LIVING A LIFE OF PURPOSE.....The Life and Lessons of Dr Dayo Olomu
" The Enchanting City of Rome was not Built overnight"- Italian proverb
AUTHOR’S NOTE
This book is not a theory.
It is testimony shaped by discipline.
The principles in these pages were not learned in classrooms alone, but in loss, responsibility, reinvention, and service. They were refined across continents, cultures and calling. If this story inspires you, it is because purpose is transferable when lived deliberately.
Introduction
A life of purpose is rarely accidental. It is formed through choices, adversity, faith, discipline, learning, service, and courage. Purpose is not discovered in ease but revealed through how one responds to challenge. This book tells the story of Dr Dayo Olomu and distils the lived principles that shaped his journey from loss to legacy.
This is not a story of perfection, but of progress. Not a celebration of titles, but of impact. It is written as an invitation to anyone who senses they were born for more and is willing to live deliberately in pursuit of significance.
•About Dr Dayo Olomu
Dr Dayo Olomu (DDO) is one of the United Kingdom’s most influential Nigerians, a transformational leader, social impact advocate, and global speaker whose work over 25 years has shaped leadership development, community empowerment, and cultural advancement across the UK and the diaspora. As Chair of the Black on Board Community UK and Founder of the Dayo Olomu Foundation, he has mentored thousands, championed diversity and social mobility, and delivered high‑impact leadership programmes for political, academic, and faith leaders across continents. Recognised among the 100 Most Influential Nigerians in the Diaspora and honoured with 182 awards, Dr Olomu has strengthened British society through mentorship, civic engagement, and charitable service, earning three Mayoral Awards for outstanding community contributions. A bestselling author, endurance athlete, and pioneer of Nigeria’s entertainment industry, he embodies the philosophy of success with significance, using his platforms to uplift communities, empower youth, and advance Nigeria’s global excellence.
Chapter One
Born for More
Some lives begin in comfort. Others begin in contradiction.
Dr Dayo Olomu was born on Friday, 25 June 1965, at Whittington Hospital in Islington, London, to Nigerian parents studying in the United Kingdom. He was given the name Ekundayo, a prophetic declaration meaning my sorrow turns to joy. At the time, no one could have imagined how fully that name would define his life story
Although he hailed from the Ebilewage Royal Family of Ikaro in Ondo State, Nigeria, royalty offered no insulation from hardship. He was raised by a disciplined school principal father and a resourceful seamstress mother in a home grounded in faith, education and moral responsibility. That foundation was shaken when his father died while Dayo was still a child. Childhood ended abruptly. Responsibility arrived early.
By the age of ten, there were no birthday parties or presents. Instead, Dayo spent his tenth birthday at a public bus garage in Lagos, hawking cold(iced) water, sweets and biscuits to support his widowed mother. That moment was not humiliating; it was formative. It taught him that dignity is not defined by what one owns but by how one stands when owning little.
Purpose rarely announces itself with clarity. It whispers through adversity. What looked like interruption became initiation. The bus garage was not merely a place of survival but the classroom where resilience, faith, grit and work ethic began their lifelong instruction.
Chapter Two
Education as Escape and Engine
Education became both refuge and defiance. In the classroom, Dayo found order amidst chaos and possibility where circumstance offered limitation.
He began his formal education at St Jude’s Primary School in Ebute Metta, later attending IICC Primary School in Ibadan, before completing primary school in 1977 at Zion African Church School, Alaagba, Iyana Ipaja, Lagos. His secondary education started at Victory High School, Ikeja, before transferring to Epe Grammar School, where he completed his “O Levels” in 1982. He later attended Anwar-Ul Islam College for his “A Levels”, finishing in 1985.
Education was never casual for him; it was intentional survival. Drawn to communication, influence and structure, he studied Public Relations at the Nigerian Institute of Journalism and later completed a Diploma in Business and Industrial Law at the University of Lagos. He understood early that expression and structure were twin tools of leadership.
After relocating to the United Kingdom in 1996, education became the lever for reinvention. He studied while working, often against fatigue and rejection. Over time, he acquired qualifications including a Diploma in Freelance Journalism, a BSc Honours in Business Information Systems, a Life Coaching Certificate, a PGCE in Further Education, an MSc in Human Resources, the CIPD Business Partner qualification, an Advanced Professional Certificate in Strategic Leadership, an Executive Coaching Certificate at the University of Cambridge, a Level 7 Diploma in Management and Leadership, and the BAME Senior Leaders Programme.
