kim Morgan Sr

940 posts

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kim Morgan Sr

kim Morgan Sr

@Kim_Morgan3

Broadcast Journalist @DembeFm @NationMediaGroup | @switch_AFR | Host | Mcee/Moderator | @IMChallengeug fellow-24

East africa Katılım Aralık 2022
945 Takip Edilen267 Takipçiler
cosmic wanderer 🇺🇬
Its interesting that for the last three years we have been hosting star gazing events but not many people care to come through even when the events are mostly free. I think Ugandans are not as curious as I thought they were.
cosmic wanderer 🇺🇬 tweet mediacosmic wanderer 🇺🇬 tweet mediacosmic wanderer 🇺🇬 tweet mediacosmic wanderer 🇺🇬 tweet media
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kim Morgan Sr
kim Morgan Sr@Kim_Morgan3·
@DouglasLwangaUg First, it’s for engagement and traction, second, it’s for negotiation power as one client might pay higher than the intended or initial price.
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Douglas Lwanga
Douglas Lwanga@DouglasLwangaUg·
Why is hard for ugandan traders online to attach prices to what they are selling? When you ask “How Much” they reply “DM” whats the science there?🤔
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Hannah Arinaitwe
Hannah Arinaitwe@arinaitwehannah·
Taking my shot at Kings & Queens of the Mic with Next Radio. This is my audition for #TheNextBigVoice. Let’s go. 🔥 #TheNextBigVoice #radio #uganda @nextradio_ug
Next Radio 106.1FM@nextradio_ug

Kings and Queens of the M.I.C...Are you ready to be heard, to be seen, and to GO BIG on-air? WE ARE LOOKING FOR YOU! Simply post a video of you doing your thing on the Mic, with the hashtag: #TheNextBigVoice in your caption, and tag Next Radio! We will find you! #NextRadioUG

Kampala, Uganda 🇺🇬 English
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90.4 Dembe FM
90.4 Dembe FM@DembeFm·
Buli weziwera ssaawa 4 nga omanya nti ye ssaawa @kim_morgan_sr atukube ku muziki. Saba akayimba koyagala kati. #Cheza
90.4 Dembe FM tweet media
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MC Kats
MC Kats@mckatsug·
About the studio Yes @BebeCoolUG told all artists it was open to them all and the Black magic camera too As long as they would pay for facilition
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Ben Mwine 🇺🇬 π
Ben Mwine 🇺🇬 π@benmwine·
Dear young people, if you read nothing else this week, read this!!!
Alfred Mathu@MathuAlfred

This is the story of how I cleared a 10-year mortgage in 2 years In the year 2000, I signed for my first mortgage KSh 2.7 million, repayable over ten years, with a monthly installment of about KSh 37,000. At the time, it felt significant but manageable. Like many young professionals, I believed the difficult part was getting approved. Once the bank said yes, I was ready to sit back and relax knowing that in 10 years i will be a home owner. That is what traps most people. When many people secure a mortgage, they celebrate the approval rather than confront the obligation. They upgrade furniture, expand their lifestyle, and slowly adjust their expenses until the monthly payment blends into routine existence. Ten years quietly becomes normal. The loan stops feeling temporary and starts feeling permanent. I had a mentor who refused to let that happen. Stewart Henderson, who was serving as CEO of Old Mutual at the time told me something that permanently changed my understanding of debt: a mortgage is not a commitment it is an emergency. Then he introduced a rule that, at the time, felt extreme. Every month I earned commissions, I had to bring my statement to him before spending any money. We would sit down together and allocate it. The bank required KSh 37,000. Stewart ignored that number. Instead, he focused on capacity. Whenever income rose, payments rose. Whenever earnings improved, we attacked the loan. He called it 𝐟𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐚𝐠𝐠𝐫𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧, treating debt as something to eliminate quickly rather than manage comfortably. The first few months were uncomfortable. The natural instinct after earning more money is to reward yourself. Income creates a feeling of entitlement to enjoy what you worked hard for. But discipline does not negotiate with feelings. Every additional shilling was assigned before it reached my pocket. Something surprising happened. As my income grew, but my lifestyle did not. Because expenses stayed controlled, every increase in earnings accelerated repayment. The balance started shrinking visibly not yearly, but monthly. What had been structured as a ten-year obligation began to feel temporary. Two years later, I made the final payment. Now here’s the surprise, after I serviced the mortgage to completion, my mentor did not congratulate late me. He simply told me to start looking for the next property. Most people follow a familiar sequence: earn, spend, then save what remains. I learned to earn, allocate, then live on the balance. The house was not paid off by income alone; it was paid off by priority. Over the years, advising many individuals, I have noticed a consistent pattern. Nearly everyone wants financial freedom eventually, but very few accept financial discipline immediately. The distance between the two is not measured in years it is measured in habits. Your path does not have to begin with a mortgage. In fact, for many people the smarter starting point is elsewhere, structured savings & investments, or disciplined accumulation strategies that eventually position you for homeownership without pressure.

