• Ofure*, 40, remembers exactly how long it took to trigger a financial crisis: 10 minutes.

    It was December 2024. As a single mother of three, she was staring down the barrel of a bleak festive season. Her petty trading business was capital-starved, and the cost of living in Nigeria was soaring. When a loan app notification popped up on her phone offering instant funds, it felt like a lifeline.

    “I needed ₦400,000 to restock for the December surge,” she says, her voice quiet. “I was convinced I’d make enough profit to repay it comfortably. The money hit my account before I could even second-guess it.”

    Ofure hadn’t gone to a commercial bank because they require paperwork, collateral, and the luxury of time, none of which she had. The app requested only her Biometric Verification Number (BVN), National Identity Number (NIN), and access to her contacts.

    When the festive sales failed to materialise, the business collapsed. Ofure managed to meet only the first month’s repayment before hitting a financial wall. Over the remainder of the six-month window, aggressive compound interest and default penalties caused the original ₦400,000 principal to grow into an ₦800,000 burden.

    In a desperate attempt to stay afloat, she began borrowing from new loan apps to service the old debt. But without any income to break the cycle, this game of borrowing from Peter to pay Paul only dug the hole deeper. 

    Her inability to keep up with the compounding interest caused her total debt exposure to balloon to ₦1.5 million over the course of a year. Today, despite struggling to make payments, nearly half of that sum remains unpaid.

    Ofure is one of millions of Nigerians caught in the gravitational pull of digital lending. It is a sector that promises financial inclusion but often delivers a modern form of indentured servitude, enforced by algorithms, public shaming, and relentless psychological warfare.

    The Algorithm of Harassment

    The mechanics of Nigeria’s digital lending boom are built on speed, with apps designed to trap borrowers. In a country where inflation hovers near 20 per cent and traditional credit is non-existent for low-income workers, fintech apps have filled the vacuum. But the ease of entry often obscures the brutality of the exit.

    Many online lenders exploit financially vulnerable Nigerians through misleading loan terms, hidden charges, and aggressive recovery tactics, turning what seems like a quick fix into an almost inescapable debt trap.

    “It was one of the worst decisions of my life,” Ofure admits. “Now, it feels like I’m working solely to repay the loan. The interest keeps piling up every time I miss a payment window.”

    When borrowers default, the “fintech” gloss wears off, revealing a crude engine of intimidation. Ofure’s phone rings relentlessly. When she misses a payment, the threats begin. But the true weaponisation of digital lending lies in the data users unknowingly surrender.

    Jalaal*, 26, an unemployed university graduate who turned to loan apps to survive, describes the moment his privacy was shattered.

    “I woke up to see they had sent a broadcast message to every single person on my WhatsApp,” Jalaal says. “Friends, old classmates, neighbours, even distant family. The message painted me as a chronic debtor and a fraud. For someone who tries to carry himself with dignity, the shame was unbearable.”

    This strategy of digitised public shaming is not an accident; it is an industrialised process.

    Nneka* knows this better than anyone. She worked inside the machine, first as a telemarketer and later in the “Collections and Recovery” department of a major digital lender.

    “We were given 50 to 70 contacts of delinquents every day,” Nneka explains. The pressure inside the call centres is as intense as it is on the borrowers. Agents have daily recovery targets ranging from ₦150,000 to ₦240,000.

    “If you don’t meet your target, they sack you fast. No grace,” she says.

    While company policy often officially forbids threats, the targets make them inevitable. “Most times, Nigerian borrowers become stubborn and tell you to do your worst,” Nneka notes. “That results in the insults. When I threaten to post a borrower’s picture to their friends, sometimes they start begging. It’s a pressure cooker.”

    The Regulatory Awakening

    For years, this sector operated in a regulatory vacuum. Lenders were often shell companies with servers hosted abroad and untraceable directors. They offered predatory interest rates, sometimes effective annual rates of over 100 per cent, masked as small monthly fees.

    That was supposed to change in July 2025.

    The Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission (FCCPC) unveiled the Digital, Electronic, Online or Non-Traditional Consumer Lending Regulation (DEON) 2025. It was billed as a mandatory framework replacing the patchwork interim rules of 2022.

    “The borrower was often treated like a slave to the lender,” admits Odanje Ijagwu, Director of Corporate Affairs at the FCCPC. “We had situations where an app would pop up, entice you, and the next moment, you are defamed and harassed. The DEON regulation is a blueprint to stop that.”

    The new rules, on paper, appear stringent. They require:

    • Mandatory Registration: Every digital lender must register, revealing the humans behind the corporate veil.

    • Suitability Assessments: Lenders are legally required to verify that a borrower can afford to repay, thereby ending the practice of lending to desperate individuals without proper consideration.

    • Data Sanctity: A strict ban on accessing contacts, photos, or using shaming tactics.

    “In the past, operators never bothered to check if consumers could pay back,” Ijagwu notes. “Now, not doing so is an offence. We can hold individual operators and corporate organisations responsible. The penalties are severe, with up to ₦100 million or a suspension of operations.”

    The Gap Between Law and Reality

    However, three months into this new regulatory regime, the gap between the law and the people remains wide.