In 2024, he received an Honorary Doctorate in Leadership Development, and in 2025 he completed a Certificate of Higher Education in Theology, Ministry and Mission at Durham University.
Education was never about accumulation; it was alignment. Each qualification prepared him for the next phase of service.
Chapter Three
Lagos and the School of Resilience
Lagos is not merely a city; it is a pressure chamber. It stretches ambition, tests character and either sharpens or swallows potential.
Growing up in Orile Agege, Lagos exposed Dayo early to hardship, instability and negative influence. Survival demanded discernment. He chose discipline over drift, values over shortcuts and faith over fear. Those choices shaped his destiny.
He entered Nigeria’s entertainment industry at the age of seventeen, not by privilege but by preparation. His career spanned event coordination, promotions management, artiste management and music promotion. At the age of twenty six, he became the youngest Promotions Manager at a major Nigerian record label, Premier Music, formerly PolyGram.
He later founded DO and Associates, managing King Wasiu Ayinde Marshal, now known as K1 the Ultimate, for three years. During this period, K1 won more than twelve national awards and was crowned the King of Fuji Music. Dayo also organised landmark concerts, including the St Florence Concert series and a major Lekki Beach concert featuring the late Afrobeat legend, Fela Anikulapo Kuti.
Recognition followed in the form of multiple industry awards, but success was interrupted by tragedy. The sudden death of his elder brother at the height of his career forced a deep reassessment of success. Applause grew quiet. Purpose grew loud.
Lagos gave him ambition. Grief gave him meaning.
Chapter Four
London and the Courage to Begin Again
Dr Olomu moved to London not because Nigeria failed him, but because his spirit sought meaning beyond momentum. Almost immediately, stability vanished. Identity theft plunged him into prolonged bureaucratic uncertainty, stripping away recognition, security and confidence.
He became a postal worker, rising before dawn, carrying heavy mailbags and walking miles daily in all weather. That season humbled and rebuilt him. While carrying letters, he carried vision. While sorting mail, he sorted his future.
In 2003, he joined Toastmasters International to confront fear and refine his voice. In 2004, he delivered his first solo seminar, Hit Your Target With Your Best Shot, at Croydon Town Hall. Gradually, platforms reopened. He transitioned into motivational speaking, writing, leadership coaching, corporate training, human resources and organisational development.
London became the place where purpose crystallised, not because life was easier, but because he refused to quit.
Chapter Five
Leadership That Serves
Leadership, as Dr Olomu learned, is not measured by title but by responsibility.
Over three decades, he mentored and coached leaders across business, academia, politics and faith communities. He facilitated leadership programmes across the United Kingdom, Europe, Africa and the Middle East and served as Chair of Black on Board Community UK, championing inclusion and representation.
Authority fades. Impact multiplies.
Chapter Six
Compassion in Motion
Belief must be embodied.
Through endurance challenges including marathons, ultramarathons, mountain climbs, skydiving, fire walking, rough sleeping and long-distance treks, Dr Olomu raised awareness and funds for causes including leukaemia, prostate cancer, dementia and homelessness.
These acts were not stunts but sermons without words. His contribution to social impact has been recognised globally, including the receipt of a Global Social Impact Award.
Purpose becomes credible when it costs something.
Chapter Seven
The Dayo Olomu Foundation
Founded in 2016 and inspired by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, the Dayo Olomu Foundation was created to provide structure for compassion and continuity for service. It emerged not as a reaction to success, but as a response to purpose the conviction that giving must be intentional, organised, and sustained.
Since its formation, the foundation has mentored over two thousand five hundred young people, supported more than five hundred women, reviewed over one thousand five hundred CVs, helped two hundred and fifty people secure employment, supported over two thousand widows and vulnerable families, donated hundreds of toys to orphanages, and provided consistent support for foodbanks and homeless communities across the United Kingdom.
Beyond high profile endurance challenges and fundraising campaigns, Dr Olomu’s humanitarian footprint is wide, consistent, and deeply felt at community level. He actively supports his local foodbank, provides direct assistance to vulnerable families, and leads the foundation as a practical expression of compassion in action. The work is hands on, relational, and rooted in dignity rather than charity alone.
Through mentoring, advocacy, and targeted support, countless young people have been helped to pursue education, develop leadership capacity, and unlock their potential. Women have been empowered, families stabilised, and individuals restored with confidence and direction. This impact reflects a deep conviction that success must always be paired with significance, and that leadership is ultimately measured not by position, profile, or recognition, but by the lives strengthened, empowered, and uplifted along the way.
