The Salary Scramble With Lee Kasumba

I Gave Up A Dangote Salary For A Dream - Musa Jesse

1 h 32 min · 18 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio I Gave Up A Dangote Salary For A Dream - Musa Jesse

Descripción

"Africa grows your coffee. You get the profit. That's theft."That's the kind of bold statement Musa Jesse, founder of Pilgrims Specialty Coffee in Zambia, isn't afraid to make. In this unfiltered episode of The Salary Scramble, Lee Kasumba sits down with Musa for a real founder-to-founder conversation about building a business in Africa without safety nets. Musa's journey is unconventional. Musa Jesse went from making music as Frazy Millz to roasting coffee and building Pilgrims Specialty Coffee, Zambia's most intentional specialty coffee brand. But the journey has been anything but smooth.Lee Kasumba talks to Musa about the real, messy truth of building a business in Africa without government safety nets. Musa shares the "duty feeling", the weight of carrying someone's livelihood while knowing you can't fully provide for them. The anxiety of addressing underperformance when you can't afford to replace someone. And the gut-wrenching moment of firing a person and feeling like you failed them. No sugar-coating. No polished founder narrative. Just real talk about the cost of building something from nothing. Musa Jesse on The Salary Scramble with Lee Kasumba.

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Portada del episodio Ohene Twum: An Architect Who Serves, Heals, and Dreams Forward

Ohene Twum: An Architect Who Serves, Heals, and Dreams Forward

Ohene Twum joins us this week, and we went there. He's the architect behind some of Ghana's most meaningful projects, from the Savannah Dialysis and Maternity Hospital in Tamale, the first of its kind in Ghana's five northern regions, to markets that honor local culture and homes that prioritize dignity over luxury. He believes great architecture should never be a luxury reserved for the rich, and that dignity can live in the smallest home. We talked about what it really means to build for people, not just for profit. He shared what it was like sitting at the feet of a 125-year-old woman in Tamale, her words became the design brief he never knew he needed. We got into the tension between designing for communities and getting paid fairly. Whether rammed earth can really compete with cheap concrete. What it costs to turn down work that doesn't align with your values. And why he believes architecture is more than a noun, it's a verb, a form of action that keeps the world spinning. Part architect, part storyteller, part servant. Entirely driven by purpose. This one's deep.

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