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Boluwatife
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PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT!!
JESUS died for me, so I can LIVE for him.
I'd keep talking about him and winning souls for him. ♥️❤️🔥🌹 JESUS SENT ME 🤍
Ayomide Adetoro@_ayomideadetoro
PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT‼️ JESUS died for me, so I can LIVE for him. I’d keep talking about him and winning souls for him.♥️❤️🔥🌹 JESUS SENT ME🤍 #Jesusmustbeseen
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Boluwatife retweetledi

Congratulations my people 🎊🎉💓💗
Rhoda🌹@tuyitee1
Traditionally his, forever mine. I married my best friend💜
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- InMail feature
- Filter by titles and activate the “hiring now” feature. It ensures LinkedIn only shows profiles of people that are currently hiring
- Use the “post” feature instead of the “jobs” feature
- Look at your analytics everyday to see who viewed your profile
Ivy The Brand🥂@Ivy_Dinma
HI GUYS, I GOT LINKEDIN PREMIUM FOR ONE MONTH TRIAL. PLEASE HIT ME WITH THE BEST HACKS TO LAND A JOB BEFORE MY TRIAL EXPIRES 🙏
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Boluwatife retweetledi

1. Send a message almost immediately after exchanging the contact (or, longest, at night). Thank them and say you are excited to meet them and look forward to going far in life them. They may reply with a simple “okay” or “Welcome”, or not even reply at all. Doesn’t matter, they are busy.
2. Follow them on social media and if they are active, engage them
3. Follow them and their company in the news. If you see any positive thing about their company in the news, send them a message to congratulate them. If it is bad news, commiserate with them and pray for them
4. Avoid spamming them with regular messages. No “Happy new week” or “Thunder fire your enemy this week” messages.
5. If you can go to any other event you read on their page or in the news they are attending and are able to meet them physically again, walk up to them and remind them about your previous encounter
6. If you write something relevant to their company, industry or interests, you can share the link with them on Whatsapp. You are subtly sending a message that you’re a person of value yourself
7. Update them about your progress. “I just got promotion at work or I just moved to XYZ company. I look forward to being a veteran in the industry like you”
8. At some point, they become more comfortable with you and will even be the one to invite you to an event
9. But if they don’t, no problem. You can still do a lot in life without having them in your network.

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Boluwatife retweetledi

This was the reason I didn’t want to be noticed during my bachelor’s program. I wanted to “hide” until graduation, but my answer sheets exposed me.
I had just joined the department as a new Direct Entry student from a polytechnic, and my first year was 200L.
The professors didn’t know me. Having taught and graded the students for a year already, they were familiar with everyone’s capabilities.
So a quiet guy shows up in 200L, writes his first exams, and boom, almost every lecturer was looking for me.
When the results came out in early second semester, one lecturer walked into class and the first thing he said was, “Who is Ugochukwu in this class?”
I was like, “Have I done anything wrong?”
[Intrapersonal communication]
I didn’t want to respond, but some students turned and looked in my direction in a uniform manner that suggested, “That’s him.” So I raised my hand.
He asked, “Were you here last year?”
I responded, “No, sir. I’m a DE student.”
He said, “No wonder. I have graded this class three times, and when I came across your script, I thought it was a postgraduate script that had been mistakenly mixed up with the undergraduate ones. You don’t write like an undergraduate.”
He then turned to the class and started telling them how my script was the best he had ever graded in a long while and how I write like a scholar, with citations and all, and he encouraged me to keep it up.
That day, my cover was blown. Although it sounded like a public commendation, I knew my trouble started that day.
This open commendation was coming from the department’s toughest grader and most dreaded professor.
The next day in class, a professor asked a question and no one knew the answer. For a second-year class, he expected us to know it because it would help us better understand the concept he wanted to introduce. He was disappointed and frustrated, and in that moment, I raised my hand and he froze. He gestured for me to speak.
I quickly explained the concept with two practical examples, and immediately I finished talking, he said, “You must be Ugochukwu Madu.”
And I replied, “Yes, I am.”
He reacted in a way that said, “I knew it,” or “No wonder.”
He paused the lecture and started telling the class how he couldn’t believe his eyes while grading my script. In his words: “He writes so well. He doesn’t miss a punctuation. He cites authors from textbooks to support his answers and arguments. He writes Queen’s English.”
Like the other professor, he encouraged me to keep it up and to share my knowledge with classmates who were willing to learn. That was how I started creating study groups and teaching my classmates, especially for difficult courses and concepts.
Again, I knew I was cooked. I just wanted to get good grades quietly and disappear after graduation, but my answer sheets betrayed me.
News of the department’s finest professors praising me openly in class spread among students and professors, and just like that, some professors vowed not to allow me graduate with a First Class CGPA, and the witch-hunting began.
My academic performance attracted envy, even from my course mates. After submitting assignments to my final-year course rep, he would not submit them to the professors: a problem that would have been easily avoided if the university used a digital course management system.
I later learned that some lecturers fought me because they feared I would be retained by the department if I graduated with a First Class, thereby becoming a competitor. I was seen as a potential threat that needed to be stopped.
I fought that battle and won. I walked away with a well-deserved First Class.
Little did they know I was already thinking GLOBAL at the time. I wanted to compete on a global stage, and God + my hard work earned me six fully funded master’s and PhD offers from top R1 universities in the United States.
Today, I’m in the fourth year of my PhD and discussing graduation plans.
God is not a man, and no man can play God.
Michael Taiwo@AskMichaelTaiwo
I will never understand why Lecturers suppress academic excellence. A father is supposed to be happy that his kids are doing well.
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@JDShuttlesworth I am a Nigerian, I came in contact with you at the WOFBEC'26 and Deeper Life Strategic Congress.
Glad to know you.
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Boluwatife retweetledi

🚨 I’m still in awe of what God has done! If you are in any way a part of #revivaltoday — I want you to see what you are doing! Anyone can say they are a local church with a global mission, but you are making REAL, global impact! Thank you @pastorwf_kumuyi . Thank you @pastorpoju ! I love you Nigeria 🇳🇬 — 2026 will continue to shower God’s blessings upon you!
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🚨GREETINGS FROM THE GREAT NATION OF NIGERIA 🇳🇬 I asked Dr. @pastorwf_kumuyi to lay hands on me for rapid church multiplication. I believe God brought me here to expand my spirit to make proper impact with The Gospel in America. It’s difficult to produce what you haven’t seen and felt. But now I’ve seen it and felt it. Time for replication. HAVE A TREMENDOUS SUNDAY REVIVAL TODAY GLOBAL PURSUIT FAMILY! God is with us.

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No Single person, denomination can fulfill the great commission, it takes the whole church 📌 "Networking"
NO COMPETITION NO COMPARISON.
#CovenantServicewithKumuyi
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Boluwatife retweetledi
Boluwatife retweetledi

#CovenantServicewithKumuyi
The Lord wants us to be specific in our prayers and requests
@dclmhq
@pastorwf_kumuyi
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#CovenantServicewithKumuyi
This Year, the water of Life will be flowing continuously in you
@dclmhq
@pastorwf_kumuyi
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