Immigrant Money Stories I- From Being A Student To A Millionaire in The UK

I started sending out a weekly newsletter to immigrants about money in January of this year. I basically send all the money lessons I gather as I go on in my own immigrant journey.

The reason is simple. I love seeing and reading about immigrants who made that very difficult life decision to move and settle in another country. Then being successful while at it.

I started something different in the month of May. I started interviewing other people and sharing the conversation with everyone who subscribed to the newsletter.

Don’t forget to share this with your friends/family and tell them to SUBSCRIBE HERE.

See the first story below.

Profile
Gender: Male
Country of Residence: United Kingdom
Profession: Accountant and Entrepreneur

Why did you choose to leave your own country?
It was for two things; I wanted to progress. I wanted to go for a postgraduate degree and at the same time I wanted to get international work experience.

Okay so it was a career move really?
Yeah mostly

Why did you say mostly?
At the time I had a lot of focus/interest on academics and so I was toying between going into pure academics and also considering advancing my banking career. While I had those two objectives in mind as my why, when coming I came on a work visa……


Wait, you came on a work visa?

Yes! back then the rules were different than now. I came on the highly skilled program general program, kind of like a point-based system where you are assessed on your current work experience, qualifications and if you meet certain number of points.


All right okay so your journey was different….
Moving forward when I came with my work permit, I went to school for a Masters degree in Economics. I had savings from working in Nigeria but it wasn’t a smooth journey.
While working in Nigeria I saved up. I mean in hindsight I made the terrible decision of investing the money in Nigerian stocks. I liquidated part of the stocks before I came which I used to pay for my school fees, but once I arrived here, because I got here in 2008, the financial crisis hit and basically all the stocks went to zero.


I had paid half of the school fees before I traveled and now with literally no money left and with the balance to pay I had to get some kind of work to survive. So I got two jobs. School and 9-5 in the daytime and then nighttime for more work to survive.


But what kind of job were you then able to get?
Back then, local businesses within the community in Leicester would come and advertise jobs, part time jobs that students could take up. There was a marketing firm in Leicester that came to advertise on the job board in the library. This was an analyst role but not business analysis as a project management but it’s kind of management consulting tech role.


So while in Uni I will be in the marketing company doing like 9am – 5pm and then in the night I went to do a warehouse job. Because I didn’t have the limitation of 20 hours I could do as many things as possible. I had to do both jobs because I literally lost all my money and I was down to zero so I had to start from scratch.


Quick question, was that job the same level as your last job before you travelled , a promotion or you had to like start all over again…..
It was like same level because I used to report to the director. I was looking after things like business strategy for the company; in terms of what kind of products do they want to launch, what markets do they want to enter, you know what’s the best strategy for packaging the products or entering the market and things like that.


Those job boards in the university are they still available?
I mean this was 2008 so I have no idea what the environment looks like now anymore. I would want to imagine that there it is still there in one shape or form. I want to believe there will be better options now than it was.


Personally I was always looking for opportunities.


I think one thing to be very mindful of when you come to the UK is how you you set up; I mean opportunities you access depends on where and how you look for it. If you come to the UK as a student or as an immigrant and your focus is “I want to look for the next available care job” that is what you will get for sure. “I want to look for a warehouse job” that is what you will find. So I didn’t focus my attention on care jobs or warehouse jobs. I focused my attention first on professional jobs.


Nothing wrong with warehouse or care job. Just saying you will get those if you focus on those alone.

Running these three things, your school, your 9-5 job and warehouse job sounds like a lot at once.
It was tough. It was really really tough because those days I did the three at the time, I’ll probably catch just a few house sleep. It was tough and this didn’t end until September 2009.

So a whole year you were running that lifestyle?

7-8 months of that. About seven months because I didn’t get the job immediately.


