obiero wrote:ArrestedDev wrote:obiero wrote:ArrestedDev wrote:maka wrote:I keep telling you guys that the CEO has high blessings. Jomo and Ngunze senior were business mates. The two grew up close with each others family. They know each other well. They are both corrupt averse. Only a lack of faith by the government and KLM can shake Mbuvi out. Hii ingine ni kelele tu ya wazua. I have access to the two main shareholders and decisions being made at the moment are rational
I can tell you for a fact he is going...Ohh btw the runway is being closed from midnight to 4 am for 3 months,as they mark it...seen some circular from KAA...so KQ schedule has to change again...
@maka I also do not think Mbuvi is an astute business leader. He seems very weak and lacking in management science. I have followed his utterances closely since he was COO.
seriously??? the gentleman headed a regional section of lafarge, he worked at PWC as a senior.. unataka aje wewe.. unafuata trait theory of mgt?? a CEO must be talk and lanky??
@obiero, A PWC senior who cannot initiate a review of internal controls which were already flagged when he took over. The chronology of experience in the resume/Cv for many is just that, management is a different issue. What are his achievements in those positions? He was handling communications in Lafarge and cannot do it now in KQ????
seems you have a personal issue with the man. vita vya wanaume wengine sitaingia katikati[/quote
in the spirit of wazua,i dont mean to offend anybody.Why should we spend so much time and energy discusing a loss of ksh 25 billion and still expecting a loss of 7 billion in the coming financial year after major sale of assets.Is that really productive? we should just encourage those who are shareholders in KQ to continue holding longterm. Period.I thought wazua spirit is to help us grow.Will discussing 25 billion loss for so much time help us?
Towards the goal of financial freedom