Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nigeria. Show all posts

Monday, November 20, 2023

SpaceX is advertising a position for growth manager of its Starlink Internet service in Sub-Saharan Africa

ACCORDING to the following article, SpaceX is advertising a job vacancy for a manager to boost Starlink growth in Africa. The role will be based in Nairobi, Kenya, from where the growth manager will report to a team at Starlink’s Hawthorne, California headquarters. It would prioritise applicants with a current right to work in Kenya. Also:


"Starlink’s estimated rollout date in South Africa has remained “unknown”, whereas the service has already been available in Kenya for four months. Six other Sub-Saharan African countries — Benin, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Zambia — have also launched Starlink. In addition, the company has given estimated rollout dates for the vast majority of the other countries in the region before the end of 2024. Aside from South Africa, the only four countries that don’t yet have a planned launch date are Central African Republic, Eritrea, Mali, and South Sudan". 


Read more in report from MyBroadband - mybroadband.co.za/news/
By Hanno Labuschagne
Dated Monday, 20 November 2023 - here is a copy in full:

SpaceX hiring manager to boost Starlink growth in Africa

SpaceX is advertising a position for growth manager of its Starlink Internet service in Sub-Saharan Africa.


The role — first reported by Space in Africa — is open for applications on the Greenhouse recruitment website.


SpaceX explained that it was looking for someone to join the Starlink Growth team, which is responsible for launching, growing, and improving the service.


The successful candidate will be accountable for Starlink’s growth and success in the region, identifying and removing barriers to growth, championing user experience, and driving initiatives to accelerate adoption.


The role will be based in Nairobi, Kenya, from where the growth manager will report to a team at Starlink’s Hawthorne, California headquarters.


The growth manager’s responsibilities will entail the following:

  • Own growth of active consumer subscriber base in the region, identifying blockers and prioritising levers for growth
  • Set vision, develop strategy, and manage a budget around consumer growth initiative strategies, and tactics to meet company goals in the region
  • Deeply understand the customer experience in a country, elevating insights to drive localised improvements
  • Develop dashboards to track progress, drive improvements to growth and operational metrics, work with the operations team to create forecasts, and communicate to the broader Starlink team and senior leadership
  • Engage with local partners to drive efforts catered to the market, understand what’s working and what’s not, and drive continuous improvement
  • Champion key strategic consumer-focused projects end-to-end by collaborating and working cross-functionally with Operations, Engineering, Marketing, Sales, and Support teams

The basic qualifications required to be considered for the position include a Bachelor’s degree, five or more years of experience in consulting or project management, and three or more years of experience in Excel and SQL.


In addition, SpaceX demands two or more years of leading in interdisciplinary projects. The candidate must also have residency and work authorisation in Africa.

Skyline of Nairobi, the capital city of Kenya

Other preferred skills and experience that will benefit applicants include:

  • Bachelor’s degree in business, supply chain, management information systems, computer science, engineering, or economics disciplines
  • 8+ years of relevant work experience in go-to-market, growth, international operations, consulting, software, Internet, and/or media industries, or early-stage companies
  • Proven ability to work independently in a fast-paced environment
  • Experience leading complex operational and strategic initiatives
  • Demonstrated track record of cross-functional stakeholder management and leadership through influence
  • Distinctive project management, problem-solving, and analysis skills, combined with business judgment and top communication skills
  • Experience working in broadband Internet or other consumer product industries
  • Master’s degree in management, engineering, or supply chain

SpaceX added it would prioritise applicants with a current right to work in Kenya.


They must also be willing to travel approximately 50% of the time and work extended hours and over weekends as needed.


It also stressed it does not have regional offices everywhere in the world and the candidate might not work from a SpaceX office.


No clarity on South African rollout


Many tech companies operate their Sub-Saharan Africa offices out of South Africa because the country is among the most well-developed on the continent.


However, Starlink’s estimated rollout date in South Africa has remained “unknown”, whereas the service has already been available in Kenya for four months.


Six other Sub-Saharan African countries — Benin, Malawi, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, and Zambia — have also launched Starlink.


In addition, the company has given estimated rollout dates for the vast majority of the other countries in the region before the end of 2024.


Aside from South Africa, the only four countries that don’t yet have a planned launch date are Central African Republic, Eritrea, Mali, and South Sudan.


SpaceX’s enterprise director Phillip van Essen previously told Mining Weekly that the company prioritised countries that made it easy to get approval for Starlink.


It is possible that the role of the growth manager could include expanding the service into countries where Starlink has not passed the necessary legal hurdles.


In South Africa, Starlink requires an electronic communications services (ECS) licence to sell its service directly to customers.


It would also need an electronic communications network services (ECNS) licence to roll out ground stations to improve the service’s performance.

Starlink Gateway on Unalaska

To acquire these licences, the Electronic Communications Act determines that SpaceX — or its local subsidiary or partner — must be 30% owned by historically disadvantaged groups — including black people, women, youth, or disabled people.


Complicating matters further is that the licence will have to be acquired “second hand” from a willing seller, as South Africa’s telecoms regulator — Icasa — is not currently accepting applications for new licences.


It recently emerged that even government-owned fibre network operator Broadband Infraco cannot apply for an ECS  licence.


Icasa has not explained why it has not published a new invitation to apply for these licences in more than a decade.


