Thursday, October 31, 2013

Construction firm canvasses support for indigenous companies

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Construction firm canvasses support for indigenous companies



A building and civil engineering company, Construction Kaiser Limited, has expressed dissatisfaction with the inability of local construction firms to exist for long.

The Executive Vice Chairman, Construction Kaiser, Mr. Igbuan Okaisabor, expressed the dissatisfaction during the company’s 20th anniversary held in Lagos.

He noted that the anniversary was to celebrate the company’s existence despite the numerous challenges being faced by indigenous companies in the country.

Okaisabor said, “As research has shown, entrepreneurship is very challenging, only 20 per cent of start-ups make it past the fifth year in the Western world; yet here, we are celebrating our 20th anniversary in an environment that is very challenging to do business for various reasons you can identify with.

“I wonder why Nigerians cannot establish and grow construction companies that can work to high standards, and indeed, at a lower price, since we can eliminate the overheads associated with keeping expatriates in Nigeria.”

He, however, advised constructors to invest in staff training and acquire equipment for quality job delivery.
“We believe that 80 per cent of success in business is brought about by relationships, while 20 per cent is attributable to product knowledge. We have invested heavily in equipment and training of personnel. Nigeria is a typical emerging market characterised by scarcity of well-trained people, especially in middle management,” he added.
While giving tips that sustained the company, Okaisabor said, “This has been made worse by little or no investment in the country’s educational sector over the last 30 years. Recognising this, we have embarked on local and international training of our engineers and management to continuously improve our project delivery.”

The keynote address speaker, Mr. K. Adeola, blamed the lack of financial support for the non-sustainability of the local companies.

Adeola, who spoke on ‘The emergence of indigenous construction companies in Nigeria – Challenges and prospects’, explained that engineers had limited opportunities to work in their fields due to the absence of construction companies that could employ them.

He said, “There are thousands of engineers and most of them are working in other sectors because they have limited opportunities in the fields they are trained in. We need to boost engineers in the small scale enterprise. There is inadequate capacity building and banks are not willing to help local contractors.

“The patronage policy does not allow local contractors to get work. They are struggling against all odds. Also, the procurement policy is hugely against local constructors. Access to capital is another problem. Construction business involves huge capital, which a local contractor is not likely to have; access to finance is a great barrier to local contractors.”

Other experts who spoke at the events were the Dean, Lagos Business School, Dr. Enase Okonedo; Managing Director, Interkel Group, Mr. Nnamdi Agbim; President, Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors, Mr. Agele Alufohai; Fellow, Nigerian Society of Engineers, Mr. Ernest Nwapa; and Mr. Massimo De Luca of the European Union delegation.

http://www.punchng.com/business/homes-property/construction-firm-canvasses-support-for-indigenous-companies/

Written by

Sodiq Oyeleke is a Media, Human Resources, Project Management and Public Relations Practitioner

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