AT 34, Olumuyiwa Oludayo, Ph.D,
holds sway as Registrar, Covenant University.
He was actually 32 when he was announced the university’s Chief
Administrative Officer on August 12, 2013.
The father of two children,
married to a banker, told ENCOMIUM Weekly’s Associate Editor, UCHE OLEHI in an
interview at Covenant University, Canaanland, Ota, Ogun State, Nigeria, reasons
Covenant University is not like the regular institution of higher learning.
Can you please share your
academic journey with us?
I would take it way back to 1997
when I graduated from Federal Government College, Odogbolu. I waited five years after JAMB to gain
admission into a higher institution.
Every year, I had to write JAMB all over again. It was just the cross I had to bear for five
years. I didn’t have to write WAEC
twice, but I had to write JAMB all over again.
Your parents must have been
worried by the delay?
Certainly. It was a serious challenge for them. My mom was mostly affected. In 2002, my mom took ill (I’m her first son
and her first child). Obviously, because
her son was not making headway, he was not making progress. A couple of her friends checked her up in the
hospital and one of them said, “There is a university coming up, owned by
Living Faith Church (Winners Chapel) would you love to consider him for
admission there? She was like, ‘Let’s
just try it out.’ She was worried unlike
me, because I had this assurance that things would get better. That year (2002), I got admission as a
pioneer student of Covenant University.
When I graduated in Industrial Relations and Human Resource Management,
I went ahead to have my Masters degree here and my Ph.D in the same discipline
at Covenant University. My NYSC was at
Spring Bank, which later became Enterprise Bank and now Heritage Bank.
After that, I got many job
offers. I had the opportunity to work
with Pricewater, Spring Bank but I declined all of them because I wanted to
come back to Covenant University. Though
it was not economically advantageous. I used to tell my colleagues when we
started, I didn’t come to Covenant University to work for the economic advantage,
I came for the destiny advantage. If I
had come for the economic advantage, I would have gone for blue chip jobs, jobs
like KPMG, Pricewater. I started as a Graduate Assistant.
Don’t you feel privileged to have
so many firsts at Covenant University?
I think there is a pioneering
grace on my head. People of my type, I
believe are not common in a generation.
For me, it’s a great privilege.
What year were you appointed
registrar?
Before I was appointed registrar,
I was the Dean of Students. I was appointed in August/September 2010. That ushered me into the highest academic
decision making body at Covenant University, which is the Senate. I was the youngest then at just 29. I was born in 1981. I worked for a year, went
back to complete my Ph.D in the same university while I was working as a
lecturer. On August 12, 2013, I became
the registrar of the university. That’s
in summary how my journey began. I lecture here primarily in Human Resource
Department.
What does your office entail?
The registrar is the Chief
Administrative Officer of the university.
Everything administrative revolves around the registrar: procurement,
admission, staff equipment, external engagement, maintenance, salaries and
compensations, quality implementation, ensuring compliance to rules and laid
down guidelines of the university, exams and records.
How do you handle all these
successfully?
For me, what I have been doing is
ensuring that every opportunity God gives me, I make maximum use of it. I may not have all the competences, we must
make mistakes.
It is obvious you would be taking
decisions affecting those far older than you are. So, how do you handle such a complex
situation?
For me, it’s about carrying
everybody along, irrespective of one’s age or knowledge. I also largely depend
on mentorship. Somebody was there
before, so, I lean on such a person. I
don’t downplay anybody’s idea.
You are married?
Yes, I’m married to a graduate of
Covenant University (laughs).
Covenant University is really the
centre of your world?
Yes, for me it was safer. With the kind of teaching got here, it would
be difficult to go out there to look for somebody who has all I needed in a
wife. I needed somebody compatible with
me. I was looking for both spiritual,
social and mental compatibility. We are
blessed with two children. My wife works
with UBA. We didn’t talk to anybody
before she was posted here at Canaanland.
God did it for us. And because of
the environment we found ourselves, our children also school here. So, in many many months, I may not know what
happens outside Canaanland. My wife
works here, my children attend school here; it’s once in a while I step out of
campus.
We should assume your boss,
Pastor David Oyedepo is your mentor?
Although he’s my mentor, Bishop
Oyedepo is uncopyable. You can’t copy him.
What he has done in my life is the assurance of my future. We have this consciousness we are not
ordinary, a consciousness we are not second rated. He made us know this all the time. He
believes in looking within for solution to problems. I also got absolute dependence in God. He believes there are no self-made men but
God-made men.
What are the books that shaped
you?