When I finished Uni, I thought to myself what is the next step? I looked at Leicester and thought Leicester was a small city. I don’t think I would achieve what I wanted to achieve career wise, so I left the job and I moved to London. I didn’t have any job offer in London but luckily I had family in London

You didn’t have a job but just resigned?


Yes I went to London with no Job offer.

I will tell you a story.

One of the nights I was going for the warehouse shift, I met a guy; he had done his masters in the University of Leicester the year before me. We were going for the same shift as warehouse operators that night and I had just finished my masters degree that year. We got talking and he was saying “oh you know what? you can live so well here. If I was doing this kind of job in Nigeria I probably won’t be able to take care of myself with this job; but look at me, I can pay my rent, I can buy nice clothes, I can go out for lunch, I can go to the nightclub when I want to, you know life is nice and simple. This is okay!

I didn’t say anything. But I said to myself that night I must never remain this complacent. I must never get so comfortable with the warehouse job and think this is where I am getting my result. Because I don’t want to remain in Leicester then get complacent I knew I needed to move out of there. You know this is something I’ve always heard and I’ve always believed; you go as far you see as far or you access information as far as the people around you. I didn’t have a network of people that were aspiring for more, I didn’t have anybody around. The people I knew were mostly students and a lot of them were international students.

So how was life in London?

I stayed with family from November 2009 and I will just sleep, wake up and apply for jobs. That was my full time job; I could apply for a one hundred jobs per day. I literally will just apply non stop and at first nothing happened. I mean no interviews; a lot of sectors – healthcare, banking just name it, I applied for it all.

Even with the seven months of UK experience on your CV?

Yes. Then eventually I got this call in January 2010 of the following year and it was with Scottish Widows which at that time was part of Lloyds banking group. The recruiting agency asked me “would you be willing to travel down to Edinburgh for an interview” I said yes that’s fine no problem. At that time, all I had left for money was £70.

Wow

I went online for whatever cheap train ticket to Edinburgh I could find and I found one for £50. All I had left was £20. Meaning that if I got to Edinburgh and back and I didn’t get the job that was all I would have for money.

I was still on Princess Street in Edinburgh on my way back to London when the recruiting agency called me back asking how it went. I remember telling him I had no idea but we will see what they say. Literally five minutes after he called me says “they really like you to start immediately”. I got myself back to London, borrowed some money to move myself to Edinburgh and book an airbnb because I didn’t have an apartment to stay.

I was with Scottish widows for two years on a rolling contract.

At that time how much was it then per day as a contractor?

Back in 2010 it was £350 per day for the first 12 months and then they increased the rate to about £400 per day.

This is somebody coming from almost zero and suddenly you are earning lots of money………

My spending became very very conservative and I am still the same till date.

Going back to my journey, when I finished uni I had no particular intention of doing contracting. However again back to when I said that the kind of people you surround yourself there is a part of the journey story I missed that is very very important.

When leaving Leicester and realised I needed to surround myself with people that are professionals, I had friends some friends who had worked in Nigeria and who had been in the UK before myself. What I used to do was that while I was applying for jobs I would do up my CV and send it to them for feedback; “what do you think about this? what changes should I make? what can I do to this that will make it attractive to an agent or an employer?”

They will help me with my CV and other things. I mean I had quite a bit of banking experience in Nigeria so I wasn’t a green horn in terms of work experience I just didn’t have a lot of UK experience.

I knew my stuff but I think because I haven’t done it in the UK, I was missing something. My experience in Leicester was not financial services. It was marketing and definitely not related to what I actually wanted to do.

So what I will do then was that, when these my friends go to work in the morning & come back in the evening, I will go to their place and ask them to tell me “what is your day like? Run me through your day? What did you do what project did you work on? What tasks did you do? can you bring me some of the outputs let me see what kind of documentation you guys produce? and as they were walking me through that, I was picking up the Lingo because it was different from what I was used to. I’ll review the documentation and I would digest them. From all those conversations I could actually then begin to build work scenarios in my head so when I step into an interview and they ask me to tell them about my experience I’m telling them about my experience in the language of my friends experiences. The interviewers will feel like okay this person appears to have UK banking experience because I understood and spoke the lingo.

