Zimbabwe Highway Code 2016 Pdf
Tag: Highway Code Zimbabwe Learners’ licence startup Road Rules signs content distribution deal with Traffic Safety Council of Zimbabwe Please leave this field empty.
This deal means that Road Rules, through its mobile app which has registered over 25,000 users to date, becomes a complementary learning tool for the Provisional Learners’ Licence and general traffic rules for Zimbabwe, albeit with State approved content. In return, Road Rules will provide TSCZ with a digital platform for the distribution of its content and help it participate in some form of digitisation of the Highway Code. Since access to the Road Rules app is provided at a premium TSCZ also stands to benefit from some of the profit generated through the online distribution of its content.
You can download the by following this link here The new agreement with the TSCZ ensures that Road Rules passes on the responsibility of content verification and alignment with the latest traffic regulations to the national traffic authority. According to Road Rules founder and CEO, their team will now focus on User Experience (UX) and User Interface (UI) improvement and with the help of TSCZ work on expanding the app’s presence in other countries in Southern Africa with standardised regional traffic regulations.
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Road Rules will become the first digital drivers’ education application to have State approved learning content giving it an edge in a race that is also being run by a handful of other provisional licence apps and the more popular offline methods of learners’ booklets that are widely distributed through streetside vendors. Some of these sources have often been highlighted as pools of misinformation by unsuccessful students who end up taking the learners’ licence test repeatedly. Hopefully, the Road Rules/TSCZ partnership will provide a good working example of how the government, through its various arms, can work together with Zimbabwe’s startup community to use technology for the delivery of solutions that can improve people’s lives. Image credit –. Firstly I would like to congratulate Chikosi for a job well done. I know that there are a lot of people who supported him all the way and some who were not enthusiastic about his idea.
The story of Chikosi brings a lot of both answers and questions on how to start a startup. That is another story for another day. But I am really disapointed by the dismally perfomance of other Zimbabwe entrepreneurs who participated together with Chikosi in numerous programs especially US sponsored initiatives that took guys like Chikosi to the States who are doing absolutely nothing in terms of entrepreneurship yet these programs they attended in the USA where all about mentoring them to be succesful entrepreneurs so that they can motivate other young entrepreneurs. Other entrepreneurs that went to USA under such programs only shared with us selfies they took whilst in Washington and never shared with us their entrepreneurial stories meaning that there is nothing they did when they got back home. I do not agree with those percentages, infact those figures are always thrown here and there to explain dismally failure by startups, something that is making our entrepreneurs to remain stuck in their comfort zones. Those statistics are mainly peddled by westerners when they come here. Entrepreneurs should learn more from our traditional startups rather than want to learn it all from western startups.There is nothing new about startups.
When I was young my mom did numerous startups that included selling chibage chekugochas, selling tomatoes, sewing petticoats, making and selling homemade jam. All these startups were a success as she managed to pay our school fees. NOthing was impossible then. Unfortunately nowadays we start something when somebody in the USA has already told us that 90% of startups fail which is bad. With a startup the only work is to work your idea and results will come. Lets use zim startups for statistical analysis of success rates of startups over a 4 year period we had the techzim startup challenge eachy each year over 20 startups would apply and 3 winners where chosen looking at the winners alone for the 4 years we had 12 startups only 4 of these startups are still alive & kicking thats a success rate of 33% the data set is small but these where the top startups selected from over 100 startups in total so the startup trajectory is not that easy For more info check. Hey Arnold Thank you fr congratulating us mate, we appreciate the support and indeed there were supporters and well as discouragers along the way to this first milestone but that’s the way entrepreneurship is, particularly here in Zimbabwe.
I am both humbled and excited that our journey may as you say one day be a case study giving both answers and raising questions too. Regarding my US exchange program counterparts, I know they are doing well in their own spheres and are making an impact in their own different way. I just happen to be the loudmouth making a lot of noise on the little progress I would have made and maybe that then has the perceived effect of making my colleagues of no or little action.