Kabeer Oloyede

472 posts

Kabeer Oloyede

Kabeer Oloyede

@Leadsman85

MSc, PMI-SCP™ , PMI-CP™ , PMP®, MNIQS, RQS ( Project Manager & Quantity Surveyor )

Lagos, Nigeria Katılım Mart 2024
18 Takip Edilen87 Takipçiler
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Kabeer Oloyede
Kabeer Oloyede@Leadsman85·
I help clients turn construction ideas into well-executed projects, delivered on time, within budget, and to the right quality standards. As a Construction Project Management Consultant, I handle building construction, renovation and remodeling, civil engineering works, and interior and exterior fit-outs. I also provide hands-on project management consultancy to coordinate contractors, Sub-Contractors, control costs, manage risks, and ensure smooth delivery from start to finish. My focus is simple: protect your investment, reduce uncertainty, and deliver a project that meets your vision without unnecessary delays or cost overruns.
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Lesh
Lesh@Leshinlekan·
@Leadsman85 See as this one sit down like learner driver 😂
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Kabeer Oloyede
Kabeer Oloyede@Leadsman85·
@Letter_to_Jack @dreamzey2303 You made a mistake. Truth be told. You should have bought Tokunbo Gear. Don’t mind those Gear Masters when they promise you they will repair your Gear. Na 50/50. So e better make you buy Tokunbo
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Man of Letters.
Man of Letters.@Letter_to_Jack·
E better make your engine spoil than make your gear spoil.
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Kabeer Oloyede
Kabeer Oloyede@Leadsman85·
@ronkecarew It is easy to help people who have already helped themselves. No one is willing to take you from zero to something. Expect from something to greater thing.
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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
The last 48hrs has opened my eyes to a new reality. Whilst some ladies are genuinely oppressed and Sincerely want a solution and love to become productive. There are so many more that actually love the cage they are in . They are the ones keeping themselves in the cage. As kind as I can be , I don't do saviour or messier complex . No I am very clear about my mission. Your sob stories won't move me once I conclude you love your chain. My job is not to fund you, I have responsibilities well and clearly defined. I work Hard, Really Hard and pray Harder, I always ask God for ease. So you should, Go figure out what you want to do with yourself and actually do it. I don't do pity parties, never have , never will. Too late for me to be sentimental and kindly stop messaging me if you are not ready to put the work in. I don't tolerate lazy people or entitled people . I grew up poor and I am deliberate about not ending my life in that state Insha Allah . What you do with yours is not my business frankly. I detest lazy and entitled women because you will always make yourself prone to abuse and look for who will buy your pity stories , sadly I am not one . Move on from me. Thank you
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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
The worst poverty is that of the mind No one will take you out of it but yourselves. Self development is a constant process, Be deliberate about it
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Emdee
Emdee@Parrot98Lion·
@Leadsman85 am writing to express my interest in potential opportunities within your organization for a Project Manager or Facilities Manager role. With a strong background in project management and facilities operations, I am eager to bring my expertise to a dynamic team like yours-
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Kabeer Oloyede
Kabeer Oloyede@Leadsman85·
Protect Your Investment: Why a Professional Project Manager is Essential for your Construction Project. Whether you are a private client, corporate organization, investor, developer, institution, or stakeholder delivering a construction project, successful outcomes are not achieved by chance, they are delivered through structured leadership, disciplined coordination, and professional control. Construction projects are capital intensive, time bound, and inherently complex. Without effective management, they are exposed to avoidable risks such as cost overruns, delays, poor quality, and contractual disputes. Engaging a Project Manager is therefore not optional, it is rather a strategic decision to protect value and ensure delivery certainty. As your Project Manager, I act as your professional representative and single point of accountability, ensuring that your objectives are translated into a clearly defined execution strategy and successfully delivered from inception to completion. I establish project governance, define execution frameworks, develop realistic budgets and schedules, and coordinate all design consultants to ensure full alignment between concept, functionality, and financial feasibility. I drive early-stage decision-making to eliminate inefficiencies before they impact cost or time. I lead procurement strategy, contractor selection, and contract administration, ensuring transparency, competitiveness, and value for money. Through structured cost control and financial monitoring, I safeguard your investment and ensure resources are utilized efficiently. During execution, I provide end-to-end coordination and oversight of site activities, enforce quality assurance standards, manage project risks proactively, monitor performance against baseline schedules, and ensure seamless communication across all stakeholders. This ensures disciplined delivery without burdening you with operational complexity. I also ensure full compliance with specifications, regulatory requirements, and industry standards, while maintaining strict control over time, cost, and quality parameters. At completion, I manage testing, commissioning, defect resolution, documentation, and structured handover to guarantee operational readiness. In essence, I provide executive-level control over your project. Ensuring predictability, accountability, and performance across all delivery dimensions. Your focus remains on strategy, business, and priorities; my responsibility is to ensure your project is delivered with precision, efficiency, and certainty. A Project Manager is not a cost center, it is an executive safeguard for your investment and a driver of project success.