For Dr Olomu, service is not a project. It is a posture. The foundation exists as a living reminder that purpose becomes credible when it is operational and that legacy is never theoretical. It is built daily through consistent acts of courage, compassion, and commitment.
Chapter Eight
A Life That Serves Others
Purpose is most clearly revealed not by what we achieve, but by what we give back.
For more than three decades, Dr Dayo Olomu’s life has been shaped by a deep commitment to service, compassion, and community building. His journey as a British Nigerian transformational leader and humanitarian advocate demonstrates that leadership finds its highest expression when it is rooted in contribution rather than recognition.
At the heart of his work is a simple but demanding belief: success must always be paired with significance. Influence, when divorced from compassion, is incomplete.
Dr Olomu’s humanitarian impact has taken many forms, but all are united by willingness to give not only time and talent, but comfort itself. Through endurance challenges that test physical, mental, and emotional limits, he has raised both funds and awareness for causes close to his heart. These include leukaemia, prostate cancer, dementia, homelessness, and community wellbeing.
Over the years, he has completed five half marathons, three full marathons, one ultramarathon, a skydiving challenge, multiple mountain climbs, and several long‑distance treks. He has slept rough on the streets to spotlight homelessness and participated in physically demanding experiences such as fire walking and endurance challenges, not as spectacle, but as sacrifice. These efforts reflect his conviction that service is not only what we give, but what we are willing to endure for the sake of others.
In recognition of this work, Dr Olomu received the Global Social Impact Award at the inaugural Africa Day Awards organised by Diaspora Business Forum. Presenting the award, the founder described him as a remarkable individual who has left an indelible mark on the world, highlighting how his humanitarian action, mentorship, and personal sacrifice demonstrate the power of one life lived intentionally.
Beyond endurance challenges, Dr Olomu’s humanitarian footprint is sustained and practical. He actively supports his local foodbank, provides assistance to vulnerable families, and leads the Dayo Olomu Foundation. Through the foundation, thousands of young people have been mentored, supported through education and leadership development, and empowered to unlock their potential.
His service is also expressed through leadership. As Chair of Black on Board Community UK, Dr Olomu equips underrepresented communities with the confidence, competence, and readiness to serve at board level and influence decision‑making spaces. For over thirty years, his mentoring has shaped the careers and character of emerging leaders, building confidence, communication skills, and personal authority.
The foundation of this humanitarian philosophy was captured in words shared with him by Archbishop Desmond Tutu: “Do your little bit of good wherever you are. It is those little bits of good put together that overwhelm the world.” Dr Olomu has lived this truth daily, integrating faith, family, fitness, and purpose into a life of service.
Whether running marathons, climbing mountains, mentoring leaders, or serving behind the scenes, his life testifies to a simple but demanding truth. Purpose becomes real when it costs something, and legacy is built through consistent acts of love expressed with courage.
Chapter Nine
What Purpose Really Means
Purpose is not a job title, salary band or destination. It is alignment. It is the daily decision to use your gifts intentionally in service of something greater than yourself.
In Dr Olomu’s life, purpose was clarified through loss, refined through reinvention and fulfilled through service. It evolved across continents and careers, but its essence remained constant.
A life of purpose integrates faith, growth, contribution and legacy. It is success rooted in significance.
Chapter Ten
How Values Steer and Goals Drive a Purposeful Life
A meaningful life works like a bicycle in motion.
A bicycle does not move forward by chance. It moves because its parts are aligned. The front wheel sets direction. The back wheel provides momentum. The spokes hold everything together, ensuring balance and stability. When alignment is lost, progress becomes unstable, exhausting, and unsustainable, no matter how hard the rider pedals.
Life works the same way.
Purpose is not simply about movement. It is about direction, momentum, and alignment. Without direction, speed becomes dangerous. Without momentum, direction alone achieves little. Without alignment, success eventually collapses under its own weight.
This is why values must steer and goals must drive.
Values Steer Direction
On a bicycle, the front wheel determines where you are going. It does not provide power, but it governs direction. Wherever it turns, the rest of the bicycle must follow.
Values perform this role in life.
Values answer the deepest questions of identity: who you are, what matters most, what you will not compromise, and how you will show up while pursuing success. When values do not lead, goals begin to take control, and people often arrive at destinations they never intended to reach.
