Please sir, Iking Ferry on Facebook you made mention of someone willing to invest in Fokona Moderator business;
My question is, let’s take it that you accepted, how would you calculate the business and know the value the investors money and your personal income value and profit sharing modules, advantages and disadvantages.
Using story of mama ngozi
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This is one of the most important questions in business and investing. Let me explain it using Mama Ngozi's story so it becomes very clear. You mentioned someone on Facebook willing to invest in Fokona — so let’s simulate exactly how this works. Mama Ngozi's Business Story Step 1: Mama Ngozi StartsRead more
This is one of the most important questions in business and investing. Let me explain it using Mama Ngozi’s story so it becomes very clear.
You mentioned someone on Facebook willing to invest in Fokona — so let’s simulate exactly how this works.
Mama Ngozi’s Business Story
Step 1: Mama Ngozi Starts Small
Mama Ngozi starts “Mama Ngozi Foods” — selling:
Rice
Beans
Stew
Drinks
She starts with:
Capital = ₦50,000
Table + stove = ₦30,000
Total investment = ₦80,000
After 6 months:
She now has:
More customers
Better equipment
Daily profit
Someone now says:
“Mama Ngozi, I want to invest in your business.”
Now the big question becomes:
How much is Mama Ngozi’s business worth?
Step 2: How Business Value Is Calculated (Unlisted Business)
There are 3 common methods
Method 1: Asset-Based Valuation (Simple Method for Small Business)
Calculate:
Equipment value = ₦100,000
Cash in business = ₦50,000
Stock (food items) = ₦70,000
Total Business Value:
₦100,000 + ₦50,000 + ₦70,000 = ₦220,000
So Mama Ngozi’s business is worth ₦220,000
Method 2: Profit-Based Valuation (Most Common)
Let’s say:
Mama Ngozi makes ₦20,000 profit weekly
Monthly profit = ₦80,000
Yearly profit = ₦960,000
Small businesses are often valued:
1x – 3x yearly profit
So:
Low value = ₦960,000
Medium value = ₦1.5 million
High value = ₦2.8 million
So business value could be:
₦1 million — ₦2 million
This is how investors usually think.
Step 3: Investor Comes In
Investor says:
“I want to invest ₦500,000”
If business value = ₦1,000,000
Then:
Investor owns:
₦500,000 ÷ ₦1,000,000 = 50% ownership
So:
Mama Ngozi owns = 50%
Investor owns = 50%
Step 4: Profit Sharing
If monthly profit = ₦100,000
Then:
Mama Ngozi gets 50% = ₦50,000
Investor gets 50% = ₦50,000
Step 5: But Wait — Mama Ngozi Is Working
Since Mama Ngozi is the one working daily, she may also take:
Salary + Profit Share Model
Example:
Salary = ₦40,000 monthly
Profit = ₦100,000
Profit sharing after salary:
Remaining profit:
₦100,000 – ₦40,000 = ₦60,000
Split:
Mama Ngozi (50%) = ₦30,000
Investor (50%) = ₦30,000
So Mama Ngozi total income:
Salary = ₦40,000
Profit = ₦30,000
Total = ₦70,000
Step 6: Same Thing Applies to Fokona
If someone invests in Fokona:
You must determine:
1. Business Value
Based on:
Users
Growth
Revenue
Future potential
Brand value
Example:
Fokona value = ₦5 million
Investor puts = ₦1 million
Ownership:
₦1m ÷ ₦5m = 20% ownership
Founder = 80%
Investor = 20%
Step 7: Types of Profit Sharing Models
Model 1: Equity Sharing
Investor gets percentage of profit forever
Example: Investor owns 20% → gets 20% profits
Model 2: Profit Until Capital Returns
Investor invests ₦500,000
Agreement:
Investor gets 30% profits
Until ₦500,000 is returned
After that → investor owns smaller %
This is common in small businesses.
Model 3: Silent Partner
Investor:
Doesn’t work
Just collects profit
Mama Ngozi:
Runs business
Takes salary + profit
Advantages of Taking Investment
✅ Business grows faster
✅ More capital
✅ Reduce personal risk
✅ Business expansion possible
✅ Shared decision making
Disadvantages
⚠️ Lose some control
⚠️ Profit sharing
⚠️ Possible disagreements
⚠️ Pressure from investor
⚠️ Must keep records properly
Smart Rule for Founders (Very Important)
Never give too much equity early.
Example:
Bad:
Give 50% for ₦200,000 ❌
Better:
Give 10% — 20% first ✅
Protect your future.
Real-Life Example (Simple)
Mama Ngozi Today:
Business value = ₦1,000,000
Investor puts = ₦200,000
Ownership:
Investor = 20%
Mama Ngozi = 80%
Profit monthly = ₦100,000
Investor = ₦20,000
Mama Ngozi = ₦80,000
Final Thought
Investment in unlisted businesses is mainly:
Value → Ownership → Profit Share
Simple formula:
Ownership % = Investment ÷ Business Value
That’s the core idea.
