayment, namely an increased loan amount in the next cycle. Additionally, borrowers may not be able to effectively evaluate either the inherent riskiness of their partners or the riskiness of each others' projects.
Progressive lending
Some MFIs adopt the policy that once a debt is repaid in a timely fashion the group will be eligible not only for a new loan, but for a larger loan as well. This structure creates opportunity costs for non-repayment, as a borrower stands to lose substantial future credit if they chose to default. A loan-ladder also gives MFIs the opportunity to “test” their borrowers with smaller loan packages, helping the institution to gather information about their potential clients. As loan sizes increase, the average costs of servicing those loans decrease, making the MFI itself more profitable. Although there is still opportunity for a borrower to strategically default, waiting until loan sizes have grown substantially larger before failing to make payments, the reputational constraints discussed above operate to reduce the frequency of this problem.
Short-term contracts
Finally, in yet another substitute for an MFI's lack of information about its clients, most microfinance loans have very short repayment periods, with cycles lasting as little as a week. As each payment is made directly to an officer of the MFI, these frequent meetings assist in monitoring investments and keeping track of repayment. Keeping the loan size small also limits the MFIs exposure in the event of borrower default or economic shock to a particular group or village. It is also important to observe that many microfinance clients report that they find it easier to repay their loans on shorter schedules.
Targeting women
Empirical evidence has demonstrated that women are more effective targets for microfinance than men, despite the fact that men are typically the targets of formal sector commercial institutions in developing countries. Women are not only more likely to repay their loans, they are also more likely to spend loan proceeds on their families basic needs, education, and health care, leading to a greater impact on household welfare. It has been suggested that women provide better targets for microfinance for a variety of reasons: They are typically less mobile than their husbands. As a result, the monitoring costs for bank managers is lower. Because they are less mobile, they are also more susceptible to the peer pressure that is critical to securing repayment in group lending contracts. Finally, as women have been traditionally relegated to small industry, they have a comparative advantage in the very businesses to which microfinance is targeted. While microfinance could thus, arguably, be seen to further entrench women in their traditional roles, as a counterargument these women have few opportunities outside of the home. Microfinance allows them to take the fullest advantage of chances that are available to them, limited as they may be.

Beyond microcredit

While the terms microcredit and microfinance are often used interchangeably, microfinance in fact encompasses a broad range of activities outside of lending.   Many MFIs have expanded beyond microcredit to offer services such as savings devices, insurance, and in some instances, sales and marketing assistance specially tailored to meet the needs of the very poor.
Savings and deposit taking
There are a number of reasons why poor people find it difficult to save.   Some people may lack a structured disciplined method of saving.  Others may have difficulty controlling the consumption habits of other members of their household.  This problem is particularly acute for women, who often have no control over household spending.  Moreover, for those who are interested in saving, the only mechanisms available may be investments in illiquid assets that deprive them of the ability to take advantage of new investment opportunities or respond to sudden setbacks.  In addition, those assets may themselves be risky investments.   For example, investments in livestock are susceptible to the risks of disease and drought.  Meanwhile, more liquid assets such as cash and jewelry are susceptible to the risk of theft. 
A number of MFIs require that borrowers contribute a small portion of their earnings to a savings vehicle, often in small amounts on a frequent basis. These savings will often be unavailable to the borrower for a predetermined period and are designed to help microfinance clients develop effective savings habits.  Alternatively, an MFI may allow its clients to make voluntary deposits.  These deposits are intended to be safer and more liquid than alternative savings instruments. 
It is important to recognize that these kinds of savings plans also serve the interests of MFIs by allowing them to accumulate capital and, because the deposits can be seized in the event of default, collateralize the debt obligations of their borrowers.
Microinsurance
Offering insurance services to poor people presents many of the same challenges as offering them credit.  The difficulty of assessing the risk associated with individual clients makes insurers vulnerable to adverse selection, with the most most risky clients seeking insurance.  Meanwhile, the difficulty of preventing clients from engaging in risky activities after they have been insured raises the problem of moral hazard.
In many developing countries informal mutual assistance schemes serve as a form of insurance.  It is also possible to conceive of group lending as a form of insurance.   A few microlenders have insured their clients as part of a loan package. Life insurance, perhaps because it presents the least moral hazard, has been the most successful, but property, health, and weather insurance have also been offered.