That was the method I used to break into into the UK marketplace because I wanted to build my career in financial services.

How many years in total did you do contracting for?

So I joined RBS 2013 and I was there up until 2017 , after RBS I went to Aberdeen standard investment. So six years totally for contracting or so . But while I was in Aberdeen Standard Investment I started my accounting practice on the side.

I have a question, I mean contracting; by that time you would been doing upward like £500 to £600 a day. Why did you leave? Why did you decide to set up your own practice?

While I was at RBS, there was a guy, Nathan, we were contracting together then. He is from Jamaican origin and he used to tell me a lot about how he was into properties. He would buy properties do them up and rent them out.

We became good friends and I used to share my new experience in buying stocks. He would say “we’re contracting and we’re getting good cash flow, that is great but what exactly is the next level? You know we can’t just sit here and just get comfortable? What if contracts don’t get renewed or if the business landscape changes, what next?”

I was like you know we need to kind of explore opportunities for financial freedom. I remember saying why don’t we do properties and why don’t we do stocks. Before now I mostly followed the crowd and we discussed about getting things done properly. We started buying books about stocks and that’s when I came across a book called Buffettology; detailed analysis on how Warren Buffet used to go about his investments and one thing struck me.

He said the key to wealth was owning businesses and that was when my mindset shifted away from contracting. I decided it was time to build my own business.

So I tried with one client to test the hypothesis. One client became two, two became four, became 10 and then became 15 and just grew gradually like that without any any form of marketing or advertisement.

Yeah I was still contracting but the more the business grew the more frustrated I got with contracting because the managers just started to irritate me. You know it gets to a point where it is not they are bad people or they’re annoying people but because your mindset is now changing, you are moving from an employee mindset into a business owner mindset so you begin to become uncomfortable in an employment state. You begin to feel that discomfort in your being, like you’re being caged. I wanted and could do more.

I think the tipping point for me was when I was at Aberdeen Life and it became a really toxic work environment and literally people were resigning every other week. The managers were horrible, I have never had that kind of experience before.

You went on to build your business, I want to assume that in that journey of you changing jobs and building your business you made your first purchase of your property?

Yes that is correct. 1 year and 11 months after. I bought a two bedroom semi detached house. In the time leading up to buying the house I was saving enough deposit such that by the time I put that deposit into house purchase my monthly mortgage payment would not exceed what I was paying in rent.

I saved up so much that what I was paying in mortgage was about £500 pounds monthly. I didn’t want my outgoing to change after the mortgage for the house.

That’s a very smart move. You had your deposit for the house, you bought a house. Which other money moves did you make? I want to assume that you also started doing a lot of investment as well?

No heavy investments at the time when I bought the house. It started after the house because I was studying and doing some more research.

After I got the house and I started to dabble into investing gradually. It was at that point I also got myself a brand new car . Something I was quite reluctant about.

You were reluctant ?

I think I was so affected by using all my money that I became extremely prudent because in my head I was like I never want to find myself in that situation I had zero.

But this brand new car, was it in cash or it was on higher purchase?

If I remember correctly I was paying about three hundred and fifty pounds a month on a higher purchase financing.

Oh wow I mean considering that your income was significant that’s that’s another good stuff as well.

Looking back at your journey it sounds like you are making a lot of really good money decisions. You are not outrageous in your spending, you are making all the right choices. So aside from not investing in just Nigerian stocks what are the other mistakes that you think you did in your entire journey?

I think the Nigerian investment was the single most devastating money mistake I made and since then whenever I’m doing something I have to make sure I get it right. I am very slow to act, before making any decisions.

That sounds reasonable. I have two questions: Do you think that you are finally settled in as an immigrant and what is your next financial goal?

Settling, yes. I would say most definitely yes I am very settled.

