Internet and Mobile Entrepreneurs Meet Students
Today’s Options will become Tomorrow’s Requirements!
Adwoa Perbi, Afro-Chic @ GIMEF 2010- Charles Nii Ayiku Ayiku, Funerals in Ghana (www.funeralsinghana.com)
- Tetey Sylvester, Levels Multimedia (www.levelsmultimedia.com)
- Aisha Obuobi, Christie Brown (www.facebook.com/ChristieBrownGH)
- Dr. Longe Bankole-Phillips Ayodeji , Graig Phillips Geosciences, Canada and Nigeria
- Dr. Longe Olumide, University of Ibadan, Nigeria and NEPAD Cybercrime Head
- John Totoe, Mobile Content Ghana (www.mobilecontent.com.gh)
- Carl Ashie, Zap Money, Zain Ghana Ltd
- George Graham, Craft Concepts Limited
- Edward Amartey-Tagoe, NandiMobile Limited (www.nandimobile.com)
- Benard Otabil, Esoko Ghana (www.esoko.com)
- Florence Toffa, Mobile Web Ghana (www.webfoundation.org)
- Opoku Afriyie-Asante, OLPCORPS Ghana - One Laptop Per Child Project Corps Ghana
- Adwoa Perbi, Afro-Chic, (www.afrochiconline.com)
Opening the event, Dr. Kofi A. Osei, the Acting Dean of the University of Ghana Business School, expressed the support of the institution for the event and intimated that, this should not be a one-off event, but rather an annual forum for interaction between technology entrepreneurs, students and the academic community. The presenters made contributions on their experiences in starting up and addressing challenges. Sylvester Tetey of Levels Multimedia emphasized that young entrepreneurs should learn to focus, volunteer and save money during the start-up stage. John
Totoe of Mobile Content Ghana, emphasized the need to collaborate and share ideas with other technology entrepreneurs in order learn and also test one’s idea(s) before launching out. Dr. Longe Olumide, speaking on cybercrime, cautioned young entrepreneurs on “get rich quick” schemes and apparent gullibility from desperateness associated with start-up. Such individuals usually fall prey to tricks of cyber crime entrepreneurs or the “Yahoo boys” as they are known in some countries. Adwoa Perbi of Afro-Chic, challenged the participants in using the Internet to market made-in-Ghana products. She concluded the event with the advice that “Today’s options will become tomorrow’s requirements”, hence the need to take advantage of today's resources being overlooked by others. The audience was also awed by Opoku-Afriyie Asante and his OLPCorps team with demonstrations of One Laptop Per Child project.