Empirical studies

There is conflicting data about the true value of microfinance as a development tool. While many MFIs advertise high repayment rates and a better quality of life for their clients, the evidence that microfinance creates appreciable reductions in poverty is inconclusive. To make a significant impact, microfinance must be made available to a very broad segment of society, and be coupled with  entrepreneurial ability on the part of MFI clients. Faced with these sobering difficulties, much of the euphoria of the movement's early days has dissipated, and few now see microfinance, on its own, as a panacea for global poverty. Despite this emerging sense of realism, there is still a relatively broad consensus that providing financial services to the poor  has tangible economic benefits, even if not the instant alleviation of client poverty.        

Regulatory issues

Interest rates
Microfinance institutions may often be forced to charge higher interest rates than their traditional counterparts. Rates are generally higher because an MFI faces greater costs. Traveling to clients, meeting with them, and making and keeping track of larger numbers of small loans all serve to create costs well beyond those faced by a typical bank in a highly evolved credit market. As a result, capping interest rates or strictly enforcing usury laws can cripple an MFI by preventing it from charging sustainable rates. MFIs can operate under such laws if they remain unenforced or if there is an implicit exception for their operations, but this kind of informal non-enforcement is both awkward to defend from a rule-of-law perspective and subject to potential corruption.
Protection of depositors
Once an institution begins taking the savings of its clients as opposed to providing credit from other sources, regulatory issues arise. If an MFI is being run as a for-profit institution then its owners have an incentive to take great risks with their depositors' money. Without any of their own assets invested in the institution, rather than investing prudently they could rationally be expected to seek the largest return possible. Such management will be likely lead to a high incidence of MFI failure that will not only undermine the economic progression of microfinance clients, but could also serve to discredit the entire industry. Circumstances may therefore require the regulation of deposit-taking MFIs. Yet creating an effective regulatory regime with an eye toward the goals of microfinance presents significant challenges in itself. These issues are discussed further below.  
An MFI also faces the same problems with taking small deposits as a traditional bank. Its transactions costs will be high and earning profits on small deposits will be difficult. It should be noted, though, that many MFI clients are not seeking returns on their deposits, but instead merely require a safe place to keep their money. As they grow more sophisticated, though, they may ultimately demand interest on their savings. Fortunately, an MFI can charge much higher interest rates on its loans than its traditional counterparts. Its impoverished clients enjoy a much higher rate of return on their investments, thus, using deposits to capitalize loans to its clients can provide the returns necessary to make deposit-taking profitable for an MFI. This solution assumes that the MFI itself can control the costs of its operation sufficiently to avoid large deficits. One of the reasons MFIs are so popular is that they provide great convenience to their clients, both by meeting them in their respective villages and by providing flexible loan structures. That convenience  requires a large and devoted staff and prevents the MFI from taking advantage of standardization as a means of keeping costs down. Cost control is thus a general problem for MFIs, but can be particularly problematic for institutions that seek to fund themselves with client deposits, as taking deposits will further inflate those costs, and the MFI will be hard-pressed to earn sufficient returns.
There are several forms that such a regime might take.  A special regulatory “window” can be created for MFIs, allowing them access to deposits and the local credit market without some of the strict reporting or capital requirements that are given to traditional institutions. Alternatively, MFIs can fall under the purview of existing banking regulations, or regulators can make individualized exceptions to those regulations.
Obstacles to enforcement
Given their small size and dispersion, monitoring MFIs would be a challenging task even for regulators in a developed financial market with an excellent informational infrastructure. In a developing economy, with limited regulatory resources, effective observance and control will be even more difficult.  Collecting and processing data may be prohibitively expensive - for either the MFI or the regulators - or simply a poor use of a central banking authority's time and energy, as the collapse of smaller MFIs is unlikely to affect macroeconomic stability.  
Additionally, as most MFIs are not funded by profit-oriented investors, regulators lose some of their most important forms of leverage. Specifically, mandating capital adequacy ratios becomes ineffective as means of encouraging managers to closely monitor the performance of their institution, as it is not the managers' equity on the line. Nor can a supervisor make capital calls of donors or NGO's. These institutions often lack further resources, or might refuse further participation in microfinance altogether if they would be responsible for recapitalizing failed institutions. Halting lending will remove an important incentive for an MFI's clients to continue their payments, exacerbating the financial trouble of the target institution.
Subsidies
While the ultimate goal of microfinance is self-sustainable services for the poor, subsidies can play an important role. The start-up costs of establishing an MFI can be significant, and might require extremely high interest rates during its first few years of operation. As a result, subsidies can be an effective method of getting MFIs off the ground, and can be provided through soft loans from a country's apex organizations (second tier lenders providing cheap, government credit to private retailers), tax breaks, technical assistance, and direct financial support. There may also be some cases in which populations are simply too expensive to reach, either due to geographic isolation or the extremely small loan sizes that their service would entail. In these situations, microfinance subsidies may be more effective than other, more direct forms of aid to their beneficiaries.  However, there is always a risk of subsidizing ineffective or inefficient MFIs and thereby crowding out more efficient institutions.