In terms of next financial goal, it is just to continue building businesses; multiple business not just one. Because what I’ve found and learned is, this is from Warren Buffett again, his preferences to own businesses. Stocks give you portion of a business but owning the whole business is better. What I do actively now is look for businesses to either start or acquire. I have managed to diligently build the accounting practice from scratch and it is doing quite well. Now I understand how to build a business from scratch. I have also now built a logistics business from scratch and this is also in the UK.

So far this is what I have learnt: build a business to sustain you and the family, add the second business and this second one is just pure cash flow that you can then use to either start new businesses or acquire new businesses or invest or do whatever you need.

What you are describing to me is actually quite interesting, so your first business is the one that takes care of your everyday needs; your rent, your feeding the family, but the second businesses is for cash flow and acquisition of more businesses…..

That is correct. I built the Accounting Practice that allowed me to start a Logistics Business which started in 2021. The logistics business broke even in two to three months. I pulled out all the capital invested in it so now it’s running on its own. That capital that was used and pulled out is now being used to acquire properties. Now it’s the second business that is providing the cash flow for other businesses.

I am trying to mirror Warren Buffet’s approach to building wealth but at a much much smaller scale of course.

In all of this journey from 2008 and this is 2023 you’ve gotten married, you have two kids now. Are you as conservative as before or your spending habit has changed?

In my perspective, it is still conservative. My wife would tell you it remains extremely conservative and the reason is this; I been on the side where I’ve gone from 100 to 0 that was manageable because it was just me. Now I have two kids I can’t afford to go from 100 to 0. It’s just the way my brain works for safety and precaution.

This is for immigrants that will read this, one advice or two pieces of advice you would you say to them?

I would say make sure you have a goal and a vision. Don’t let anything deter you from it, no matter how challenging it is. At the start see whatever you can latch on to as the stepping stone to that ultimate vision. However with your vision, allow yourself flexibility because visions change. The more you learn and the more your vision is likely to change in a finer direction. When I got to the UK my focus was academics and being a banking professional at the top of the chain of my career.

That was my vision but I as I began the banking career, I started to learn, read, and research my vision changed from being an employee to someone running businesses and being an employer. If I don’t allow myself some flexibility; I mean being at the top of the chain in banking is not a bad thing itself but I think I found myself in a much better space than being the MD of a bank.

Thanks OOM. This was great conversation and hearing about your journey is inspiring.


Thats our first story done! Please let me know what you thought about this immigrant story: Too Long? Too Short? Didn’t add Value? Simply reply this email.

Don’t forget to share this with your friend/family and tell them to SUBSCRIBE HERE.

The Female Immigrants Money Chronicles

Let’s go back to my early days as an Immigrant and why I have chosen to share Money tips every week with immigrants.

First, sign up here. So you can also receive the weekly tip.

Back to my story.

In 2017, I left Lagos Nigeria for a Scholarship sponsored MBA at the Edinburgh Business School (Heriot-Watt University). This was a dual country 1-year course, meaning I spent a number of months in Dubai for some classes/workshops/project work and the rest of it in Edinburgh.

My MBA concentration was in Entrepreneurship and I got the opportunity to stay back after the conclusion of the program to join the newly created Business Incubator by the Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh Business.

I was developing a business, a wedding gift registry, for cash gifts only. Something I had started before I left Nigeria. It eventually failed and I went back to full-time employment. Story for another day.

This is now 5 years plus in the UK and as an immigrant, I wish someone or some people had shared/documented the money/financial lessons I will share over the next couple of weeks.

Because while I landed in the UK with some good enough savings and took up a part-time job while in school and while building my business, I ended up broke.

I mean so broke that I didn’t have money to buy food.

I remember going into my part-time job most days praying someone is celebrating something so they can share some snacks. That was my only hope at a meal for the day.

And there was the period I was wearing torn clothing because I couldn’t afford to buy new ones. So I did a lot of patching up or leaving the tear if it was not in a visible spot.

