About

Dedicated HR professional with five (5) years of experience in optimizing talent acquisition processes and enhancing employee engagement. Recognized for strong interpersonal skills and a passion for creating an inclusive workplace culture. Human Resources professional with a history of developing efficient HR policies and procedures across multiple industries. Implemented HRIS system that improved employee data management by 50%. Drove employee engagement levels up by 30% through strategic HR initiatives.

Skills

  • Digital Marketing and Team management
    10
  • ICT
    10
  • HR Manager
    7
  • Effective Communication Skills
    10
  • Teamwork and Problem-solving
    10
  • Time management and Organizational Skills
    10
  • English and French
    9

Recommendations

Experience

  • How can a newly employed individual maintain financial and career independence without becoming trapped in the rat race?

    First, let’s be clear: the “rat race” isn’t just about working a job. It’s about losing control—of your time, your choices, and your direction—while... your expenses quietly grow to match your income.
    So the goal isn’t to escape work… it’s to stay free while working.
    1. Lock Your Lifestyle Early
    When you first get paid, there’s pressure to “upgrade” your life—better phone, nicer apartment, more outings.
    Resist that.
    If you can live on 60–70% of your income from the start, you create breathing room. That gap is what gives you options later—whether that’s quitting a toxic job, starting something, or helping family without stress.
    Freedom starts with what you don’t spend.
    2. Pay Yourself Before Anyone Else
    Don’t wait to “save what’s left.” There’s never anything left.
    Automate a percentage of your salary into:
    • savings
    • investments (even small ones)
    Even if it feels insignificant now, consistency matters more than amount. Think of it as buying future freedom every month.
     more