Wednesday, 7 December 2011

Africa's richest man at a glance...


Biography of Aliko DANGOTE
Nigeria > Business : Aliko DANGOTE

Aliko DANGOTE


Born on 10/04/1957 (format : day/month/year)

Biography :

Alikote Dangote (b. on April 10,1957), is the Nigerian  founder and president of Dangote
Group. He is known to be one the richest man in Africa , but he said "I think I have to be 
rated by Forbes magazine first before I can be [called] the richest man in Africa," 
says Mr Dangote modestly.
"But, you know, I'm comfortable."He ranked first in Nigeria in the Forbes 2008 list of 
the richest people in the world with a fortune estimated at 3.3 billion dollars.
In 2011
With an estimated current net worth of around US$ 13.8 billion, he was ranked by Forbes
as the richest Nigerian citizen
. He is also simultaneously the richest person of African descent in the world, surpassing
Mohammed Al Amoudi ($12.3 billion) and Oprah Winfrey ($2.7 billion.)
Aliko Dangote is the 'golden child' of Nigerian business circles. The Dangote consortium spans
across many sectors of the Nigerian economy
The Dangote Group provides , cements ,sugar, salt, flour , ricr, spaghettis, textile etc,,,,,,,,,at
competitive prices.
As a nonpartisan and detribalized businessperson, he is generous to different political parties,
religious groups and cultural institutions. Apart from providing employment to elite graduates
from different ethnic backgrounds, he minimizes the level of crime by engaging youths who are
school leavers in the area of transportation, packaging, security amongst others.

It may not be a wild assumption to say that every Nigerian has heard of his name because of the
impact of his business. His products are in most homes across the country. Those who may not
use his products would have passed some of his trailers by the way. He is into export, import,
manufacturing, real estate and philanthropy. All these are rolled together into what is known as
the Dangote Group.

At the helm of its affairs as president and Chief Executive Officer is an unassuming man
named Aliko Dangote. The focus of his investments is food, clothing and shelter.

The Dangote Group imports 400,000 metric tonnes of sugar annually which accounts
for about 70 per cent of the total requirements of the country and is a major supplier
of the product to the manufacturers of Coca Cola, Pepsi Cola and Seven-Up in Nigeria.
It imports 200,000 metric tonnes of rice annually just as the company imports tonnes of
cement and fertilizer and building materials.
Dangote Group also imports fish and owns three big fishing trawlers chartered for fishing
with a 5,000 MT capacity.
The group exports cotton, cocoa, cashew nuts, sesame seed, ginger and gum Arabic to
several countries.

Beginning

Born in Kano, his grand father, the late Alhaji Sanusi Dantata provided him with a small capital
to start his own business, as was the practice then. He thus started business in Kano in 1977
trading in commodities and building materials. Alhaji Aliko Dangote moved to Lagos in June
1977 and continued trading in cement and commodities. Encouraged by tremendous success
and increase in business activities, he incorporated two companies in 1981. These and others
that followed now make up the conglomerate known as Dangote Group.

Activities


The group today is involved in diverse forms of manufacturing with high turnover. Dangote
textile
and the Nigeria Textiles Mills Plc, which it acquired, produce over 120,000 meters of
finished textiles daily. The group has a ginnery in Kankawa, Katsina State with a capacity
of 30,000 MT of seeded cotton annually.
The sugar refinery at Apapa port, Lagos is the largest in Africa and in size the third largest in the
world with an annual capacity of 700,000 tonnes of refined sugar annually. It also has another
100,000 tonne-capacity sugar mill at Hadeja in Jigawa State.

Apart from having substantial investment in the National Salt Company of Nigeria at Ota, Ogun
State, the group has salt factories at Apapa and Calabar, a polypropylene bagging factory which
produces required bags for its products, over 600 trailers for efficient distribution network and
goods meant for export can also efficiently be transported to the ports.

A vehicle leasing unit with over 100 fully air-conditioned commuter buses, is also part of the
Dangote Group. It is also into real estate with luxury flats and high rise complexes in Ikoyi,
Victoria Island, Abuja and Kano. Dangote Foundation is the philanthropic arm of the group
where yearly he spends millions for worthy causes such as contributions to educational and
healthcare institutions, sinking of boreholes and giving of scholarships.

The Dangote Group has nationwide staff strength of 12,000 but on completion of on-going
projects, it is expected to hit 22,000.
Alhaji Aliko Dangote’s business success may be influenced by various factors. He seems to
be broad-minded. Unlike some people, his Personal Assistant is Yoruba while his Head of
Corporate Affairs is a Christian from Delta State.

In this encounter, Dangote talks about his driving force in business, the factors that have kept
him above his contemporaries in business, his $800 million cement factory at Obajana, Kogi
State and the N14 million mega company, which he and some industrialists have set up.
Perhaps above all, his patriotic stance is commendable: “If you give me today $5 billion, 
I will not invest any abroad, I will invest everything here in Nigeria. Let us put heads 
together and work.”

As a self-employed person, with minimum basic education, he proves that business success
can be through determination, honesty and perseverance; and not necessarily by acquiring
Harvard-Oxford certificates or First-Class academic qualification. His managerial skill must
surely be the envy of economic professors. Instead of stashing his funds in foreign accounts,
a common feature of fraudulent front and public office looters, Dangote invests wisely in the
productive sector of the Nigerian economy.
To deny that Dangote does not have monopoly over some of the commodities in the Nigerian
market is to deny the obvious. Recently he and other notable Nigerians announced their
desire to float a private sector mega company with the name Transnational Corporation of
Nigeria (TCN), which amongst other things may acquire government-owned refinery, operate
strategic state-owned coys and pioneer status in Agriculture and IT.

http://www.africansuccess.org/visuFiche.php?id=469&lang=en

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