The challenges of commercialization

The fact that substantial amounts of low-cost funding for microfinance is available from the international donor community has limited MFIs' demand for commercial financing.  Both commercial actors and donors tend to be most interested in investing in large, successful MFIs.  Nonetheless, some MFIs have begun to seek capital from profit-seeking investors.
Tapping commercial sources of financing dramatically expands MFIs' access to capital.  Profit-seeking investors may also be more strongly inclined than donors to encourage MFIs to improve their efficiency.
On the other hand, MFIs that focus on maximizing returns for their investors may experience mission drift, in other words, they may find themselves drawn away from their focus on serving the very poor.  For instance, they may find themselves drawn toward wealthier borrowers who are cheaper to service because they can provide collateral and require larger loans.  In a worst case scenario, MFIs may attempt to take advantage of regulatory windows or donations to compete with traditional institutions that are already serving the middle income market. Then they will not only fail to serve their target market, but also drive out efficient credit providers
One strategy some MFIs have pursued in order to counter the problem of mission drift is to seek “socially oriented” investors

Source:

Tuesday 5 April 2016

ADMISSION INTO POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMMES FOR 2016/2017 ACADEMIC YEAR










                         UNIVERSITY OF DAR ES SALAAM OFFICE OF THE DEPUTY VICE

CHANCELLOR - ACADEMIC DIRECTORATE OF POSTGRADUATE STUDIES ADMISSION INTO POSTGRADUATE PROGRAMMES FOR 2016/2017 ACADEMIC YEAR
The University of Dar es Salaam invites applications for admission into its postgraduate programmes for the 2016/2017 Academic Year. Minimum Admission Requirements

 1. Postgraduate Diploma At least a Bachelor Degree, Advanced Diploma or its equivalent from a recognized institution of higher learning. Candidates with equivalent qualifications must also possess at least Secondary School Certificates with three credit passes. Duration: 12 months. 

2. Master’s Degree (i) An honours Bachelor’s degree or equivalent qualifications. Applicants who hold unclassified degrees (e.g. B.V. Sc. M.D. etc.) should have a credit or distinction in the subject of the intended Master’s programme. Candidates with Pass degrees will also be considered if:- a) Their undergraduate performance in the proposed subject of study was a ‘B’ grade or higher. b) They have satisfied the relevant School/College/Institute that they have exhibited potential through subsequent research experience and/or additional training. (ii) An Advanced Diploma from a recognized higher learning institution with a minimum of an upper second class PLUS Postgraduate Diploma and Secondary School Certificates. (iii) A recognized professional qualification (CPA, CSP, ACCA, CA, CIB, MCIM, CMA certificate) PLUS Secondary School Certificates. Duration: 15-27 months, depending on the programme and mode of delivery. 3. 