You may ask:

* But you were on a scholarship?

* But you were working part-time?

* What happened to all the savings you came with?

* Didn’t you have a family to support you?

* Didn’t you have friends that could help?

They are very valid questions. And I will answer them all as I share in the coming weeks.

It was indeed a tough season and I am glad that season of my life is over.

I don’t know you (at least not yet) but I know one thing is common between us, we made the tough decision to leave our family, friends and everything we know in our home country to make the move to a new country. I am glad I am in a good place where I can look back and share the lessons that helped turn the tide around for me so you – the female or male who has chosen to go and live in another country, can begin to build that legacy for your next generation.

I plan to share very relatable and simple-to-understand money tips every week so make sure you subscribe. I promise you will learn so much!

Sign up here.

Anu

Want to build a Career in Digital Tech? I have created an Online Course

While in the 2020 famous lock down I baked multiple recipes of banana bread and I ate them all. Alone.

Like many, food was the comfort we ran to as coping mechanism. I know, what you will say next, the calories! O yes I know but we shall discuss that another day. Maybe.

After many weeks/months of food binging, I put the many free hours I found for myself to good use. Finally you would say!

On the back of the feedback I received from participants who attended the virtual session held in June 2020, I created a deep dive course on how to build a career in Tech.

When I say deep dive, I mean I shared:

  1. How I began my Digital Tech Career from a core commercial banking background.
  2. Skillset required for the digital tech space: soft Skills and Industry Specific soft skills.
  3. Roles within the Digital Tech industry and what exactly they do.
  4. Getting some work experiences and certifications.

I was very detailed in this course. So that someone with no technology background can understand and begin to navigate building career in this industry.

The course is uploaded on Udemy and comes at a cost.

But if you are reading this and will like to access the course for free, please drop a comment and I will share the free access. But in return I ask you leave a review.

A number of students have accessed this course and they believe it was great. See some their reviews below.

Do you still have questions? Please ask me!

Re: Building a Career in Digital Technology Virtual Workshop

Hello there!

You are likely here because you attended the virtual workshop. It was great to have everyone be part of this session. I am indeed grateful you took time to come listen.

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A RECAP OF THE SESSION

We “walked” away with a key message, building a career in digital tech is open to all, no matter your background. A chef  after significant  years of   making the best meals took the bold step and became a specialist within the space and so did a financial accountant.

A key step to achieving this is understanding yourself and your limitation. But more importantly the transferable skills you currently possess versus where you want to go.

Tosin mentioned  a framework  for  skills and competencies related to information and communication technologies, digital transformation and software engineering. Check it out here.

Everything is now done remotely (at least for the foreseeable future), so regardless of what part of the globe you are in, you can be a part of any group and tap into the knowledge base that exists therein.

Please see the link to the replay of the session here.

The roles

I found a link that details all the roles and what they do. You can read through and see what matches your current skillset and what you would likely to do within the Digital tech space. Link here

Skill Acquisition

There are a number of online platforms I would recommend to gain some classroom knowledge. I have used Coursera, Udemy and Edx. It can be quite lonely as it is a global platform. For more “intimate” opportunities consider the below:

Codebar Our goal is to enable underrepresented people to learn programming in a safe and collaborative environment and expand their career opportunities. To achieve this we run free regular workshops, regular one-off events and try to create opportunities for our students making technology and coding more accessible.

Equate Our programme of free activities develop women’s expertise, essential skills and confidence. Our priority is to create learning and work spaces in which women can flourish.
 
Women Who Code We envision a world where women are proportionally represented as technical leaders, executives, founders, VCs, board members, and software  engineers.

Gaining Experience

Try this method. Go on job sites and look up job roles and descriptions for the  career path you are interested in, look at the specific skills required and then join any of the groups below to acquire these skills working on projects for free.

