In this inspirational Woman Profile we interview Nadia Takyiwaa Mensah. Nadia Takyiwaa Mensah is the founder of Sixth Sense Manifesto (a brand management agency) in Ghana and Nigeria and Sai (a wine and champagne cafe).
She has been writing a weekly article for the Business and Financial Times Newspaper in Ghana for some time now and her passion and energy are clearly reflected in this interview.
Please tell us what is a typical
business day for you?
Teaching,
holding my head, cringing, laughing, a lot of planning and strategising
What made you start the business and how
did you get started?
Both
businesses were a spiritual calling for me to work on them. For each, I was
guided by my spirit on what to do, when, how etc. I got started by simply
having faith, trusting God and obeying my spirit
What would you say has been your
greatest accomplishment in the business world to date?
- Opening a new business within 5 years of living in Ghana
- Re-branding into Sixth Sense
- Opening a branch in Lagos, Nigeria and successfully winning and executing contracts
- Sixth Sense winning an International Star of Quality Award in June 2015
- Getting my recruitment process right and being able to retain my employees
- Keeping the business growing year on year
What has been your
biggest challenge in business so far?
Communication between myself and staff and the lack
of exposure that my staff have received.
What are your future
plans for the business?
For Sai it would be to open up more branches
throughout Accra each with a slight twist to the original café that has been
opened.
For Sixth Sense Manifesto it would be to continue
to build a stronger team and position the agency very well in Ghana and
Nigeria, ensuring that at least 1 in every 10 person within our industry knows
our name.
If you had to do
it all over again, what would you do differently?
Start younger! But I guess my destined time is my
destined time, so asides from that nothing!
Why is it so
important to inspire young women in particular to follow their dreams?
I believe coming from a traditional family culture,
it is important to inspire young women so that they know that it is OK to be
the best you can be without offending anybody. Also, without necessarily
compromising family life.
What advice would you
give to somebody who wants to start a business in your industry?
Know what you are doing, don’t look left, don’t
look right, just straight ahead! Focus on what is going on in your vision for
your business and build on it. Fall in love with your vision and have fun
building it and making it come to life. Your vision will eventually become
reality as you allow them to enter your world.
What or who inspires
you in business and why?
Innovation and change inspires me because there is
so much opportunity in Africa to do things better and bring an experience to
people. Our future generation inspires me to depart something for them to take
and run with. Secondary to this, my son and family inspire me in business as I
have made a lot of personal sacrifices because of business and they have been
supportive of this.
What is your favourite
inspirational quote?
Luke
11:9-10 - So I say to you, ask, and it will be
given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks, receives;
and he who seeks, finds; and to him who knocks, it will be opened.
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