Tunde wasn’t your average electrical engineering student. While his classmates spent their weekends partying or desperately hunting for scarce internship slots, Tunde had quietly built a side hustle that was currently paying his hostel rent. He didn’t drive an Uber, and he didn’t do data entry. He was a Freelance Automation Fixer.
It had started six months earlier out of pure frustration. The university library’s digital catalog was notoriously slow and constantly crashed. Tunde, bored one weekend, wrote a lightweight Python script that scraped the data and created a lightning-fast, mobile-friendly mirror for his friends.
Word spread. A local pharmacy owner down the street from the campus heard about the “tech kid” and approached him with a problem: “My inventory software doesn’t talk to my accounting software. It takes my staff three hours every night to copy data manually. Can you fix it?”
Tunde had never worked for a real business, but he knew how to connect APIs. He spent three sleepless nights using Node-RED and a few custom scripts to bridge the gap. When he showed the pharmacy owner that the data now synced instantly with a single click, the man’s jaw dropped. He handed Tunde a crisp envelope of cash that equaled a month’s student allowance.
That was the eureka moment. Tunde realized a profound truth that most students missed:
Wealth isn’t about trading time for pennies; it’s about solving specific, painful problems for people who have a budget.

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