Throughout Dr Dayo Olomu’s life, values determined posture long before outcomes were clear. From losing his father as a child, to hawking goods at a Lagos bus garage at ten, to rebuilding his life in London after identity theft, values, not circumstances, set direction.
The values that have consistently steered his life are:
Faith, anchoring belief beyond circumstance
Family, prioritising relationships over recognition
Fitness, sustaining endurance for long journeys
Friendship, valuing community over isolation
Fulfilment, choosing meaning over empty applause
Finance, stewarding resources responsibly
Fun, protecting joy, curiosity and balance
Fairness, committing to justice, dignity and inclusion
These values remained steady through success and struggle alike. They provided direction when clarity was absent and restraint when opportunity tempted compromise.
Direction always came before speed.
Goals Drive Momentum
If values determine direction, goals provide motion.
The back wheel transforms effort into forward movement. Without it, the rider may know where they want to go but never arrive. Goals convert intention into progress and give structure, pace and discipline.
However, the back wheel is not designed to steer.
When goals move to the front, life accelerates, but often in the wrong direction. When goals are guided by values, momentum becomes sustainable rather than destructive.
Dr Olomu’s goals evolved across seasons, careers and continents. They included:
Spirituality and Meaning, aligning life with divine purpose
Health and Fitness, sustaining energy and longevity
Career and Business, building influence without losing integrity
Finance, creating stability and generosity
Relationships and Connections, investing in people over platforms
Self‑Development and Learning, maintaining relevance through growth
Fun, Leisure and Adventure, protecting joy and renewal
Contribution and Service, turning success into social impact
Education goals powered reinvention. Career goals created platforms. Endurance goals raised awareness and resources. Financial goals created margin for generosity. Goals drove progress, but values always chose the direction.
Momentum never replaced meaning.
Alignment Sustains Purpose
Between values and goals sit daily habits, choices, disciplines and relationships. These are the spokes that hold life together.
Where values and goals align, life feels stable. Where alignment is lost, even success feels fragile.
Purpose is sustained not by speed alone, but by alignment.
Values determine direction.
Goals generate momentum.
Alignment produces fulfilment.
Chapter Eleven
The Ten Ways to Live a Life of Purpose
Purpose is not discovered in a single defining moment. It is built patiently and deliberately through daily choices, shaped by adversity, refined through reflection, and strengthened through service. It is not a destination reached by chance but a life formed intentionally.
According to Dr Dayo Olomu; “My purpose is to inspire, impact and influence lives by empowering people, strengthening families, raising leaders and uniting communities toward growth, purpose and lasting legacy across generations. I use my gifts, my story and my voice to spark aspiration, drive change and develop leaders and organisations that create enduring impact”.
The ten principles that follow are not theories or motivational concepts. They are drawn directly from lived experience. They were shaped in hardship, tested in transition, and proven through service. They are offered as practical pathways for anyone seeking an aligned, meaningful and purposeful life.
One - Faith as Foundation
Faith anchored Dr Olomu when circumstances offered no certainty. Losing his father in childhood removed emotional and financial stability early in life. Growing up with limited resources and heavy responsibility could easily have produced resentment or despair. Later, identity theft in the United Kingdom stripped away professional credibility and personal security once again.
Faith did not remove difficulty, but it reframed adversity as preparation rather than punishment. It sustained hope before evidence appeared and kept ambition rooted in values rather than ego.
When professional status disappeared in the UK, faith kept him working, studying and serving quietly long before opportunities and platforms returned.
Faith went first. Clarity followed later.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
What current uncertainty are you facing right now
Where are you tempted to respond with fear instead of trust
What would it look like to anchor your next decision in faith and values rather than outcomes
Write a short prayer or belief statement you can return to when clarity is absent
Two - Write Your Vision and Goals
Vision becomes powerful when it is written. Writing transforms vague desire into defined direction and creates accountability long before results appear.
At the age of fifteen, Dr Olomu wrote in his journal that he would work in the entertainment industry and become a promotions manager before the age of thirty. At twenty six, he became the youngest promotions manager at a major Nigerian record label.
The journal came before the achievement. Writing did not guarantee success, but it aligned intention and action over time.
When life became unstable, written vision provided clarity and direction even when momentum slowed.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
What is your current five-year vision if you were brave enough to write it down
What goals are clearly defined and which remain vague
How often do you review your written goals
Write one paragraph describing the life you are intentionally building
Three - Take Personal Responsibility
Purpose accelerates when responsibility replaces excuses. Waiting for perfect conditions or external rescue delays growth and weakens agency.
