African gamification ideas for Chinese business in Africa.

African visionaries for Chinese companies

Are you an expert in gamification, mobile games, or videogames?

is the existence of games date back to ‘human ancient days’?

They were used as a channel for social interaction, knowledge sharing, developing mental skills, entertainment as well as teaching spiritual and ethical lessons?

"What we need is your talent and creativity."

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niches as Russia – West Africa AI games, Beijing – Nigeria Shipping gamification, Hong Kong – South Africa reasonable videogames, Moscow – East Africa mobile games, China - North Africa gamification of trade, etc to dominate them virtually.

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African entrepeneurs - Chinese companies

Gamification is gaining popularity due to its landscape that makes the hard stuff in life fun. 

Our logical business system, allows you to segment your target markets to be seen, and dominate the bilateral trade niches you choose from China and Russia to Africa.

"You dominate your import-export niches: feel the power"

 

Why African ports need to harness technology

New from BizCommunity.com

Addressing the Tech TOC session at the African Terminal Operators' Conference (TOC Africa) in Durban, Lwandile Mabuza, senior operations manager for Transnet National Ports Authority's (TNPA) Port of Durban's Point and Leisure Precinct, said African ports needed African solutions that respond to the rapid technology changes in the maritime industry. These solutions should embrace technology while enhancing the skills and talent development within the port sector.

These shifts are all impacting on the workforce of the future. Mabuza said that despite a growing number of millennials in the workplace, African ports still faced challenges in recruitment and selection. These include an ageing, low-tech workforce, the high experiential requirement for white collar jobs, limited upward mobility, physically demanding jobs, inflexible work schedules, repetitive work and long hours. 

Mabuza said South African ports were approaching technology as more of a friend than a foe. TNPA’s Smart People’s Port Programme, for example, is an integrated solution that seeks to create a single view of port connected logistics, operations, infrastructure, assets, traffic and trade flows using the latest digital technology to complement human activity. The Transnet Maritime School of Excellence also remains committed to training for a high-performance workforce.

“Your agility gives you competitiveness. African ports must invest in training and development and should look at how we leverage technology to bolster our competitive edge,” she added.

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