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Degree Applicants must have a good relevant Masters degree of the University of Dar es Salaam or from any other recognised University by TCU. Duration: 36-60 months, depending on the programme and mode of delivery 






  Download from here


DIVERSIFICATION IS FOR SUCKERS


Diversification is for suckers

Just ask any billionaire, if they got there by diversifying. 

“Keep all your eggs in one basket, but watch that basket closely.” - Warren Buffett


Warren Buffett has often said, "I could improve your ultimate financial welfare by giving you a ticket with only twenty slots in it so that you had twenty punches - representing all the investments that you got to make in a lifetime. And once you'd punched through the card, you couldn't make any more investments at all. Under those rules, you'd really think carefully about what you did, and you'd be forced to load up on what you'd really thought about. So you'd do so much better."
Why? Too often investors throw money around like scattering seed, saying to themselves, "I'll throw a little here and little there to see what happens." Instead, Buffett advocates a policy of finding the best and richest soil, planting substantial amount of seed in it, and protecting it. This policy may sound simple, and it is. It also can be life changing. Lou Simpson, one of the best investors in the world and head of GEICO's equity portfolio, once said that this particular Buffett strategy helped him enormously in his record of crushing the market over several decades.

If you rank your best investment ideas and kill the lower grade ones (in terms of risk/return & certainty), you are inevitably going to improve your performance. Greenbalt in one of his studies says, adding more than 6-8 stocks to your portfolio has little impact in reducing portfolio volatility. You are much better off with smaller number of stocks that you understand.

Happy Investing. You will do well

Hakuna mtu anayeweza kuendelea kwakuwekeza vtu vingiiiiiiiiiii! be specific either to 2/3 ambavyo unaweza kuvimudu, sio kila sehemu kidogo kidogo.

mfano. 
1.unakuwa na kibanda cha chips pasua kichwa
2. mtu wa boda boda
3. stationary
4.duka la bidhaa
5. upo shule
6.unauza maji
 :) usifurahishe uma, fanya mawili au matatu unayoweza kwanza kwa ustadi kisha fungua nahayo mengine ukishayaweza hayo machache. kwani usipoweza kufanya vzr machache utaishia kulalamika nakuona kazi zako zinakutesa.

Monday 4 April 2016

Scholar Investment Challenge



              Investment Challenge Rules

Rules - The DSE Scholar Investment Challenge 2016

The DSE Scholar Investment Challenge is an edutainment initiative targeting Tanzanian youth in higher learning institutions. The challenge is an online simulation of live trading at the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange (DSE), where each participating group/individual is given a virtual start-up capital to invest using the DSE real time information for a period of 3 months. The winner is the team/individual considered by a panel of judges to have made the most sound investment decisions, the highest portfolio value and to have contributed in the discussion forum.

 
Targeting Scholars 
 
The DSE scholar investment Challenge 2016 is open to any Tanzanian youth who is enrolled in any higher leaning Institution in the country. Participants are required to use their names (as they appear in their respective higher learning institution’s records) and provide their registered mobile phone numbers, university/college name, course and the year of enrolment.
 Objectives 
 
Targeting and involving Tanzanian students in higher learning institutions, the main objectives of the challenge are to develop and encourage the culture of saving and investment, to enhance financial management and entrepreneurial skills, and to create/foster a sense of ownership, teamwork, critical thinking and problem solving among the youth. The challenge also aims at educating youth the prudent process of investment decision making and risk management and in the process, foster links with professional bodies and industry.
 