See lessInvestment is not about money first. It is about: ✓ valuation ✓ agreement ✓ structure Let Me Explain With a Simple Story Mama Ngozi has a tomato business. She already: • buys and sells tomatoes • makes ₦50,000 profit every month Now someone comes and says: “I want to invest ₦200,000 in your businessRead more
Investment is not about money first.
It is about:
✓ valuation
✓ agreement
✓ structure
Let Me Explain With a Simple Story
Mama Ngozi has a tomato business.
She already:
• buys and sells tomatoes
• makes ₦50,000 profit every month
Now someone comes and says:
“I want to invest ₦200,000 in your business.”
The Big Question
How much of the business should that person own?
Step 1: Calculate Business Value (Very Important)
Before collecting money, you must ask:
👉 “How much is my business worth today?”
which he did😁
Simple Way to Estimate
Use your profit.
If Mama Ngozi makes:
• ₦50,000 per month
• ₦600,000 per year
A simple rough valuation could be:
✓ 1–3 years of profit
So:
• ₦600,000 × 2 = ₦1.2 million
Meaning
Mama Ngozi’s business is worth about:
👉 ₦1.2 million
Step 2: Determine Investor Ownership
Now investor brings:
• ₦200,000
Calculate Ownership
₦200,000 ÷ ₦1,200,000 = 16.7%
So:
Investor gets:
✓ about 17% ownership
Mama Ngozi keeps:
✓ 83%
Step 3: Decide Profit Sharing
Now profits must follow ownership.
If monthly profit is ₦50,000:
• Investor gets 17% → ≈ ₦8,500
• Mama Ngozi gets 83% → ≈ ₦41,500
But Wait… There Is Something Very Important
Salary vs Profit (Most People Miss This)
Mama Ngozi is working daily.
So she deserves:
✓ salary (for running the business)
✓ profit (as owner)
Example
• Pay herself ₦20,000 salary
• Remaining profit = ₦30,000
Now share:
• Investor → 17% of ₦30k
• Owner → 83% of ₦30k
Why This Matters
If you don’t separate this:
✓ investor will eat your sweat
Types of Investment Structures
1. Equity (Ownership Sharing)
• investor owns part of business
• shares profit
• shares risk
2. Loan (No Ownership)
• investor gives money
• you pay back with interest
• no control given
3. Hybrid (Mixed)
• small ownership
• plus fixed return
Advantages of Taking Investment
• more capital to grow
• faster expansion
• shared risk
Disadvantages
• reduced ownership
• sharing profit
• possible conflict
Let Me Be Honest With You
Money is easy to collect.
Structure is hard to fix later.
Common Mistakes You Must Avoid
• not valuing business properly
• giving too much ownership too early
• no written agreement
• mixing salary and profit
• emotional decisions
Final Truth
Investment is not:
✓ “give me money, let’s share later”
It is:
✓ numbers
✓ structure
✓ agreement
Let Me Leave You With This
Before accepting any investor, ask:
• What is my business worth?
• What percentage am I giving away?
• How will profit be shared?
Because once you get this wrong…
You don’t lose money.
You lose control.
Rose Ejituru
See lessHow Are Ownership and Profit Shares Determined? let me answer this two questions. how Ownership and profit shares are determined. am also learning cause am a young CEO. firstly you must understand that, ownership and profit sharing are not fixed by the market, they are internally agreed and sRead more
How Are Ownership and Profit Shares Determined?
let me answer this two questions.
how Ownership and profit shares are determined. am also learning cause am a young CEO.
firstly you must understand that, ownership and profit sharing are not fixed by the market, they are internally agreed and structured by the founders or stakeholders.
How Ownership is Determined.
when, I learn that at the early stages of business, ownership shares is not advisable. Ownership is based on equity (shares or percentage stake).
let me share two our ownership is determined.
1) Initial Contributions
Capital (money invested)
Assets (equipment, tools, land)
Ideas or intellectual property
Time and effort (sweat equity)
Example:
Person A invests ₦5M
Person B invests ₦5M
→ Ownership = 50% / 50%
it can also be
Person A invests ₦7M
person B Invest 3M
–> Ownership= 70% / 30%
2) Founder Agreement
Before starting, partners agree on:
Who owns what %
Roles and responsibilities
Decision-making power
This is written in:
Shareholders Agreement
Partnership Agreement
With is two you can be able to determine ownership.
2. How Profit Sharing is Determined
Profit sharing depends on agreements, not necessarily ownership alone.
let me also share with you how to determine profit sharing of unlisted business.
1) Based on Ownership (Most Common)
Profits are shared according to equity %
Example:
You own 60%, partner owns 40%
→ Profit is shared 60/40
2) Salary + Profit Model
Very common in real businesses:
Owners working in the business earn salary
Remaining profit is shared as dividends
Example:
You (CEO) earn monthly salary
Profit at year end is shared based on shares
lastly, Ownership is about who owns the business. Profit sharing is about how the rewards are distributed. They are related, but not always the same.
Thank you.
Henry Paul Akinmade.
See less