Features Writers Section

ABOUT

What this page represents

As part of the larger vision of creating a melting point and an active hub for creative writers in Nigeria, this blog will feature a good number of my friends, colleagues, mentors and others who sign-up for it, affording them the unique platform to share their own stories and knowledge.

We will co-share this platform and get more people to read contents that are authentic and self-styled to appeal especially to young ones  who are in dire need of guidance and direction. This is not leaving the older ones who may re-awaken the burning desire to start writing and sharing again. 

The stories and content that would be published here will come in a variety of styles and cover a range of topics, from life experiences, to lessons from mistakes made,travel features about a specific trip, to a review of a restaurant, to life as a single mum, divorce and all sorts – the possibilities are endless.

It is my firm believe that we all have a story to share and for a good course we will express ourselves without inhibition.

If you are convinced that your writing style and stories will appeal to anyone anywhere, please join the feature writers and lets create a story together.

Welcome aboard.

 

Some stories from your favourite writers

Your Talent; Your Personal Signature

It all began with a story.

Ade Clayton was born in the late 70’s and is the first child in a small family with his four siblings. Times were tough during Ade’s teenage years. 

Legends

The Legend and How He Completes Our Story

How do people become legends? And by the way, who is a legend? The dictionary says he is a famous person, admired for his achievement in a particular area. Really, a legend defies definitions, technical or literary. 

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Be Audacious, take that blind leap

My first job was at an engineering consulting firm in Oshodi Lagos. I was fresh out of school and had just completed the compulsory National Youth Service Program NYSC…

The Power of Listening

Jessica was an amazing human being. She was as close to a perfect personification of energy, class and grace as there could be. During our undergraduate days, she…

The twelve commandments for the 21st Century public office holder

Congratulations my dear on your desire to aspire to become a public office holder. The desire is noble but the journey to public office is stormy, rough and at times may lead to your death.

Identity Theft, by the Owner!

I am a man. That is the first thing. Or I could be a woman. I am human. Equal to any other human, no matter the colour, height, shape, location. I am me. I am of high value.

Keeping Sane - The Covid -19 Realities

Renowned businessman and personal development guru Jim Rohn said that you’re the average of the five people you spend most time with

Your Contractual Obligations - Is COVID 19 a valid Excuse in Law?

Amidst the ripple effects of the Covid-19 Pandemic, businesses have found themselves unable to fulfill several contractual obligations;

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The Woman of my Tribe

Have you met a woman from my tribe?

She is that one who has guts to go for what she wants and gets it. This particular woman has no place for mediocrity and refuses to wear a label. She has a spring to her steps and fire in her belly with all the ginger and swagger of the queen that she is.

On Trend

Popular Stories

The Loudest Person in Every Room Is Often the Most Afraid

When he told his father, Dare’s first response was a sigh. Then: “I told you to practice more. I told you months ago. You don’t listen. You never listen.”

There was no “I’m sorry, son.” No pause to let the boy simply feel the loss of the thing he wanted. Just a swift, seamless pivot to what Temi had done wrong — and, by extension, how Temi’s failure was evidence of Temi’s failure to take his father’s wisdom seriously.

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Everything You Were Too Embarrassed to Google About Mid-Life Crisis

You are somewhere between forty and fifty-five. You looked in the mirror recently and had a thought you immediately dismissed. Maybe you googled something at 2am that you would never say out loud. Maybe you bought something expensive and impractical and told everyone it was an investment. Or maybe you just feel — quietly, persistently — like the life you built was supposed to feel better than this by now.

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Chekhov’s Gun

Anton Chekhov was a Russian physician and playwright — a man trained in the discipline of diagnosis before he became one of the most precise storytellers in the history of world literature. That combination of sensibilities matters, because the principle he articulated in the late nineteenth century was not merely a rule of dramatic craft. It was an observation about the nature of significance itself. About what it means for something to be present. About the relationship between introduction and consequence.

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Fear Is a Prison with Invisible Walls

There is a prison that has no concrete walls, no iron bars, no guards posted at the gate. Nobody built it for you. Nobody sentenced you to it. And yet, for many people, it is the place they spend the better part of their lives — circling its perimeter, brushing their fingers against its invisible boundaries, and quietly retreating each time they feel the edge of something that might require more of them than they believe they can give.

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The Closed Fist

Picture a hand holding sand. The tighter the grip, the faster the grains escape between the fingers. Ease the grip — open the palm, allow the hand to become a vessel rather than a vice — and the sand stays. This is one of the oldest paradoxes of leadership, and one of the least learned: that control, pursued too aggressively, produces the very loss of control it was designed to prevent.

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The Growth Trap

There is a version of ambition that builds. And there is a version of ambition that consumes. From a distance — and especially from inside it — they look almost identical. Both are energetic. Both are forward-moving. Both speak the language of vision and possibility. The difference only becomes visible later, usually at the point of fracture, when what was built begins to come apart under the weight of what was promised.

