Efosa Ojomo Explained

Efosa Ojomo
Birth Place:Nigeria
Known For:"The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty"
Alma Mater:Fisk University
Vanderbilt University
Harvard Business School
Occupation:Author, Researcher
Nationality:Nigerian

Efosa Ojomo is a Nigerian author, researcher and speaker. He leads the Global Prosperity research group at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, a think tank based in Boston and Silicon Valley[1] and is a senior research fellow at the Harvard Business School. Efosa speaks regularly on innovation and has presented his work at TED,[2] the Aspen Ideas Festival, the World Bank, Harvard, Yale, Oxford and at several other conferences and institutions. In January 2019, Efosa and Harvard Business School professor, Clayton Christensen published "The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty".[3]

Early life and education

Efosa was born in Nigeria. He attended Secondary School in Nigeria. After failing college entry exams twice, he proceeded to the Fisk University and later to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee where he obtained a bachelor's degree in computer engineering. He also holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he worked as a researcher under Late Professor Clayton Christensen at the Forum for Growth and Innovation.[4] He also worked as an engineer for National Instruments right after graduation.

Professional career

Efosa Ojomo is the director of Global Prosperity at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation. He was formerly a senior research fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation at the Harvard Business School. He was mentored by Late Professor Clay Christensen, one of the world's top experts on strategy, growth, and innovation.[5] Efosa's research examines how emerging economies, or what he now refers to as growth economies, including sub-Saharan Africa, can engender prosperity for their citizens by focusing on investments in market-creating innovations.[6] He also works with firms to help them develop a market-creating innovation strategy.

Efosa was also the President and co-founder of “Poverty Stops Here”. He was a Co-President, Harvard Business School Africa Business Club from 2014 till 2015.[7] He worked as an engineer and in business development for National Instruments for eight years following graduation. He was named THINKER S50 Radar Class of 2020.[8]

The Prosperity Paradox: How innovation can lift nations out of poverty

Efosa Ojomo co-authored “The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty” with Late Clayton Christensen and Karen Dillon. They reveal why so many investments in economic development fail to generate sustainable prosperity and offers a groundbreaking solution for true and lasting change.[9]

The book provides actionable solutions to growing sustainable economies. “The Prosperity Paradox” expertly offers cases of successful market-creating innovations, including the Ford Model T, which made cars accessible to ordinary Americans, and Tolaram instant noodles, inexpensive, convenient food made available to millions of Nigerians, rich and poor. Essentially, what Nigeria and other low- and middle-income countries need (and what America needed when it was still a poor country) is not for well-meaning charities and NGOs to “push” resources into its communities but for innovations to “pull” those resources in. “The Prosperity Paradox” was awarded an Axiom Business Book Awards “Gold Medal” [10] in the category of Business Ethics for 2019 and a review on Wall Street Journal by Rupert Darwall tagged “Paradox of Prosperity- A better way to fight poverty”.[11]

TED Talk: Reducing Corruption takes a specific kind of Investment

Efosa has spoken in several TED events. In 2019, he was a speaker at the TED Salon where he delivered a compelling talk on “Reducing Corruption takes a specific kind of Investment”. The talk has garnered over 2 million views. Efosa argues that to potentially eliminate corruption worldwide, we need to focus on scarcity. "Societies don't develop because they've reduced corruption, they're able to reduce corruption because they've developed" he says.[12]

Article publications

Personal life

Efosa married Priscila in 2019. [15]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Interview: Creating a prosperous Africa. Christensen Institute.
  2. Web site: Efosa Ojomo | Speaker | TED. Efosa. Ojomo. www.ted.com.
  3. Web site: The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty. www.hks.harvard.edu.
  4. Web site: BIO Efosa Ojomo LLC . efosaojomo.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20210116135433/https://efosaojomo.com/bio . 2021-01-16.
  5. A Decade In, It's Time to Supercharge the Giving Pledge. Harvard Business Review. August 4, 2020. hbr.org. Auerswald. Philip E.. Gay. Gabrielle Daines. Ojomo. Efosa.
  6. Web site: Efosa Ojomo. May 18, 2016.
  7. Web site: Efosa Ojomo | Research fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation at the Harvard Business School.
  8. Web site: Efosa Ojomo. February 2, 2020.
  9. Book: The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty. 15 January 2019. Harper Business.
  10. Web site: 2019 Winners. www.axiomawards.com.
  11. News: 'The Prosperity Paradox' Review: A Better Way to Fight Poverty. Rupert. Darwall. Wall Street Journal. January 30, 2019. www.wsj.com.
  12. Web site: A Counterintuitive Solution to Poverty: Stop Trying to Eradicate It. Efosa. Ojomo. www.ted.com.
  13. Cracking Frontier Markets. Harvard Business Review. January 1, 2019. hbr.org.
  14. Africa's New Generation of Innovators. Harvard Business Review. January 1, 2017. hbr.org. Christensen. Clayton M.. Ojomo. Efosa. Bever. Derek van.
  15. Web site: Priscila + Efosa | Inn on Boltwood Elopement. July 29, 2019.