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ReConnect Africa is a unique website and online magazine for the African professional in the Diaspora. Packed with essential information about careers, business and jobs, ReConnect Africa keeps you connected to the best of Africa.



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Image Modupe Williams

Management Consultant

 

I was educated at....

…..the Prince of Wales school in Freetown and studied for a degree in Civil Engineering at the University of Sierra Leone. I later went on to pursue postgraduate studies at the University of Toulouse in Public Health Engineering and an MBA in Project Management at Henley Business School.

My first job was....

…..with a firm of consulting engineers where I trained to become a chartered engineer with the Institution of Civil Engineers, specialising in the design and building of roads, bridges and planning transport systems.

What I do now is....

…. I currently work for a firm of management consultants that specialises in the delivery of major complex infrastructure projects. My job entails advising clients on project delivery arrangements and undertaking audits on behalf of sponsors and project funders. In my spare time, I also work with colleagues in running a charity that supports engineering institutions in Sierra Leone in training and development of engineers.

Modupe Williams works as a Management Consultant for a practice in London that specialises in the delivery of complex infrastructure projects. He has worked in management consulting for the past 14 years. His earlier career was as a civil engineering consultant and in leading teams in the delivery of public infrastructure projects in the UK and overseas.

Modupe is also a Director and Trustee of RoTAP, a charity he co-founded to improve the training of professional engineers in Sierra Leone.  RoTAP is made of experienced engineers and related professionals resident in the UK with an interest in Sierra Leone’s development. 

Some of the activities RoTAP engage in include fund raising for educational material, presenting technical papers at conferences in Sierra Leone, providing advice on relevant government policy and building links between UK and Sierra Leone engineering institutions. More information on RoTAP can be found on their website www.rotap.co.uk.

Modupe is married to Glennis, a GP in London, and they have 3 adult children.

 

What I learned along the way is…

…the importance of continuous learning; updating your knowledge and skills and having a flexible approach. This equips you to better cope with changes in the wider business environment.

The greatest influence on my life has been……

…having a few inspirational people at key stages in my life help me take the right decision on career choice or direction. For example, when I was deciding what course to study at university, a family friend offered me an internship in his firm which gave me exposure to civil engineering. I found civil engineering very fascinating and I was convinced that this was the right career for me. He also happened to be one of my university professors and was a great inspiration both as a professional mentor and tutor in the early stages of my career.  Another example was one of my university friends who was a couple of years ahead of me at university and who  persuaded me to pursue a chartered engineer training scheme at the company he was working for in the UK. This was a significant step in developing my core professional skills in a large international practice. More recently, I met another inspirational professional who broadened my perspective on how one’s approach to business can be an effective way of sharing our ethical or personal values.

The best advice I ever received is…

…to always keep an open mind; that is the only way to continue to keep receiving good advice.

My top tips for succeeding in my career area are…

  • … Work hard and persevere through challenges
  • Pursue a career that you enjoy and for which you have a natural ability
  • Always keep learning and don’t be afraid to take calculated risks
  • Pay attention to improving your interpersonal skills at all levels within and outside your organisation
  • Don’t be overly preoccupied about making loads of money – remember that reward is the compensation you receive for applying appropriate effort.
 

 

If you would like to nominate an inspiring personality for a ‘5 Minute Interview’ please contact us at editor@reconnectafrica.com

 

Michael Garrison has worked in media and with young people from Black communities for the past 30 years. Starting as a Youth Worker for ILEA Youth Services, he moved to Southwark Council as a Media Tutor producing some notable videos that featured issues of public concern. Years later, he moved on to Lambeth College as a Youth worker and Princes Trust team leader.

After gaining qualifications for Radio Production techniques at Goldsmith College, he qualified as a mature student in Film and Communication Media at Lambeth College and Kent Intuitions of Art & Design.

In the late 1990’s, Michael was recruited by pioneer music & performance school, Islington Arts and Media School, where he managed and co-ordinated training for students in their Multimedia Broadcast Radio and Visuals platform Studios. He also developed programmes to train young people in a Radio and Visual Productions Scheme, which worked in partnership with popular industry figures liked the Heartless Crew.

Michael also put together summer university courses for Islington Youth Service and North London University, training and familiarising young people in a multi-media Radio environment. He took the project forward to develop courses with other local youth services and the Youth Offending Team.

Michael has worked in a freelance capacity with most mainstream broadcasters, including the BBC and Channel 4, and developed an interest in media promotions and productions which led him to create a visual production company called ‘NOW Productions.

This, with his extensive knowledge of visual media art, secured contracts to tour and produce and record videos for numerous recording artists including Beenie Man, John Holt, Morgan Heritage, Sean Paul, Buster Rhyhmes, Luciano, and the Marley family.

Now Productions was one of the first community based Visual Production Companies of its type and it has now been operating for over 20 years at the forefront of visual media technology.

These Projects were the inspiration behind the setting up of View Now TV.

 

After graduating, I worked as a freelance with TV companies and used my connections within the entertainment business and skills to formulate a company called Now Productions.

That organisation, now running for 25 years, was at the forefront of producing radio ads and then major visual productions. I would go on tour with artists as visual arts were gaining a foothold within our communities, and I would always interview the artists and entertainers, but I didn’t have a marketplace to stream my content.  With the advent of social media and YouTube, there were the devices for me to output the content I had on my shelves and I saw a gap in the market for historical references for people who come over to perform here.  We then formulated a channel called View Now TV to diffuse this and other type of content and genres of programming.

What I learned along the way is....

....to have patience; it really is a virtue. As a young man, I wanted to have everything, right then and there.  But I came to the realisation that if you want something, you have to work for it; show respect and have patience in developing your skills and knowledge to get what you want in life.  I had to learn all this to equip me for what I do now.

My greatest influence has been....

....my elder brother, Len Garrison, who formulated the Black Cultural Archives, and my father.  My father died at the age of 95 in 2012 and he was married to my mum until he died.  We were a family unit for over 60 years, which has given me strength and courage that I have drawn on in my own life.  If you’ve lived to 95 years, you’ve got to have learned to have some patience!

The best advice I ever received is....

....a lot of things my mother used to say to me; Caribbean/Jamaican sayings that I replay in my mind.  ‘If you want good in life, your nose has to run’. ‘If market is not good in the morning, the market won’t be good in the evening’. Sayings that tell that you’ve got to get it right the first time off and then you’ve got the chance to get it even better.  ‘A patient man rides a donkey’ is another one; while everyone is whizzing around, the little man on the donkey is just getting there quietly.  I used to think these were just sayings with no substance, but going through life and reflecting, I have really embraced our cultural heritage. A lot of what we adopt is not from our own cultural beliefs, so I try to take these sayings on board as part of my inner strength as I go forward, because these values are just as significant as any others I have come across.

My top tips for succeeding in my career area are....

....to have a plan and to make sure you continue to develop your abilities. If you have not been given chances and opportunities, you can end up feeling that you can’t succeed. So develop your confidence and abilities and, whatever they are, have belief in yourself.  Whatever is done in this world is done by a human being and that human being could be you.  Nothing is beyond you.  It’s not just others that can deliver; you can also - if you have that belief and confidence in yourself.


If you would like to nominate an inspiring personality for a ‘5 Minute Interview’ please contact us at editor@reconnectafrica.com

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