Meet The 20 Year Old Millionaire Who Turned Down Harvard To Build His Company In Kenya Despite Being Orphaned At Age 11.
MOMBASA,Kenya:“If you are in a society
where there are intelligent people, you need a plan. If you are in a
society that has intelligent people who have a plan, you need a
strategy. If you are in a society of intelligent people who have a plan
and a strategy you need speed and aggression”. These are the word of the
young enterprenuer Mubarak.
Mubarak Muyika was not a
conventional school boy, the kind that depended on Dad and Mum for
almost everything, from food to underwear. Not that he detested such
luxury, but life didn’t just let him have it.
Orphaned at the age of 11, Mubarak knew
he had to brace up and face life head-on. He was made to live with his
Aunt and her husband who owned a small book publishing and distribution
company, Acrodile Publishers.
While working with his adoptive parents,
he discovered the difficulty they faced each day trying to reach more
customers with the insufficient help of a webmaster who provided a poor
service at a very high cost. Mubarak took the initiative to address this
need; he began teaching himself how to build a website using online
resources. The result of his work was very amazing. In a space of
months, the teenager became a website pro. He then delivered a working
e-commerce site for Acrodile Publishers.
‘‘I cleared high school in 2011, two
years earlier I had developed a passion for computers that saw me set up
a website for my adoptive parents who were running a bookshop. ‘‘They
needed an online platform to expand their venture,’’ He told the
Business Daily in an interview at Nation Centre, Nairobi.
Mubarak’s entrepreneurial leanings were
discovered at an early stage, when he began business at Kamusinga High
School in Bungoma County. This drive intensified as he grew older, I
guess that explains why he turned down what young men his age would call
a very rare opportunity; a fully paid scholarship to the prestigious
Harvard University in the US.
He knew that was the price he had to pay
for his dream. Most people found the young man’s action difficult to
comprehend, but not Chris Kirubi; the business mogul who recommended
Mubarak for the scholarship.
‘‘Mr Muyika is enterprising and focused,
I recommended him to Havard University but noticed that
entrepreneurship came first and he had no obligation to pursue the
course. Nowadays one can learn in many ways, even Bill Gates did not
complete his studies. He walked out and aggressively did serious
business,’’ Chris tells Business Daily in a phone interview.
In
January 2012, Mubarak registered Hype Century Technologies and
Investments Ltd, a company which deals in web-designing and domain
registration. He soon incorporated two of his friends in the enterprise
and within three months, the business became a highly profitable one.
‘‘We started very small, with Sh50, 000
which I had saved from a freelance job I had been doing as a student and
after High School. My first client was so impressed that he offered me
space in his office at Rehema House in Nairobi,’’ He recounts.
HypeCentury has continued to grow and
become profitable, expanding services to include domain name
registration, online marketing, and more. Mubarak’s vision for
HypeCentury is to grow East Africa’s economy by leveraging the power of
the Internet. Isn’t it clear that the young man is striding on the right
path?
‘‘We had three computers and in a good
month I would pocket between Sh60, 000 and Sh80,000, which I used to pay
my two part-time employees. Our services varied from domain
registration to web hosting and designing ’’ He says. ‘‘Most of the new
staff were university graduates, I was dealing with the best talent in
the market,’’
The entrepreneur Mubarak Muyika is also an Anzisha prize fellow; he contested in 2012 and was awarded with Sh1.1 million.
Since then, several major business doors
have been opening at will for the young business man. In December 2012,
Mubarak hit a big one when he entered business with Indian investor
Jignesh Patel who runs I-Code Ltd. Mr Patel acquired a 25 per cent stake
in the company while Mubarak had 60. By the end of the year the company
had more than 900 domains.
‘‘Patel had 25 per cent shares, Wakwoma
five per cent, Doursey 10 per cent and I had 60 per cent. I retained the
chief executive’s position but I had the feeling that I was not
maximising my potential. I opted to sell my shares and develop a new
venture,’’ Mubarak tells Business Daily.
Soon after that, Mubarak registered
another firm, Zagace, an enterprise management platform that uses
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and web-hosting resources to create a
basic forum for business systems and processes. He rented a two-bedroom
house which acts as his office and has employed about 12 computer
programmers. Mubarak is set to take the world and may never relent until
he achieves his purpose.
He had the option of wallowing in
self-pity with a badge on his chest that says; “I am a helpless orphan,
can’t you see?” instead he took charge of his life and became a solution
to other people’s needs. You too can take the world, but first, you
need to take charge of your life and then step out in faith. You are
stronger and more intelligent than you know.
Mubarak also added in an interview that
if you must succeed then you need intelligence, strategy, speed and
aggression. He broke it down by saying “if you are in a society where
there are intelligent people, you need a plan. If you are in a society
where there are intelligent people who have a plan, you need a strategy.
If you are in a society of intelligent people who have a plan and a
strategy you need speed and aggression. He embodies these qualities, no
wonder he is a success at such a young age and is tipped to become one
of the biggest players in the future of tech in Africa.
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