Audio By Carbonatix
Four students of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST) have developed an application for disseminating information at the business school.
Randy Senyo Deh, Francis Acquah Jnr, Prosper Abasa and Isaac Afful are final-year students of the KNUST School of Business.
Their innovation relieves students of the hassle they go through accessing information on campus.
Users will be able to receive news on academic and other activities from lecturers as well as management for purposes of effective planning ahead of time.

Learning materials and other educational resources from other programs can also be shared for easy use.
Team leader, Isaac Afful, says they decided to build the mobile application after they realised students are not getting real-time information.
“There was an event last year which the organisers faced a lot of problems with budgeting and planning. They underestimated and under-budgeted for the event because they did have adequate information. So we developed the app to address the challenge and make life simple on campus,” he said.
There are often recurrences of students missing out of a class, a quiz, mid-semester or end of year exams because they missed the time.
“it has a schedule timer which will prompt the student may be twenty minutes (depending on the time set) to the events as a reminder so they don’t forget or miss out on important happenings,” he explains.
The app was out-doored at the official launch of the 12th Business Week of the School of Business at KNUST.
The theme for the week celebration was, “Celebrating an Enabling Environment to Promote Entrepreneurship “.
Dean of the Business School, Professor Nathaniel Boso says the business community must tap into the knowledge of the youth and women in particular.
“Young people are not supposed to be seen as not ready for life. Whether we like it or not, young people have a superior cognitive power that older people don’t have. Majority of successful businesses are being started by women so they shouldn’t be marginalised”.
According to him, evident is being seen from various parts of the world that High growing people are being started by teenagers.
He believes the society should, therefore, give young people the chance to think beyond what society expect them to.
Vice Dean, Dr David Asamoah, says in the face of graduate unemployment, volunteerism must be encouraged.
“What we are advising our students to do is that they should be thinking about sacrificing, for now, they should capacity and skills. So immediately they identify an area they are interested in, they should find a company that has the capacity in that sense and volunteer. And this could make them better prospects for employment. I believe that it will even help slow down the unemployment in the environment.”
Latest Stories
-
2026 World Cup: Nketiah and Hudson-Odoi will ‘bring chaos’ to Black Stars – Derek Boateng
7 minutes -
11 Nigerian soldiers freed after 10-day detention in Burkina Faso -Ministry
12 minutes -
Livestream: Joy Business Review 2025
22 minutes -
Interior Minister opens Upper West Regional Police Headquarters
31 minutes -
AFCON 2025: Top 10 stars set to light up Morocco
48 minutes -
AG to update Ghanaians on Ofori-Atta case, cybercrime recoveries today
52 minutes -
Republic bank staff wins GHC 100,000 MTN mobilemoney “Still Me Nsaka” promo
56 minutes -
MTN Mobile Money to undergo nationwide agent re-registration in 2026 to curb fraud
59 minutes -
GNFS to launch nationwide vehicle fire-extinguisher compliance drive
1 hour -
AFCON 2025: The best arrival photos ahead of tournament commencement
1 hour -
First Atlantic Bank PLC marks major milestone with oversubscribed IPO and upcoming GSE listing
1 hour -
Trade Minister meets tomato traders and transporters to resolve the sector’s challenges
1 hour -
African Summit 2025 opens in Accra
2 hours -
MultiChoice Ghana rewards DStv premium subscribers with UK Premier League experience
2 hours -
Three GCTU scholars named among world’s top 2% scientists
2 hours