No one rescued Dr Olomu from hawking sweets and biscuits at ten years old or walking miles daily as a postal worker in London. At each stage, responsibility replaced self pity and turned limitation into preparation.
Taking ownership did not make circumstances easier, but it made progress possible.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
Where in your life are you waiting to be rescued or validated
What is fully within your control right now
What is one responsibility you need to take ownership of today
Write one action you will take without waiting for ideal conditions
Four - Persevere Beyond Setbacks
Setbacks test conviction. Perseverance sustains progress when motivation fades.
Identity theft stalled momentum and delayed recognition for years. Job rejections followed. Confidence was tested. Plans were postponed. Perseverance preserved integrity and direction until opportunity re-emerged.
Failure pauses progress. Quitting ends it.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
What setback are you currently facing
How has it shaped you so far
What might this season be developing in you
Write a sentence that reframes this setback as preparation
Five - Commit to Lifelong Learning
Every reinvention in Dr Olomu’s life was financed by learning before opportunity arrived. Education was pursued not for prestige but for readiness.
From entertainment to leadership development and organisational consultancy, learning ensured relevance, adaptability and capacity across decades.
Learning bridged uncertainty and created options long before platforms appeared.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
What learning have you postponed that your future requires
What skill would most increase your effectiveness
Who could mentor or stretch your thinking
Commit in writing to one learning investment this year
Six - Serve Others Intentionally
Purpose deepens when it moves beyond self. Service shifts success from accumulation to contribution.
Founding the Dayo Olomu Foundation formalised a lifelong commitment to mentoring young people, supporting women, feeding the hungry and restoring dignity to vulnerable communities.
Service transformed achievement into fulfilment and success into significance.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
Who has benefited because you lived intentionally this year
Where could your skills solve someone else’s problem
What does service look like in your current season
Identify one person or cause you will serve consistently
Seven Build Disciplined Daily Habits
Purpose is sustained by habits, not inspiration. Motivation fades, but habits quietly carry vision forward.
Journaling, reflection, fitness routines, prayer and structured learning-maintained alignment when external validation was absent and progress felt slow.
Consistency outperformed intensity.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
Which daily habits currently support your purpose
Which habits undermine your clarity or energy
What single habit would most improve your alignment
Design a simple daily routine that supports your values.
Eight - Have the Courage to Reinvent
Reinvention is not failure. It is faithfulness to growth.
Leaving a successful entertainment career in Nigeria to start again in the UK required humility and courage. From influence to anonymity, reinvention demanded letting go of identity without abandoning purpose.
That courage ultimately expanded impact far beyond a single sector.
Growth required release.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
Which identity or role might you be outgrowing
What fear is keeping you attached to the familiar
What would courage look like in this season
Write a compassionate permission statement to yourself
Nine - Surround Yourself Wisely
Purpose thrives in the right environment and diminishes in the wrong one. Influence shapes direction.
Joining Toastmasters transformed confidence and communication. Mentors, peers, and learning communities accelerated growth far beyond what isolation could achieve.
No one builds a purposeful life alone.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
Who currently influences your thinking and habits
Who stretches you rather than flatters you
Where do you need stronger community or accountability
Identify one relationship or group to pursue intentionally
Ten - Live with Legacy in Mind
Legacy sharpens purpose and reframes ambition.
The death of Dr Olomu’s elder brother forced an early awareness of life’s fragility. Success could no longer be measured by titles or applause but by lives lifted, systems influenced and opportunities created for others.
Legacy transformed ambition into stewardship.
Reader Reflection and Journaling
If your life were measured today, what would remain
Whose life is better because you showed up
What do you want people to say about how you lived
Write one action that serves your long term legacy.
Purpose is not an idea to admire.
It is a commitment to live daily with clarity, courage, and contribution.
The decision now belongs to you.
Chapter Twelve
Fulfilment and the Final Measure
Fulfilment is not a destination. It is a by‑product.
It emerges not from chasing happiness, applause, or accumulation, but from alignment between values and actions, belief and behaviour, intention, and impact. Fulfilment is what remains when success is stripped of ego and life is measured by contribution rather than comparison.
For Dr Dayo Olomu, fulfilment did not arrive suddenly. It unfolded gradually, shaped by loss, responsibility, reinvention, and service. Each stage of life refined the understanding that achievement alone is insufficient. Only significance endures.
