Susan Aghogho Asakpa went viral
yesterday after her girlfriend shared her pictures on Facebook to
celebrate the International Women’s Day and revealed she was a graduate
accountant turned female cab driver in Abuja.
Here’s how this lady wonder got to where she is today:
It all started when Suzan Asakpa’s
employer revealed the plan to slash her monthly salary from N80, 000 to
N70, 000. ‘That was my wake-up call,’ she narrated, after all she was
already getting bored with the job.
She had worked for three years as a manager in a hotel in Abuja and felt she deserved an upgrade. But it wasn’t coming.
To make this worse, came that revelation
of a salary slash. At that moment Asakpe decided she needed to be her
own boss and prayed for a business idea.
When she got on the phone to her father in Lagos, they talked about what she wanted to do.
He was excited when he learnt she wanted
to drive a cab herself. It was not long before he gave her a call from
Cotonou and asked her whether she would prefer a manual or automatic. He
had actually taken a loan for that.
When the car was sent to Abuja, it was
already serviced and everything had cost N720, 000. ‘But I am going to
pay him back,’ Asakpe revealed, adding that she had already got N500,
000 so far.
So by October, 2015, Asakpe was already in business, but not before some preliminaries.
Before the vehicle was sent to Abuja, she had asked around and knew what she needed to do.
So when the time came she took it for a
paint job. Initially, she had not wanted to paint it in the traditional
taxi colours, but was advised by a taxi driver to do so because it’s the
law.
Asakpe had complained to him that
painted taxis were not allowed to enter some places, but he insisted
that at least they still get access into most.
‘I later noticed that the rooftop of my
cab was painted orange, which meant Painted Abuja taxi (PHC) while
others blue, and some green with white stripes connoting their various
companies,’ she revealed, adding that where she registered as a taxi
driver, she was asked by several people whether she was actually going
to drive it herself.
‘They were nice to me and I even got a
pass twice and didn’t have to pay for the monthly sticker. All I had to
do was show the note from their chairman and the boys on the road let me
go,’ Asakpe said. She understood it was their way of encouraging her.
So far the experience has been
interesting for Asakpe. Every day she gets to meet new people. Virtually
everyone that enters her cab wants to engage her in a discussion. How
did you come about this job? Why are you doing this job? And she enjoys
responding to these questions because how she started-off is a story to
tell.
But amidst the excitement sometimes
comes challenges, particularly when her car sits at the mechanic’s and
there’s no way she can work and it continues to gulp money for a couple
of days.
Again, while most of the people around her are supportive, some discourage Asakpe. ‘I will get you a job,’ and ‘you shouldn’t be doing this’. But Asakpe only smiles.
Again, while most of the people around her are supportive, some discourage Asakpe. ‘I will get you a job,’ and ‘you shouldn’t be doing this’. But Asakpe only smiles.
Asakpe is presently studying to be a
chartered accountant and plans to get more cars and empower women
interested in the business.
‘There’s a lady already who is
interested and keeps asking me to get a car for her,’ she intimated. So
Asakpe wants to run a transport company that is strictly female in the
future. She has realised that there’s no job that’s strictly for men,
after all, there are men who own restaurants, cook, and make women’s
hair.
‘Funny
enough, men are supportive and are my biggest fans,’ she said, adding
that she discovered it’s untrue that men don’t like independent women as
some women claim. ‘I get more suitors now than i got when i was a hotel
manager.’
Asakpe’s typical day as a hotel manager
involved resuming work at 7:30 in the morning, particularly when she was
studying for a particular examination. ‘Those days i have to work for
24 hours, which it means i work from that time of the morning to 12
midnight and then i sleep there in the premises and resume the next day
at same time,’ she said.
Now her work schedule has changed and is
more flexible. She drives out at 7:30 am and scouts around for workers,
‘because that’s the peak period, till 10am or 11am.’
When Asakpe started, she parks her car
and sleeps off at noon, but soon discovered she could still make more
money after a single experience. Overtime she has made friends with some
of her customers and takes a break at their place of work. Ideally, her
closing time is 5pm, but when some of her major customers are in town,
she works late.
‘I had a customer recently and worked
till 9pm,’ she revealed, adding that most times such jobs require her to
drive them to a meeting and park while they are inside. So in this case
she charges by the hour. Most times because they are her customers it
fluctuates between N1,000 and N1,500. She thinks this is fair because
she waits and her fuel is not used-up. And staying in a meeting for five
hours by any customer automatically earns her N5000.
So Asakpe makes about N100, 000 in a
month, with 80, 000 being her profit. A graduate of Accounting from the
University of Nigeria, Enugu, she keeps her records clean and knows what
she earns on a daily basis.
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