HOW TO PLAY
  • Download the "Leverage Scholar" App on your smartphone from Google Play Store OR Apple App Store.
  • Visit the website www.younginvestors.co.tz OR
  • Use your mobile phone to dial the USSD Code *150*36#
  • Complete the registration process
  • Create your own unique password for accessing your account
  • The challenge is through mobile (SMS & Leverage Scholar App) and Internet – platform provided by Maxcom, Leverage and Smart Youth
  • Each participant (individual/team) will be given an initial virtual capital of TZS 1,000,000/-
  • A participant has an option to borrow additional funds through a loan (virtual capital) for more investments 
  • Participants will use the DSE website (www.dse.co.tz), www.younginvestors.co.tz or Mobile Phones (Leverage Scholar App OR Dial *150*36#) to access current prices and available shares.
 
 
HOW TO WIN THE CHALLENGE 
 
Overall Winners will be determined at the end of the 3 months competition period. The winning portfolios will be evaluated by an audit panel of judges drawn from the following:
  • DSE
  • Selected Faculty members from higher learning institutions
  • Stockbrokers and Investment Experts
 
Participants may use DSE website and social media pages to participate in discussion forums and briefly provide their investment objectives. Shortlisted top 10 performers will be invited for a live discussion forum to explain and discuss their investment objectives and strategies that guided their investment decisions. Judges will use the forum to test participants’ teamwork, problem-solving, and critical thinking abilities/skills.
 
The following weighted average method will be used for tallying and identifying the winning portfolio:
  • 50% - Highest overall portfolio value on the last day of the challenge.
  • 30% - The reason given by participants to support their investment decisions.
  • 20% - Discussion forum participation.
 
PRIZES
  • Cash
  • Certificate of participation
  • Mentorship opportunity
 
Rules and Disclaimers
  • Participants can only access / buy shares that are available in the system using the existing live prices on DSE’s Systems and website
  • Participants cannot sell shares that are not available in their portfolio
  • The DSE Scholar Investment challenge is a securities trading simulation of what happens at the Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange. It is by no means meant to represent the actual happenings of the DSE. Participants should therefore use the challenge only as a learning tool and educational entertainment.
  • The final interpretation of these (and other) rules is at the sole discretion of the challenge coordinators and judges. Any decision made by the challenge coordinators and judges will be final and no correspondence will be entered into.
  • The DSE, on matters relating to the challenge and related initiatives; may (at own discretion) accept, reject or terminate any teams participation, before, during or after the challenge for any reason whatsoever.
  • The DSE reserves the right to change or amend the rules before, during or after the challenge. Change of rules will be communicated via DSE websites and applied to all the teams equally.
  • Team members should work as a team combining their research knowledge to arrive at joint decision. Any transaction performed by a team member will be assumed to be a collective decision by the team and will be binding on the team.
  • By taking part in this challenge, participants fully authorize DSE to use their legal names, images, School ID numbers, and other related information for identification, promotion, recruitment and all other current and future Challenge activities.
  • Research is an integral part of the investment process – participants are therefore expected to use various data, reports, researches, papers and approaches to guide their investment decisions  

  • Download a Pdf document 
  • rules

Tuesday 16 June 2015

RESASONS TO DRESS SHARP



5 Reasons Why Young Men Should Dress Sharp


It only makes sense then that they should start dressing as such.
It may seem superficial, but the harsh reality is that a young man is judged by others within seconds of being noticed.
The old saying that “you only get one chance to make a first impression” is true.
Take the time and effort to look your best and you’ll start on good footing – dressing down to what might be fashionable in your age group only creates barriers when you are looking to rise to the top.