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The Frontline Disconnect

There is a particular kind of organisational absurdity that most people who have ever worked in a company will recognise immediately. It is the policy that was clearly designed by someone who has never had to implement it. The restructuring that looked elegant on a slide deck and chaotic on the ground. The customer-facing process that was overhauled by a committee that has not spoken to a customer in years. The directive that arrives from above, fully formed and non-negotiable, that causes the people closest to the work to exchange a look — the kind of look that says, without words: they have no idea what we actually do here.

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Burnout Is a Leadership Failure

We have built an entire mythology around exhaustion. In boardrooms and business culture — perhaps nowhere more so than in the high-pressure, always-on professional culture many of us inhabit — busyness has become a currency. To be tired is to be serious. To be overwhelmed is to be important. To be burning out, quietly, is somehow proof that you are fully committed.

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The “Polite” Failure: How Kindness Without Courage Quietly Dismantles Teams

There is a particular kind of failure that never makes the headlines. It does not arrive with a scandal, a public collapse, or a dramatic resignation. It builds slowly, almost imperceptibly, in the space between what a leader sees and what they choose to say. It lives in the meetings that end without the real conversation ever starting. It grows in the silence after a poor decision goes unchallenged, not because nobody noticed, but because everyone agreed — unspokenly — that it was simply easier not to say anything.

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The Hubris Trap: When Confidence Curdles into Arrogance

The boardroom at Crescent Capital Partners on Victoria Island smelled of leather and ambition — the kind that had been earned, aged, and perhaps left out a little too long. Emeka Osei-Bello, Managing Director and Group CEO, sat at the head of a long mahogany table, his charcoal suit immaculate, his posture the kind that says, I built this. He had, in many ways, done exactly that.

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Be Loyal to Your Future, Not Your Past

When you stay loyal to a version of yourself that no longer exists—the one who was hurt, the one who failed, the one who was overlooked—you are still choosing. You are choosing to let one moment in time define the whole arc of your life. And that choice costs more than it keeps.

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Before the Flood

A tipping point in business is the critical threshold where small, consistent efforts and favourable conditions trigger a much larger market response. It is the point where growth changes character.

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The Culture You Ignore Will Cost You Everything

Culture is not static. It is not a problem you solve once and move on from. It is a living,
breathing, constantly evolving dynamic that reflects the collective experience of every
person in your organisation. The question is not whether your culture is changing. It is
whether it is changing in the direction you intend — or drifting somewhere you cannot
afford to go.

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The Dream I Let Drag: Why I’m Finally Building Eloquence Unfiltered

The driving idea behind Eloquence Unfiltered is simple but radical: public speaking is not about perfection; it is about authenticity. We are moving away from the stiff, corporate rigidity of the past and embracing a raw, unfiltered approach to communication. This event is designed specifically for the modern professional—from the ambitious Gen Z graduate to the mid-level Millennial manager—who needs to command a room, pitch an idea, or simply find their voice in a crowded marketplace.

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The Five Pillars of Public Speaking Mastery: Pillar 4 – WORD

Many professionals mistakenly believe that complex language makes them sound more authoritative. In reality, complexity is often a mask for a lack of deep understanding. True mastery is the ability to take a complex idea and explain it so simply that a ten-year-old could understand it, without losing the nuance that a fifty-year-old expert demands.

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Connectologists, the Quiet Architects of Influence – Part 2

What makes Connectologists different is not noise, status, or outward performance. In fact, many of them look completely ordinary. They are not always the loudest in the room, the richest at the table, or the most decorated on paper. Yet they carry an invisible force. They bring people together with uncommon ease. They connect people to value.

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Connectologists, the Quiet Architects of Influence

What makes Connectologists different is not noise, status, or outward performance. In fact, many of them look completely ordinary. They are not always the loudest in the room, the richest at the table, or the most decorated on paper. Yet they carry an invisible force. They bring people together with uncommon ease. They connect people to value.

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The Five Pillars of Public Speaking Mastery: Pillar 1 – LOOK

When we talk about “LOOK,” we are not merely discussing whether your suit is tailored or your shoes are polished—though appearance certainly matters. We are talking about your physical presence, your spatial authority, and the non-verbal cues that tell your audience whether you are a leader worth listening to.

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The Weight of Experience: When Life Says, “Your Turn”

There is a profound arrogance in the unlived life. It is the quiet, unspoken assumption that because we have observed the storm from the safety of the shore, we understand the fury of the waves. We build fortresses of theory, constructed from the pages of books, the narratives of documentaries, and the cautionary tales of others. We sit in the grandstands of existence, offering unsolicited commentary on the players below, convinced that our hypothetical strategies would yield better results.

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The 8th Floor

Have you missed reading a short story from the blog, oh well, here is one. You will find a thrilling and fast pace read somewhere

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sylvester, happy new year, sparkling wine

Cheers to 2025

Every New Year holds promise, as though it is any different from the turn of every new day that we witness every 24hours. If the

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Moral Case for a Gift

Moral Case for a Gift Enjoy this new short interactive story Interactive Story – Decision Based Kamikun was having his first ever marijuana. He was

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