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Alfred Mathu
Alfred Mathu@MathuAlfred·
This is the story of how I cleared a 10-year mortgage in 2 years In the year 2000, I signed for my first mortgage KSh 2.7 million, repayable over ten years, with a monthly installment of about KSh 37,000. At the time, it felt significant but manageable. Like many young professionals, I believed the difficult part was getting approved. Once the bank said yes, I was ready to sit back and relax knowing that in 10 years i will be a home owner. That is what traps most people. When many people secure a mortgage, they celebrate the approval rather than confront the obligation. They upgrade furniture, expand their lifestyle, and slowly adjust their expenses until the monthly payment blends into routine existence. Ten years quietly becomes normal. The loan stops feeling temporary and starts feeling permanent. I had a mentor who refused to let that happen. Stewart Henderson, who was serving as CEO of Old Mutual at the time told me something that permanently changed my understanding of debt: a mortgage is not a commitment it is an emergency. Then he introduced a rule that, at the time, felt extreme. Every month I earned commissions, I had to bring my statement to him before spending any money. We would sit down together and allocate it. The bank required KSh 37,000. Stewart ignored that number. Instead, he focused on capacity. Whenever income rose, payments rose. Whenever earnings improved, we attacked the loan. He called it 𝐟𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐧𝐜𝐢𝐚𝐥 𝐚𝐠𝐠𝐫𝐞𝐬𝐬𝐢𝐨𝐧, treating debt as something to eliminate quickly rather than manage comfortably. The first few months were uncomfortable. The natural instinct after earning more money is to reward yourself. Income creates a feeling of entitlement to enjoy what you worked hard for. But discipline does not negotiate with feelings. Every additional shilling was assigned before it reached my pocket. Something surprising happened. As my income grew, but my lifestyle did not. Because expenses stayed controlled, every increase in earnings accelerated repayment. The balance started shrinking visibly not yearly, but monthly. What had been structured as a ten-year obligation began to feel temporary. Two years later, I made the final payment. Now here’s the surprise, after I serviced the mortgage to completion, my mentor did not congratulate late me. He simply told me to start looking for the next property. Most people follow a familiar sequence: earn, spend, then save what remains. I learned to earn, allocate, then live on the balance. The house was not paid off by income alone; it was paid off by priority. Over the years, advising many individuals, I have noticed a consistent pattern. Nearly everyone wants financial freedom eventually, but very few accept financial discipline immediately. The distance between the two is not measured in years it is measured in habits. Your path does not have to begin with a mortgage. In fact, for many people the smarter starting point is elsewhere, structured savings & investments, or disciplined accumulation strategies that eventually position you for homeownership without pressure.
Alfred Mathu tweet media
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kim Morgan Sr retweetledi
90.4 Dembe FM
90.4 Dembe FM@DembeFm·
Happy new month, Saba akayimba anti Kim Morgan wali mu studio. #Cheza
90.4 Dembe FM tweet media
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Hannah Arinaitwe
Hannah Arinaitwe@arinaitwehannah·
So grateful for my baby @YoungBranded 🥹💕. Please subscribe, follow and tune in to our latest episode on how to build a long lasting brand with consistency ft @ugandanboy_92 the brainstorming behind the brand @talkshow256 . This one my people will change your mindset for 2026 📌 🔗 youtu.be/eKhUhh8dYTI?si…
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Hannah Arinaitwe tweet media
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kim Morgan Sr
kim Morgan Sr@Kim_Morgan3·
On your radio @DembeFm . Where are you listening from!?😊
kim Morgan Sr tweet media
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90.4 Dembe FM
90.4 Dembe FM@DembeFm·
Olina oluyimba lw’oyagala ennyo lw’otosobola kulekera awo kuzannya. @kim_morgan_sr yattuse da ku site saaba oluyimba lwo. #Cheza
90.4 Dembe FM tweet media
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90.4 Dembe FM
90.4 Dembe FM@DembeFm·
"Album ekwata ku nze era ne music wange awonya emyoyo." 🎙️Sama Soja #Cheza ne @kim_morgan_sr
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