What Does Dressing Sharp Mean?
Before we get to the reasons why young men should dress sharp, I believe that we should examine what “dressing sharp” means. Below are four definitions of the sharp-dressed young man.
1.  Dressing sharp means to wear clean clothes that fit
Does dressing sharp mean that we young men have to wear suits everyday of our lives?
No! Most of us will not be in a career that requires us to wear suits everyday.
There are many young men who go into noble trades like carpentry, plumbing, etc. there are also young men who serve a greater cause than themselves– soldiers, priests, etc.
Dressing sharp for all young men, regardless of profession, is to wear clothing that is free from tears, rips, stains. Clean clothes.
Not only should you make sure your clothes are clean, you should also make sure they fit. Extra large may feel comfortable, but wearing clothes a size or two too big does not do justice. Fitted does not mean restrictive! We may think that fitted clothes will be too tight and will limit the sense of freedom. On the contrary, fitted clothing will seem to be weightless.
Why? Fitted clothing requires less fabric to achieve the sense of freedom, thus less weight. Fitted clothing is loose wear normally tight and snug wear normally loose.
Men's dress shirt
Know what styles benefit you
2.  Dressing sharp means to be aware of personal style
Building on clean and fitted clothes, the next level of dressing sharp is to be aware of personal style.
The way of mastering this awareness is to disregard mainstream trends in fashion.  Educate yourself by understanding how your build, your hair and skin tones, your environment and your wallet affects what your style is.
We are all not the same – an outfit you see on the young man next to you may or may not work for you.
A Man's Guide To Style
3.  Dressing sharp means to learn from the classics
Now that you are aware that a sharply dressed young man wears clean and fitted clothes and is a master of his personal style, the third level is to learn from the classics. More often than not “dressing sharp” conjures up the image of men from the past.
There is a reason why the clothes from our grandfather’s generation are considered to be classic. Classic menswear, unlike fashion trends, holds firm over time; there are no ebbs and flows of classic clothing.
Sport coats for men
Sport coats are sharp and look great on young men
4.  Dressing sharp means to excel
The last level of the definition of dressing sharp is excellence. The etymology of the word “excellence” comes from the Latin “excellere” which means to rise, to surpass and to be eminent.
Dressing sharp in the greatest sense is to rise above the social norms of the day. Jeans and t-shirts are a common sight in our society and for the most part this casual outfit is accepted in many locations. The problem is that jeans and a t-shirt does not rise above these social norms.
To excel means to dress sharp. To dress sharp means to surpass the norms.
Five reasons why young men should dress sharp
Now that we know what it means to dress sharp, let us cover five reasons why a young man should dress sharp.
Reason #1: Dressing sharp draws positive attention
We live in a judgmental world; we are quick to make assumptions and to categorize individuals based on what we see.
Even if you try to justify your choice of clothing, you are still giving people reasons to overlook and undervalue you. By default we lack the veteran label which older men have through many years in the working world. We don’t have the experience and most of us are fresh out of college.
In order to have potential employers and passers-by stop overlooking and undervaluing us, we need to dress sharp. A young man who wears clean and fitted clothing and uses classic style to his advantage will make people value him, his ideas and his presence.
A young man who excels (excellence) in dressing sharp will rise above and chances are, he will be spotted first, valued and respected.
Reason #2: Dressing sharp shows maturity
No matter if you chose to go to school or to enter a trade or to serve your country, you are now a young man.
Your background has shaped who you are today, but it is your responsibility to carry yourself forward.
And the clothes you wear are no exception. You are responsible for every facet of your life.
Dressing sharp shows motivation and maturity to everyone who looks at you. They see a young man with energy, with health and with a full life ahead of him, but they also see a young man who is mature and responsible enough to sever himself from and rise above his boyhood past.
Reason #3: Dressing sharp radiates self-respect
If you take the time, effort and pride into dressing sharp, you will undoubtedly radiate an image of self-respect and self-worth.
People will see you and think positively of you. Dressing sharp means that you are respecting your body. Furthermore, a sharply dressed young man will radiate a sense of worth. People will see you in your classic, clean, fitted clothing and they will start to think that you are worthy of their time and company.
Reason #4: Dressing sharp boosts self-confidence
A young man who has confidence in himself can rise to the challenge and move mountains. Believing in yourself is a vital necessity in order to be successful and to survive.
How can a young man snag a job he wants if he doubts himself? How can a young man walk up to an attractive woman and ask her out on a date if he thinks less of himself?
Dressing sharp will exponentially boost your self-confidence. Don’t believe me? Go put on your best clothes that you own. The immediate psychological effect is unquestionable.
Look good, feel good. Feel good, do good.

