Summary
- She has a firm handshake, great eye contact and has a “power coat” on.
- These are attributes that our photographer insists stand out about Wanja Gikonyo, Betway Sports country manager.
- She’s had seven years in mobile technology and content business, over 13 years’ experience in information technology and telecommunications at Intarget (country manager), AccessKenya among others.
- She met JACKSON BIKO for coffee.
She has a firm handshake, great eye contact and has a “power
coat” on. These are attributes that our photographer insists stand out
about Wanja Gikonyo, Betway Sports country manager. She’s had seven
years in mobile technology and content business, over 13 years’
experience in information technology and telecommunications at Intarget
(country manager), AccessKenya among others. She has an MBA
(international finance) from University of Maryland, Robert H. Smith
School of Business and a Bachelor of Science from the US. She runs
marathons, loves to visit new cities, adores her daughter and is
currently searching for the answer to the question “why?” as she also
grows Betway, a betting company.
She met JACKSON BIKO for coffee.
Do you gamble?
No. (Laughs) For work purposes I’d say yes.
Are you a lucky person?
Yes. I
can say I’m lucky. The last thing I won was a trip to the Maasai Mara
from a raffle draw. So away from gambling, I just feel I’m a lucky
person.
I never win anything in my life.
Because
you say that. You must say it to win it. It’s the attitude. When I’m
picking the ticket, I’m feeling lucky. And more often than not I am. I
believe it and when I do it just happens.
What do you like about this job?
Like
the industry, it’s new, it’s exciting, all eyes are on it. It gives me
an opportunity to delve in to the new answers of it. I have studied the
behaviour of Kenyans on their mobile phones, where you find them and how
to talk to them. Never a dull moment really. Some people love it, some
people hate, but responsible gaming is a message we like to push.
What is this ‘responsible gaming’?
Gaming
is entertainment, and anything that you engage in for entertainment you
don’t overindulge. You spend what you can afford to, so if you’re
having a drink or a cigarette, you’re not going to spend your whole
salary there or drink from morning until evening. So extend that to
gaming; it’s entertainment, spend what you can afford to lose. It’s not
something you wake up to do all day every day, or borrow to do.
Do you have a bucket list?
I
think most of it is travelling but I just don’t travel for the sake of
travelling, so I run when I travel. I love going to a new place every
year. I exposed that to my daughter. One thing that wasn’t on my bucket
list that I did was paragliding because she wanted to paraglide, so the
list is extending. There is also skydiving.
When you said she wanted to paraglide, how old is she?
Six
and three quarters, you must remember the three quarters. (Laughs). She
is really looking forward to the next age so the three quarters is a
thing. Kids! They just wonder about everything that they are going
through, so yeah, please don’t forget the three quarters. (Laughs)
Do you think parenting is a gamble?
No.
First of all, it’s a gift. You imagine what it’ll be and it’s a hundred
times or a million times better, so maybe in that sense it’s a gamble.
You don’t know what you’ll get. You discover who you are. For example, I
definitely felt more elastic, how much more love do I have? How much
more patience do I have?
What would you be doing with your time if you weren’t a mother?
I
have no idea. I don’t even know what I was doing with my time or money
before her, or what my hobbies were. It’s a good and bad thing. Bad in
that maybe now I’m too invested in her, now she’s getting her own little
life so I have to remember, ‘so what did I used to like to do?’
What’s been your greatest revelation in life so far?
(Pause)
That’s a big question. (Long pause) Humans are very resilient. No
matter what life brings you, you might come out on the other side a bit
tattered and beat up, but you are stronger for it, and you go on to do
bigger things.
What have you survived?
Uhm,
life. (Laughs). A loss of a parent, my late dad. That was very painful
and difficult to navigate. Uhm, I’ve lost a marriage. (Pause)
How did the loss of a marriage change you as a person?
Uhm,
oomph! I think I lost trust. (Laughs) Even now it’s not easy for me to
trust people and I think it’s made me stronger. What am I about? What do
I want? What was I giving up while in that marriage? So knowing myself
better.
Are you going to jump back in?
Uhm, I don’t know. (Laughs) It’s been seven years, eight.
At what point in your life did you feel that your life is taking an important shift?
When
I got pregnant. (Laughs). Before that I was grieving my dad. But
something clicked at that moment, that something important is happening
here. I went and got the right books, of course to know how to eat right
and all that, how to prepare for a child, take care of my body. I say
it was Godsend because it jolted me out of whatever direction or
emotions I was going through and I had to focus on this other person.
If you were to go back and undo a certain part of your life, change it or shift it, what part would that be?
I
would say a little bit of my childhood. I take myself very seriously.
Maybe it’s the fact that as the first born, I had to be responsible. I’m
a serious one and less fun-loving.
If you are to recommend a book that you feel had a profound effect on you, what would it be?
I’ll
give you a little bit of background first. Before I entered into the
gaming world, my interest was in technology. It’s not what I studied,
but I’ve been in the mobile space, mobile money, mobile technology which
now permeates everything. So one book that I read maybe about a year
and a half ago was ‘‘Augmented: Life in the Smart Lane by Brett King’’.
It gives a history of where we’ve come from the industrial age all the
way to where we are today and what to expect going forward. And every so
often I go back into it and just read some highlighted parts to remind
myself. It’s a profound book, I know it’s not one of his latest but for
me it stuck.
What’s the one question about life that you’ve not been able to answer?
Why
am I here? Life is almost mechanical: wake up, wash yourself, eat, go
to work, take care of your child, go to church... But what is my
passion? What do I want to do that is not about money, that will be
remembered, that will leave a mark that will fulfil me outside of being
me now? (Pause) I don’t know that yet. I don’t know what my life’s
purpose is.
Which of your qualities do you least admire?
(Pause) Perfection. It’s an issue for me, it’s becoming an issue for my daughter I think, so I need to relax a bit on that.
What has been your greatest lesson as a country manager?
Take a moment and sleep on things. Don’t make rush decisions. I guess that’s patience or wisdom.
What would you like to be remembered for?
Kindness. It eludes me that’s why I want to be remembered. (Laughs) I think in taking myself seriously, I can come across as harsh. I’m a very caring person and I would like to be remembered as a kind person in any role whether it’s in volunteering.
Kindness. It eludes me that’s why I want to be remembered. (Laughs) I think in taking myself seriously, I can come across as harsh. I’m a very caring person and I would like to be remembered as a kind person in any role whether it’s in volunteering.
No comments :
Post a Comment