Digital For Good.Uk Digital for Good is a community in Scotland enabling people from digital to contribute to the most important problems facing people and the planet. We join expertise from across the sector and work closely with non-profits in a network aligned for openness, action and impact.

Code4Covid The team’s mission is to find technology solutions to help people during the COVID-19 crisis: we believe that technology can minimise the disruption caused by the pandemic and ultimately save lives. To ensure energy gets directed to the right places and efforts are not duplicated, we are also collaborating with initiatives formed by other inspiring groups as part of the COVID-19 Tech Response.

Scottish Tech Army Our mission is to mobilise the Scottish tech community, applying the talents, creativity and commitment of its members to rapid delivery of solutions to the immediate and ongoing problems we face

Interface hooks up businesses with masters and PhD students doing research relevant to innovation in the particular field that business is working on. If you are student on a post grad study and research I thought it is a really important connection.

Other places to check out are:

Home

https://socialcoder.org/Home/Index

https://app.code4socialgood.org/

Online Communities

No man is an island plus sometimes the best of opportunities are never advertised. People simply share with those they know. I recommend joining groups

Use  Meet up to find groups that have the same interest as you within the same city as yourself.  I would advise joining at least 3. There is usually a variation of the same interest. Eg. Women in Tech, Non-Tech professionals in Tech, Technology for Good etc

Visit  Eventbrite to find meetings or conferences that are happening around you. When we could go outside I have used this a couple of time and found these events very insightful and informative. Now they are more online activities that are equally informative.

Consider being a part of Expat if you have just relocated. A very good way to meet new people. You might come across someone who knows that knows someone. Hopefully you get the jist.

This is for the women. I found Finding Ada a while back and got into their JP Morgan Mentoring program. It is now closed but I advise keeping an eye for new openings.

Support Programs

If you have just relocated to the UK, I would recommend working these people to prep you for your career journey. Some job opportunities are also released exclusively to them:

pRespect is Talent development and Career coaching service, that supports individuals to roadmap their career objectives. With practical support from CV creation, interview preparation, to aftercare once you are in work to ensure you have the skills and tools to progress towards your career goals and future growth.

AAI EmployAbility has designed a 6-week virtual support programme as part of their ‘Diversity Works’ project.The initiative is open to minority ethnic people from all walks of life to access tailored support in employment, finance and managing life at home, with resources delivered through online events and one-to-one coaching.The programme launches on a live Zoom event on 24 June – full details and sign-up here – https://buff.ly/2N7xHPe

I hope you find these resources helpful.  Still very open to taking questions. They would get answered either by me or I send to those I know would have the answers.  Maybe, just maybe we might be doing another workshop for more deep dive based on the feedback we have received.
Stay safe!
Ps: If you are a BAME woman in Scotland, I set up a Facebook group to share information, ideas, opportunities, etc. Join us here:

BUILDING A CAREER IN DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY

Unfortunately, due to the evolving impact of the Coronavirus (Covid-19) outbreak and following guidance from WHO & the UK government, as well as our own safety and security procedures, we’ve taken the difficult decision to postpone the workshop until further notice.

A new date would be announced as soon as we are able to communicate same.

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Hi there!
It is no longer news that Digital Technology roles/careers are at the fore front for many organizations. Many people have been interested but don’t know how to get started, get trained or get into these roles.
If you are one of the above, this FREE workshop is for you.
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At this workshop we would have the following speak about what they do and how to get trained for the roles:
– Business Analyst/Project Manager
– Scrum Master
– Software Developer
– Data Scientist
A Senior People’s Consultant – Talent Acquisition manager would also share what they look out for to get shortlisted for these roles and some tips to get noticed.
This workshop is for individuals from the Black and Ethnic Minority community. However if you are not from this background but still interested in digital technology roles please do attend.
If childcare is a concern please do let us know. There MIGHT be an arrangement to assist.
We hope you can make this workshop.
This event is being hosted on the premises of FreeAgent.