Reason #5: Dressing sharp attracts and keeps wanted attention
A sharply dressed young man stands out from the crowd.
He is eminent. If you stand out from a crowd, then you attract attention and keep it. This is a good thing, attention is wanted when you are seeking to establish yourself as a young leader.
Dressing sharply is the first step to attracting and keeping wanted attention. We see with our eyes and we think with them too.
Image is very important. A young man who dresses sharp gives a strong image to which people will be attracted to and will strive to maintain this attention.
Share your thoughts with us by leaving your comments in the comment box below. An active community of men with style is something everyone benefits from

Source:http://www.realmenrealstyle.com/ 

Friday 12 June 2015

Six reasons to stop panicking about what you'll do after university


Six reasons to stop panicking about what you'll   do after university

Final-year students and recent graduates should spend less time worrying about the future and realize they're not alone

Is the thought of graduating and finding a job making you stressed? You're not alone.
With graduation looming and inspiration yet to strike about your future plans, it's easy to get stuck in a cycle of despair. 
All of your friends are starting fancy grad schemes , while the only thing you've got lined up is a Breaking Bad marathon and scheduled panic attacks about the Months for waiting Posts.

Your student discount card is about to expire, and if another family member asks you about your career plans then you might just have a breakdown. Sound familiar?

 These six points might help to reassure you.

1.Comparing yourself to other people is a waste of time

Just because your housemate has secured their ideal job doesn't mean that you're a failure by contrast.

2. We're still young

Those who started a three-year course straight from school will have only just turned 23, so there's no rush to accept the first 9-5 job that you're offered. Benard Calist, a recent graduate from Dar es salaam University (DUCE), turned down several graduate jobs in favor of continuing with Electronics work.
He says: "I don't see the point in accepting a poorly-paid graduate job that I'm not even sure I want to do, just because I'm expected to. I'd rather save up until I've had time to decide what I really want to pursue." Either to go at teaching post or not.

3. You can't discover who you want to be until you find out who you are

Personalities often change at university, which can be daunting beyond the bubble of campus life. Challenge yourself by experiencing something new, while you still have the chance.
DAUD SOLOMON  of Dar es salaam University has just returned from Mara, in time for his graduation:
"I had wanted to travel and experience different cultures for a while, and the summer before starting work provided that opportunity. It was the best experience of my life. I thoroughly recommend going out into the world and seeing it for yourself, regardless of whether you have a job lined up for your return", he said.

4. Many successful career-people have 'fallen into' their line of work

Research conducted by MATONGO BLOG found that 19 out of 20 Graduates had switched jobs within three years. Be confident enough to accept that your dream career might not be as you had hoped, and devise a new plan according to the aspects that you enjoyed.

5. Your degree won't go to waste

Deciding that you don't want to be a psychologist doesn't necessarily mean that the three years and thousands of pounds spent on a psychology degree was all for nothing – any university education teaches a desirable skill set. , many graduate employers seek degree-level candidates rather than those disciplined in a specific subject.

6. You're not alone

Festo Matongo, a careers adviser at Dar es salaam University, says that many students are unsure of their plans after graduation:
"How uncertain they are does vary, from those who have an interest in a general area of work but have not yet decided about it, to those who describe themselves as not having any ideas at all.

"Panicking doesn't help and is unnecessary anyway. Don't let things drift – keep calm and make a plan. Realise that you're not deciding what to do with the rest of your life, but choosing a good next step for you."
https://proinpromotions.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/img_2317.jpg 
Kundi la Kwanza la Vijana waliojitokeza katika Usail wa kazi

Are you going into your third year and worrying about your prospects when you finish? Or have you recently graduated? Usipaniki bana.

Mr Matongo