Alternatively, SpaceX could work with a local partner that already meets the requirements.


However, this could make its subscription more expensive as the partner would have to take a cut to make such an arrangement financially sensible.


Although several companies have already confirmed distribution agreements with SpaceX, they have shied away from mentioning availability in South Africa in the near future.


Despite no official local rollout, over 4,000 South Africans are using imported Starlink kits with a regional or global roaming subscription to access the Internet.


Two Internet service providers (ISPs) that specialise in importing and managing Starlink on behalf of end-users — Starsat Africa and IcasaSePush — recently reduced their subscription prices substantially.


View original: https://mybroadband.co.za/news/broadband/515921-spacex-hiring-manager-to-boost-starlink-growth-in-africa.html


[Ends]

Monday, April 24, 2023

Sudan news round-up from BBC Mon 24 Apr 2023

BBC EPA-EFE/REX/ShutterstockCopyright: EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
Image caption: A battle-damaged street in Khartoum on 23 April

From BBC News Live Reporting 

Monday 24 April 2023 22:26 BST UK


Edited by Nathan Williams and Alys Davies


22:26 Pausing our coverage
Nathan Williams
Live reporter
We're pausing our live coverage for now, thanks for following along.


The two rival factions – the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and the regular Sudanese army – have agreed to a 72-hour ceasefire, the US says. But, this is not the first ceasefire of the conflict – let's see if this holds. You can continue to read about the story here.


Nations have been attempting to get diplomats and citizens out of the country. But UK defence sources have warned the situation is "more dynamic, more dangerous" than what was seen during the evacuation of Kabul, Afghanistan back in 2021.


Amid the evacuations, some 3,500 Nigerians are "stranded", a Nigerian diaspora body has said. 


Throughout the day, we've also heard many harrowing stories from people on the ground – including those who are having trouble accessing food and water.


For more on this story see this short background piece. And here's another on how evacuations happen.


And here's our latest news story on the situation in Sudan.


Today's coverage was brought to you by Heather Sharp, Alexandra Fouché, Cecilia Macaulay, Ece Goksedef, Antoinette Radford, Laura Gozzi, Adam Durbin, Sam Hancock, Aoife Walsh, Nadine Yousif, Alys Davies and myself.


Summary


The UK government has insisted it's doing all it can to help British nationals stuck in Sudan - after diplomats and their families were rescued yesterday


Minister Andrew Mitchell says there are estimates of around 4,000 Britons in the country, but the number could be higher


Fighting between two opposing forces has seen deadly shooting and shelling in the country's capital, Khartoum, for more than a week


France, Germany, Italy and Spain have been evacuating diplomats and other nationals from Sudan


But UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly has warned that help for Britons will remain "severely limited" until a ceasefire is reached


He added there were "specific threats and violence directed towards diplomats", which led to the decision to evacuate staff from the British embassy in Khartoum


A British businessman living in Sudan has told the BBC the situation is a "nightmare for those of us left behind" in the country


UK defence sources say the situation in Sudan is “very, very different” than what was seen during the evacuation out of Afghanistan in 2021


Khartoum is "more dynamic, more dangerous" than Kabul - with ongoing fighting in areas where Western nationals are located, the sources say


The BBC understands that a small British military team has landed in Sudan to assess potential evacuation options


Meanwhile, Sudan's rivals have agreed to a three day ceasefire starting on Tuesday, US Secretary of State Anthony Blinken says


More than 1,000 EU citizens have been airlifted out, many on French and German rescue missions


Fighting between the Sudanese army and RSF paramilitary force has left 420 people dead since it began on 15 April


About 9,000 refugees flee to South Sudan


US heavily involved in efforts to stop the fighting


Ceasefire comes after past attempts to call truce collapsed

See above reports here with thanks to the BBC.


Video caption: 
Sudan fighting: Europeans cram onto evacuation planes from Sudan

[Ends]

Sunday, September 08, 2019

Sudan: Super Eagles urge Nigeria U23 to beat Sudan

Article from Fcnaija.com
Dated Thursday 05 September 2019
Super Eagles star sends message to Nigeria U23 against Sudan
Photo: Super Eagles captain Ahmed Musa has sent a message to Nigeria’s U-23 team popularly known as the Dream Team ahead of Sudan in the first leg of the 2020 Olympic qualifiers.

The 26-year-old Al-Nassr FC forward charged Imama Amapakabo led side to go all out and make the nation proud on Thursday, 5th September clash at the Al Merriekh Stadium in Omdurman before the return leg a fortnight at the Stephen Keshi Stadium in Asaba next Tuesday.

Musa said: "I am here to encourage and pledge my support to you due to the importance of the game ahead of you,”

"I have played for the U23 before making my debut for the Super Eagles in 2010, and with dedication, hard work and grace of God, today I’m the Super Eagles captain.

"Nigeria is blessed with a lot of talented footballers. I am the captain of the Super Eagles not because I am better than most of the players but due to dedication and hard work. I urge you to go all out and beat Sudan because the game serves as Olympic qualifiers.”

"I urge you to go all out and beat Sudan because the game serves as Olympic qualifiers.”

The Winners over two legs between Nigeria and Sudan will qualify for the third Africa U23 Cup of Nations, scheduled for Egypt from November 8 till 22.

View original: http://fcnaija.com/super-eagles-star-sends-message-to-nigeria-u23-against-sudan