Iddris Sandu
Iddris Sandu
Chief Technology Officer of All Money In, designer of TMC smart store app
Everything we do, we do for the culture. We always make that known before proceeding in any form of dialog. Everything we do, all the victories we claim, are in God’s name and in the universe’s name.
My relationship with Nip was very unique. He served as a big brother, a business partner, a friend, an activist: so many things, all in one body.
He approached me the most respectful way anyone ever has in my life. I was at Starbucks working on some code that I had wrapped up over at Uber. He saw what I was doing, but he didn’t just barge in. He said, “I don’t want to take away from what you’re working, because it seems like you’re really focused. But if you don’t mind me asking, what is it you’re doing on your computer?” We ended up exchanging information and building at the studio that night.
We had so much mutuality: the fact that we were both African; the fact that we both had the experience of going to Africa and connecting with our roots and really wanted to push the culture in the right way. So we started from a very solid foundation.
He said that he wanted to launch a store, and he didn’t know when he was going to launch it. He saw that the work I was doing for the culture and technology was so necessary. He knew it was bigger than us. It was necessary for the culture.
“The number one message Nipsey preached was infrastructure development: creating and not just consuming.” - Iddris Sandu
We conceived the Smart Store [together]. We started talking in May and we launched it in June. I got to meet the family, meet his brother, meet his mom; meet everybody before even working on this. We talked about our roots. We talked about books that we read, like
Contagious. And we talked about movies we watched, like
The Spook Who Sat By The Door. We watched Dr. Sebi videos. We watched documentaries about Steve Jobs. That was all part of the creative process of the store, and then actually building everything out and laying everything out. The process was very thorough and well-thought-out. It was very synchronous in terms of ideation, learning, scouting, exploring, and then executing.
We had the attention of everyone from JAY-Z and Nas, all the way down to 21 Savage come to show support. We shut down two blocks. Even Nipsey was shocked at the reception the smart features got. People can still go up there right now, buy merch, and download the app. I was talking to Nip’s brother Sam because I wanted to work on a tribute book for him, and then just continue the legacy, and continue building. It’s extremely important that we continue.
We launched that store together. For him to pass right in front of the same store, right on that same pavement that we cut the ribbon on… These are all signs that the universe gives us.
It’s really interesting how everything is coming full circle now. When I use the word “interesting” over “tragic,” it’s because I do not believe this is a tragedy. It’s a breakthrough really. To say it’s a tragedy would be to imply that his message won’t be continued. It’s a breakthrough because now you have so many people who were impacted by Nipsey—whether they met him or not—coming out and showing support. So to me it’s a breakthrough.
In “Dedication,” he literally said he knew he’s a genius. He just can’t claim it “cause they left me no platform to explain it.” Nip gave me that platform, and yeah, we’re going to continue his legacy. Everything he was working on: the STEM project, Vector90, Destination Crenshaw, the documentary. We’re going to continue doing all of that. Because he really understood. Let me not hinder him. Let me elevate him. Because it’s really for us. It’s not about him per se.
Even in the talks that we had, there were talks about moving it to Fairfax. And I was like, “Nah. This needs to be in the hood. We need to make this the Apple Store of the hood.” Although you might look at this community as whatever you choose to call it: a ghetto, the hood. Let’s be a reflection of what good can come out of it. We deliberately put the store right there on purpose. That was 1000% his intention.
Obviously he had roots there. He grew up there and everything. But the reason he put the store right there was to show that this is the product that can come from the hood if it’s catered in the right way. This is that rose that can grow from the broken pavement.
Nipsey’s legacy transcended music. He disrupted the model. It’s the same thing I’m doing in tech, disrupting the model. And he saw that.
“Nipsey left us with a physical blueprint of economic resources. [...] He left us with buying power and economic power.” - iddris sandu
For me personally, the conversation that really brought it together was operating systems and infrastructure. You know, your iPhone runs on an operating system called iOS and the apps are literally rented space. As with all communities, they have guidelines. He was trying to disrupt the model and that’s why we even connected and why that was important. What we were working on was the operating system for the retail business. That’s what it was, and we were going to move to different locations. One in every major city.
I feel like the best way to continue his legacy is to look at the one thing—just one thing—that he was talking about. Yes, it’s community empowerment and everything like that, but the number one message Nipsey preached was infrastructure development: creating and not just consuming. As black people, we consume the most and our production rate is very low. You see
Bird being a $2 billion company in one and a half years. With somebody on the street selling T-shirts or whatever, it takes them ten years to get where they want to be. The difference is infrastructure. So that’s the main message: keep building our community up; keep creating; keep amassing wealth; infrastructure; information. On the low, that’s what we’re pushing forward: building our own infrastructure.
I’ve been fortunate. I’ve been able to work with the likes of Kanye and Jaden Smith and all of these people. With Nip, Nip was real. Nip was as close to the truth that you will ever get. He walked in his power. He was unapologetically truthful. And that’s why I gravitated to people like Kanye. But the thing with Ye is, he was unapologetically truthful with no filter and all that. But for Yeezy, it was anybody that could help at any given time.
[Laughs]. And that was sort of the difference. I designed the Yandhi album cover. I went to Africa with Ye, and all of that. But I didn’t feel as connected with Ye as I did with Nipsey.
Nip always said, “The highest human act is to inspire.” He did that, and continues to do that. He called himself “the 2pac of my generation.” I love Pac. He’s weighed very much on me. But Nipsey did, whereas Pac spoke. Pac left us without a blueprint, a physical blueprint. We can talk all we need to, but Nip left us with a physical blueprint of economic resources. You know, to build a community you need three things: you need buying power, you need political power, and you need economic power. I think about what Pac left us with was the political power. Nipsey left us with buying power and economic power. That’s the blueprint we need to continue with.
Nipsey had the word “Prolific” tatted on his face, right below his eyebrow. That’s my take from Nip: to remain prolific at all times. Prolific means to be an enigma. Prolific is to be a Pandora’s Box; a large quantity of abundance. And that’s at the heart of what Nipsey did.
That’s what I really would like to continue: to be prolific with our infrastructural development, to be prolific with our cultural impact, and to be prolific with our unapologetic truth. Politically and economically, as it relates to completing a task or even delivering a message: to be prolific with the infrastructural development.
There’s really only one enemy, and that’s the people who are against spreading the information to everyone. And those that aren’t willing to empower everyone else. Nipsey could have been like anybody else who grew up in the hood, got big, and left. But he kept coming back always. To show: “I got you guys. I’m here. Always.”
Nipsey Hussle and Iddris Sandu