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Showing posts with the label employee empowerment Kenya

Financially Impressive: The Invisible Emotional Contracts Between Kenyan Parents and Their Children

If a child grows up to be kind, healthy, responsible, self-sufficient, and decent—but not wealthy—has the sacrifice failed? Most people would instinctively say no. Yet many families behave as though the answer is yes. Not openly, of course. No parent sits their child down and says, "I didn't raise you to be happy. I raised you to be rich." But expectations have a way of revealing themselves. In comparisons with more successful relatives. In questions about promotions, land, and home ownership. In the disappointment that hangs in the air when a child is doing well enough to survive but not well enough to transform the family's fortunes. And perhaps nowhere is this tension more visible than in Kenya, where sacrifice is often treated as the highest form of love. Parents sacrifice for their children. Older siblings sacrifice for younger siblings. Entire generations sacrifice in the hope that the next one will live better. But what happens when sacrifice quietly becomes an...

The Invisible Ceiling: Why Your Role Might Already Be Capped

  Before you ask for a raise, ask yourself: has the role already hit the roof? "You can be the best driver in Nairobi, but unless you're delivering hearts for transplant, your salary has a ceiling." — A Kenyan HR consultant, off the record The Myth of Infinite Growth We are told, especially in motivational settings, that hard work and loyalty will take you far. But how far is “far” when the role itself has no ladder? In Kenya, it’s common to confuse working in a growing company with having a growing income . They are not the same thing. A company can expand from KES 10 million to KES 1 billion in revenue — and still pay its office administrator the same KES 50K it did five years ago. Why? Because some roles are structurally capped . You don’t hear this in job interviews or town halls. But it’s the silent truth behind many stagnant careers. Private Sector: The Shiny Trap In Nairobi’s private sector, salary ceilings often hide behind big brand names. Working for ...

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