The rise of Oluchi’s Havilah Academy   

The gradual growth of Havilah Academy is a testament that success is a function of grit and grace.

Oluchi started her work life as an executive marketer at Industrial and General Insurance Plc in Onitsha in 2009 after her National Youth Service Corps at Bayawa Day Secondary School, Arugungu, Kebbi State.

In 2010, she set up a crèche in her house in Onitsha. This did not, however, keep her stuck in the school, as she handed it over to competent hands to gain more work experience.

She decided to work for Nigerian Orient News, a magazine in south-eastern Nigeria, where she was the circulation officer. Thereafter, she got a part-time lecturing job at Abia State College of Education Technical Onitsha Study Centre.

In September 2015, she decided to dedicate her whole time to the school, as she felt her presence could influence the institution positively. She decided to site her Havilah Academy at 22 Nathan Okafor Street, Odume Obosi.

“l love teaching and giving inspiration to the young ones. So all the while, I never experienced job satisfaction and fulfilment as a staff member. I noticed I am a self-motivated person. There was a vacuum within, which was begging to be filled,” she tells Start-Up Digest.

How did Oluchi conceive the idea of setting up a school?

“On daily basis, I travelled miles to drop my baby in a crèche far from my house. I discovered there were many schools with no provision for kids below three years of age. In 2010, when a friend who knew me well came visiting, she looked around my house and said, ‘Oluchi, you have space enough to start whatever you have in mind’. That was the push and encouragement I needed! I immediately set to work. I created a space and decorated one of our sitting rooms and started a crèche right there. I made fliers, moved from house to house to get kids from below three years. I gave out announcement to churches around my house,” she explains.

She says in paid employment, people work just for the money and only very few go the extra mile to make things happen even when nobody appreciates their efforts.

In her first year, which was in September 2015, she registered 17 kids and employed two more staff members. The next year, the number of kids rose to 25, with an addition of one more staff member. The number later rose to 60 and, by end of 2016, she had registered over 80 pupils, she says.

She attributes the rising number of kids to the quality of teachers in the school as well as the institution’s capacity to handle children effectively. Armed with Bachelor of Arts and Master’s degrees in Psychology, Oluchi also holds Post-Graduate Diploma in Education.

She says lack of capital or collateral to source for loans to set up befitting structures is a limiting factor for the school.

“There is also a challenge with getting dedicated staff. Due to poverty and influx of school everywhere, some parents now move from school to school and, as such, dodge payment of their wards’ school fees,” she explains.

She says she needs money to expand the school to accommodate more kids, stating that she has plans to invest in real estate in the nearest future.

“There are many challenges facing entrepreneurs in Nigeria, but I guess the biggest and most challenging one is capital. No bank gives you a loan without collateral,” she laments.

She advises younger people interested in venturing in education business to be sure they really love education.

“The space is very wide and is waiting for innovative young people who have knowledge of IT. Always bear in mind that it cannot be over saturated, rather innovative people will always beat the tide and remain afloat,” she states.

 

ODINAKA ANUDU

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