Across decades and disciplines, one truth became increasingly clear: success that does not align with values ultimately drains, while purpose that is lived consistently sustains.
Dr Olomu is a husband, father, bestselling author, endurance athlete, organisational development, global speaker, best selling author, accountability partner, leadership and executive coach, humanitarian, philosophy, strategic advisor, and theologian. He lives by a personal philosophy known as the 7Fs—Faith, Family, Fitness, Finance, Friends, Fun, and Fulfilment. These are not competing priorities, but interconnected commitments that together create balance.
Faith anchors belief beyond circumstance.
Family grounds ambition in relationship.
Fitness sustains energy and longevity.
Finance supports stability and generosity.
Friends provide community and perspective.
Fun protects joy and emotional health.
Fulfilment emerges when all are aligned.
Over the years, accolades have followed. More than one hundred and eighty awards. Recognition among the most influential Nigerians in the Diaspora. Invitations to serve on boards, platforms to speak globally, opportunities to shape leaders across sectors. Yet none of these define the final measure.
Accolades fade. Titles change. Platforms shift.
What remains is impact, significance and legacy.!
Fulfilment, as Dr Olomu has discovered, is found when people are strengthened because you lived, when systems are improved because you served, and when your absence would be felt not because of status, but because of substance.
The final measure of a purposeful life is not how far one climbed, but how many were lifted along the way.
True success is not what you accumulate.
It is who rises because you showed up consistently, lived intentionally, and served faithfully.
Chapter Thirteeen
Closing Reflection
A life of purpose is not an accident.
It is built deliberately, through faith that steadies you when clarity is absent, through responsibility that matures you when conditions are unfair, through learning that prepares you for opportunities before they appear, through service that enlarges your heart, and through courage that allows you to reinvent without losing integrity.
Dr Dayo Olomu’s journey from London to Lagos and back again, from loss to leadership, from survival to service, is not extraordinary because it is unique. It is extraordinary because it is intentional.
This book has shown that purpose is not discovered in comfort, nor revealed by titles. It is uncovered through choices made repeatedly, often quietly, when no audience is watching and no guarantee is offered.
Purpose does not require perfection.
It requires alignment.
When values steer and goals drive, life gains direction without losing meaning. When faith anchors ambition and service shapes success, fulfilment follows naturally.
Purpose is available to anyone willing to live deliberately rather than drift unconsciously.
Wherever you are in your journey, beginning, rebuilding, or redefining, remember this:
You were not created merely to exist, achieve, or accumulate. You were created to contribute, grow, and leave a legacy.
Purpose is not found by searching harder.
It is lived by aligning deeper.
And when your life is finally measured, may it be said not that you were successful, but that you were faithful, impactful, and fully alive.
Purpose is not found.
It is lived daily.
•ABOUT THE AUTHOR
MIKE CERUTTI OSAGIE also known as The King of Pen” is the very definition of a "Grass to Grace" brand of success stories writer.
Originally a Sports' Writer, he was dramatically converted by Africa’s foremost publisher, Chief Nduka Obaigbena, Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of THISDAY newspaper to a People and Life Style Writer( and is a pioneer member of staff that started This day style segment on Sunday)
Osagie has since expanded his talent to deeper areas of writing from Styles to Branding, Business, Inspirational, Politics and is today carving out a niche as a premier modern day Abundance Mentality Author.
A well-traveled personality - Mike Cerutti Osagie has been on the wings from the word go and is the current award winning Best Style Writer, Best Celebrity Prolific Writer, Africa's Most Outstanding Humanitarian Writer by RAHF and only recently voted as Teens Favorite Young Charity Personality of the Year. This is on account of his tireless efforts of bringing the world's attention to the plight of the blind , disadvantaged and orphans in society.
An avid reader and prolific writer, Cerutti Osagie remains one of the few Pen Pushers who regularly writes about the rich and famous globally, and what they passed through on their way to the top. He has written on a large number of famous people over the last few years on his online blogs: www.worldindustryleaders.com and today has over 10 books to his credit, including the highly controversial and globally accepted bookGOOD, BAD AND GODLY SIDE OF DONALD TRUMP
He can be contacted on global roaming number + 234 7042631895 or chiefcerrutti@gmail.com for any important media/books commissioning project.
He has also authored several other books and literary works & he is also the publisher and Editor in chief of the international magazine brand called Richlist

























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