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Theo Royalty, M.D.
Theo Royalty, M.D.@Dr_royyalty·
Financially, this is the lowest I’ve been in a very long time. But tough times don’t last forever. 💪🏿
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Mayorbanks of X
Mayorbanks of X@TimilehinAbiod5·
Based on how the economy is, do you think it's reasonable to be working a 9-5 with a salary of N100,000 only?
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Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri
Ibironke Khadeejah Quadri@ronkecarew·
A Reflection on the Rotimi Williams Family Feud and the Tragedy of Unshared Wealth. ----------- As a lover of Nigerian history and an avid reader, the name Chief Frederick Rotimi Alade Williams, popularly known as FRA Williams, appeared everywhere in books on law and politics. He was reportedly Nigeria’s first Senior Advocate of Nigeria and was stupendously rich as a lawyer, with many estates to his name. For years, this was all I knew about him. He was also blessed with four sons who were well educated, and he lived long enough to celebrate his 85th birthday before his death in 2005. What a grace. However, it always saddens me to hear that 21 years after his death, his four sons reportedly refused to share his vast estate, said to be worth about ₦26 billion as at 2022. Why? How could a man who helped write Nigeria’s first constitution and handled many landmark cases die without leaving a WILL? It remains strange. The children are also reportedly divided: the first two sons, Ladi Williams, SAN, and Kayode Williams, on one side, and the last two, Folarin Williams, SAN, and Tokunbo Williams, on the other. To imagine that they are all from the same mother makes it worse. We often hear people say polygamous families are the problem that ilé olorogun le, but this case challenges that belief. Similar stories are told about the children of MKO Abiola, where disagreements and refusal to share property reportedly led to the waste and abandonment of many valuable assets. The excuse people gave for Kola Abiola and his many siblings was that they are from different mothers and too many women caused trouble for Chief MKO's legacy. For Chief FRA Williams, a comprehensive report I once read stated that the children had been fighting even before the patriarch died, especially between Ladi, the first son, and Folarin, the third son. Many believed the father favoured Folarin and appointed him to the boards of several blue-chip companies while the others were allegedly excluded. This perception of favouritism appears to have deepened the conflict. Strangely, all of them are learned in the law and hold SAN titles, yet they reportedly fired legal actions at one another in court, and all attempts by numerous senior judges in Nigeria to resolve the dispute proved abortive. I also read that the first son allegedly stopped Folarin from becoming a SAN in 2012 by filing multiple petitions against him. The Yoruba would describe such a situation as kìígbọ́ kígbà (Adamant traits). It appears that only the second son, Kayode, does not practise law, though I am not entirely sure, and he has quietly gone on to build his own wealth. Sadly, the first son, Ladi Williams, SAN, passed away in 2021 from COVID-19, and up until his death, their father’s property remained unshared. One would think the crisis would end with the children, but reports suggest that the grandchildren have also inherited the feud, while the remaining sons are growing old. This is truly a sad tale of one of Nigeria’s wealthy families, a drama the Yoruba would call Ilé ọlá níyọnu. Nothing is more painful than seeing the properties of very rich men in Nigeria wasting away while people ask where the children are. More often than not, the problem is disagreement over sharing. Some time ago, I wrote about the Ado-Ekiti billionaire, Chief Lawrence Omolayo, who built a multi-million-naira private hostel that is now reportedly overgrown with trees. Many who commented said such abandoned properties exist in other places within Ado-Ekiti state Capital of Ekiti. In Ile-Ife, there is a large estate called Eyiowuawi which, for years, has been freely occupied by some people who cannot afford rent because the children reportedly abandoned it. I also know of an Iwo man, popularly known as Adepiti, said to have been a meat seller in his days, who left behind a massive mansion that his children have reportedly not stepped into for over forty years, leaving the property to decay.
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Kabeer Oloyede
Kabeer Oloyede@Leadsman85·
@Bloke_Baz Because they don’t believe that you are productive working from home except they see you pretend to be busy with laptops in the office.
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Resko★
Resko★@Bloke_Baz·
We had a golden opportunity to make remote work the global standard, and we wasted it. Seriously: What happened? Why did so many companies go back to the office?
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MINÎSTER
MINÎSTER@akande_olu71304·
If you dey turn Amala or Semo steadily for University I go just assume say you no serious about your academic life.
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