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Meet Vincent, an undergraduate who started his business with #200 and became a millionaire at 24



Vincent Adeoba is an orphan that has been inspiring lots of young people across Nigeria with his inspiring success story and also in his endeavour to pomote quality education in Nigeria... why not read more and enjoy a tip of his inspiring stories...


I am Vincent Adeoba, losing my mum and dad at the age of 4 is the darkest moment of my life. People don't know why I am so passionate about quality education for every child and the inspiration behind the Sera Schools Initiative, an NGO I run which is committed to helping indigent students in public schools across the country. It is the woman in this picture. 

I know she can't read what I am writing here because she sacrificed her own education for me but I am glad her children can read it and my success today is her success. She is another Mother Theresa the world is yet to celebrate but I will. She is the major heroine of my success. She picked me up when everybody abandoned me.

May 9, 1994 is a day I will never forget; it is the
darkest moment of my life. I was just four years old then and I woke up that day seeing people crying in our compound. What happened? I didn't know until I saw my mummy lifeless body being brought into the partially completed building we were living then. Mummy died that day and it was like everything was over, our world collapsed unexpectedly. My dad had died earlier, death taking my mum away again was like God decided to punish us for reason we never knew.

Being the 2nd to the last born, I was abandoned with our last born Gbemisola as family members came around to pick the matured ones among us. Sister Morenike was just 19 then but she refused to follow the person that came for her, she dropped out of school and started working to provide money for my grandma who was taking care of us then. 

Grandma couldn't live long, she couldn't get over my mum's death and she too passed away shortly after. Sister Morenike came back, she took me and my little sister who was a year old then and took us to Akure. She was 20 by then. She became my mother and that of my little sister. She put us in a lesson which was where I received my first education since she could not afford money to put us in a school.  She told us that though she may never go to school again but that we will go and that she will do whatever she can to make us educated.

Lovely sister though I was 5 years then, I can still remember how you worked in a food canteen washing plates and many times you always bring your food for us to eat.

After some months in the canteen you raised money and venture into hawking small white beans that was common then to sustain us. From there you moved to hawking Maggi when you discovered that you could make more money there to feed us. You will hawk from morning to night so as to have money to buy akara and garri which was our best food then.

You later moved to Oja-Oba to start selling Okra and pepper and I have to join you at the age of 7 to start hawking and it was in the market under you that I learnt most of the things I know about business today. I can remember how rain always beat us in the market and how we always cry together anytime our sales proceed got stolen. 

You sacrificed everything for me and today I am a better person, at least I am now a graduate serving in Lagos State and not an okra seller as many of my mates then are still in Oja-Oba in Akure. I am shedding tears already I have to stop here. Thank so much for beating me anytime you discovered I didn't go to school. The only assignment you could only do for me while I was in primary school was Yoruba but I am grateful you have once being my teacher.

   
Aunty "Meeke" was what I shortened your name Morenike to then because I was used to calling your name from morning to night.  I cannot thank you enough. You became illiterate so that I can be educated, you became poor so that I can be rich. You sacrificed everything for me. I owe you so much even God know that.  

Join me and celebrate another great heroine of my success Mrs. Morenike Babalola and call her on this number 08140186935 on my behalf  to thank her for me and also celebrate with me with goodwill call and messages on my number 08169126032.

 I am not telling this story for comments or for likes. I don't need sympathy, I have overcome everything already even though the pains has refused to go away but I know there are a lot people outside there that are going through turbulent moments like I had gone through and my story can ignite their hope. God doesn't punish us with the situations of our lives, He only prepare us for the future with them. 

If I can I do it, yes you too can, every child deserves quality education. I am who I am today because I have access to quality education. With the Sera Schools Initiative as a platform, I will do all I can to make sure every child in Nigeria have access to quality education. 

Today, I travel across the country to various primary and secondary schools to share my inspiring story with students. I believe my story can be an inspiration to children and youths outside there with similar background like mine to hold on to their dream and can also be a lesson for children from well to do homes not to abuse the opportunity they have. I also use the platform to market my book "Maximize Your Potential For Academic Excellence" which I specifically wrote to help students achieve excellence in their study. If I could achieve academic excellence despite all I went through, then any child too can do the same. To invite me for speaking engagement in your school or your children' school or to order for my bestselling book, contact me on my number 08169126032.


I never met my dad.
I lost my mum at the age of 4.
I lost his grandma at the age of 5.
I hawked bread at the age of 6.
I started primary school at the age of 7.
I ran away from the house at the age of 7
I became a trader at the market at the age of 8 and hawked okra, pepper, vegetable, garden egg, tomatoes, garri etc. 
I escaped kidnappers at the age of 9.
I survived flood at the age of 10.
I was a called a dullard at the age of 11.
I wanted to drop out of school at the age of 12.
I failed WAEC at the age of 19. 

Less than 10 years later

I am a graduate of OAU.
I am an accountant.
I became NUASA OAU President.
I became Student Ambassador of ACCA.
I had 5.0 GP in part one second semester.
I became an author at the age of 20.
I started my business at the of 22.
I became a millionaire at the age of 24.I became CEO of Seravision Brooks at the age of 25.
I founded Sera Schools Initiative at the age of 25.
I became Impact Africa Foundation Ambassador at the age of 26.
I won Lagos State NYSC Inter-Platoon debate at the of 26.
I won an excellnece award with ICAN President at the age of 27.
I have featured on magazines, national dailies, TV programs, radio programs, blogs and several others. 
I have spoken along with professors, political leaders, captain of industries in various conferences and seminars.

Now i am a blogger, a youth leader, a social entrepreneur, a motivational speaker, an author, an educationalist and my vision is to take more than one million children off the street and give them opportunity to become valuable citizens. 

It was like my late mother knew that I will go through a lot of challenges in life. Even though she was not educated, she was inspired to name me "Vincent" which is derived from the Latin name "Vincentius" which means "TO CONQEUR" and to say I have conquered is an understatement even though I know there are still more challenges on the way to conquer. 

If I can be living my dream and making impacts despite all the odds, then you too can make your life count. Never allow your challenges to defeat you instead, let it bring out the champion in you. Make your life count, there is a champion in you.


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