A lot of books. I have about 3,000 books in my hard
drive. Some of my students have probably
‘stolen’ some (laughs). I read John
Maxwell, if there’s any book written by John Maxwell I haven’t read, maybe he
published it yesterday or this morning.
In terms of leadership development, John Maxwell’s books have really
influenced me. And I listen to a man
called Peter J. Daniel. He’s an
Australian mogul, life coach and writer.
I read a lot of books by Donald Trump and Richard Branson. I read a couple of books on leadership. I
listen to Pastor E. A. Adeboye a lot. I
cherish his simplicity in communication without sounding verbose or ambiguous.
Having read this much, are you an
author?
Yes, I have a book. I also have unpublished works. My first book is entitled, Grace of God. The first day it was published, it sold 700 copies,
the next day about 800. I have been
trying to push the book. I don’t sell it
anymore. I give it out anywhere I
go. The reason I have not published more
books is that I don’t want to write without credibility like many authors. I want to communicate my experience.
There are complaints you cage
your students and punish them severely when they misbehave. So how do you give this a human face. How do you handle those who can’t cope here?
Covenant University is not a
rehabilitation centre. We screen
students before admission believing they are capable of adapting to our rules
and regulations. The training and
leadership system here is thorough. The
way you process gold is not the same way you process bronze. For us, the university has a responsibility
to God, and parents, Nigerian society and the world at large, to produce a new
breed of leaders. So, it couldn’t be the
same. We have core values. Number one, spirituality. Number two, is integrity. You must be total in your character, what you
say must match what you do, what you do must match what you believe. You must be responsible. You can’t just sneak out of campus without
permission. If one’s parent comes and
asks for the child, who would be held responsible? Hard work is also our core value; sacrifice,
extra mile. Sacrifice is key here. You must go the extra mile.
Generally speaking, the cost of
attending a private university is on the high side, and Covenant University
doesn’t help matters?
If I could graduate from Covenant
University at the time I did, parents who want the best for their children can
afford our fees. It wasn’t as if my parents were the director-general or
permanent secretaries of this world.
They were middle level civil servants.
Parents have to plan. Many of us
need to learn the law of delayed gratification.
Covenant University is relatively affordable, if you consider our
facilities. Today, you have a Covenant
graduate running one of the most visited job sites, PushCV. It is currently the number one job site;
Career 247 is number two, Jobberman is now number three. PushCV.com was developed by a graduate of
Covenant University.
Covenant University has a mobile
learning portal where all our students have a mobile tab, where they can learn
and have social interaction. It was
facilitated by Covenant University graduates in partnership with telecom giant,
Samsung. Who does that? We have some of our graduates flying for
airlines, yet we don’t have aviation school here. Most of our jobs here are related to physical
development, IT and more are executed by CU students and graduates.
What were you doing the time you
were home for five years waiting for admission?
My father is a chartered
accountant. He had a couple of
jobs. So, I was always following him to
do some auditing jobs. And when I got
such a job I did it faster than he could imagine. I worked with a cyber café,
but no pay, though I go early and close late.
Also those years, I gave myself to reading the Bible. I could read for 18 hours. I fasted and prayed 50 days, dry.
I have taken a prayer walk, three
hours’ journey. I have walked from Mile 2 to Ijesha, praying. I grew up around the area. You possibly saw me on the road and said, I
was one of these mad guys (laughs).
What career path were you
pursuing?
I wanted to be an ambassador. I
wanted to study International Relations, but I’m now wiser. I don’t need to
study International Relations to be an ambassador. I don’t need to study
Political Science to be in politics. All
I need to do is not be a VIP, but a VAP. I developed the Value Adding
Personality (VAP) concept. The
perception you are a VAP not VIP suggests you have something you can
contribute. Anybody can be VIP by virtue
of his status but as VAP, you have measurable contribution.
What’s your ultimate ambition?
For me, I don’t think I have any
office ambition. My desire is simply to
be given a platform. If you think I
should be the security officer of Covenant University, believe me, I would
serve in that capacity. You see many
people don’t celebrate where they found themselves, that’s why God can never
decorate them. You must be happy
wherever you are. If you ask me now to go teach students at 100 level, I will
celebrate it. If you ask me to be anything, be it up or down there, as far as
I’m making some meaningful and measurable contribution in improving the lot of
humanity, I would serve.
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ReplyDeleteWinners chapel have transformed christianity in Nigeria today, how many church have university running effectively many years ago? but look at what God as done today in Nigeria, it as brought tremendous dignity to Christian faith in Nigeria today, without any doubt Covenant University is an outstanding academic institution that as become a force to be reckon with, we bless God for his Grace upon the academic arm of the commission.