    Raheemah Olawuyi, a Data Protection and Privacy Expert, argues that the violation is by design: “The apps are built to strip-mine a user’s phone, seizing access to private data purely to gain leverage over the borrower. A bank doesn’t ask for your entire contact list,” Olawuyi says. “The fact that these apps do is already a violation of the principle of ‘Data Minimisation’ under the Nigeria Data Protection Act. They collect information for ‘guarantors’ but use it for intimidation.”

    While the DEON regulations and the Nigeria Data Protection Commission (NDPC) provide a pathway for recourse, access to justice is unequally distributed.

    “The NDPC has made toll-free lines available and translated the Act into Igbo, Hausa, and Yoruba,” Olawuyi acknowledges. “But does the average woman on the street, the primary target of these loans, know that? When a loan agent calls to threaten, does she know that it is a reportable offence, or does she just feel shame?”

    Feyisara Owojuyigbe Bantale, a consumer protection lawyer, agrees that awareness is the missing link.

    “Most consumers try to keep things quiet,” Bantale says. “They are reluctant to seek help because they feel they are in the wrong for owing money. This silence allows for exploitation. Although the law requires lenders to assess repayment capacity, many lenders bypass this requirement. And truthfully, borrowers sometimes provide wrong information just to get the cash.”

    Feeding the Addiction

    The country’s high cost of living does not solely drive the crisis. The frictionless nature of digital loans has also weaponised addiction.

    Ayodeji*, 28, a young professional earning ₦500,000 a month, which is still considered a good salary, didn’t borrow to survive inflation. He borrowed to fuel a gambling habit.

    “In 2024, I borrowed up to ₦1 million from 20 different loan apps to fuel my addiction,” Ayodeji says. “I borrowed as much as I wanted, and didn’t pay all of them back.”

    For Ayodeji, the shaming tactics lost their power through sheer volume. “They always called and texted, threatening to post my obituary. I just repaid the ones I felt like paying and deleted the apps. Their threats didn’t scare me at all.”

    If a borrower can cycle through 20 different apps, leveraging one to pay another or to fund a betting spree, it proves that the systems central to a healthy financial market are evidently failing to flag high-risk behaviour in real-time.

    A Long Road to Recovery

    The DEON 2025 regulations have undoubtedly raised the barrier to entry for digital lenders. The days of faceless Asian-operated shell companies are numbered, as the FCCPC now demands to know exactly who is pulling the strings.

    But for Ofure, these high-level policy shifts feel abstract. She is still receiving threatening calls today, months after the regulations took effect.

    “I’m not even aware of any new digital lending rules,” she says wearily. “The pressure and harassment haven’t changed. When I make a late payment, I still get pressured.”

    To keep the agents at bay, Ofure added her teenage son’s number as her secondary contact—a decision she regrets deeply. “They called and sent vile messages to him. I loathed myself for dragging him into this. It was devastating.”

    The tragedy of the digital lending trap is that it works until it doesn’t. It provides liquidity at the speed of light, but extracts value at the speed of compound interest.

    “No one envisages such things happening,” Ofure says, “Before you collect that kind of money, you have hope that you’ll pay back. You have hope.”

    For now, that hope is the only currency she has left.

    “I’m not worrying myself anymore,” she concludes, a note of resignation in her voice. “Whenever I get money, I’ll pay. If I don’t have it, there’s nothing I can do. As long as I’m still alive, there’s hope.”

    KNOW YOUR RIGHTS: The DEON 2025 Borrower’s Guide

    The Digital, Electronic, Online or Non-Traditional Consumer Lending Regulations (DEON) 2025 have rewritten the rules of engagement. If you are taking a digital loan, these are your non-negotiable rights:

    1. The Right to Privacy: This strictly prohibits lenders from accessing your contact list, photo gallery, or social media accounts. They cannot contact your friends, family, or employer to shame you into repayment. If an agent messages your contacts, they are breaking the law.

    2. The Right to Full Disclosure: No more hidden fees. Before you click “Accept,” the lender must display a Key Facts Statement that shows the full cost of the loan, including the interest rate, total repayment amount, late fees, and the tenor, in plain English.

    3. The Right to a Suitability Assessment: Lenders can no longer throw money at you if you cannot afford it. They are legally required to assess your ability to repay the loan before granting it. If they give you a loan without checking your income or creditworthiness, they are liable for reckless lending.

    4. The Right to Fair Recovery: Harassment is illegal. Lenders must conduct debt collection ethically and within reasonable hours (8 AM – 8 PM). Threats of arrest, physical harm, or the creation of “wanted” posters are criminal offences under the new framework.

    5. The Right to Redress: If a lender violates these rules, you have the right to report them directly to the FCCPC. The regulator now has the power to suspend the lender’s license and impose fines of up to ₦100 million.

    To report a violation: Visit the FCCPC consumer portal or contact their dedicated digital lending task force.


    *Names have been changed to protect the identity of the subjects.


    Next Read: “Everyone Thinks I Owe Them Something”: The Economics of Nigerian Entitlement


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  • For years, there’s been a popular idea about success for young Nigerian professionals: if you want a better career, you have to leave the country. The word japa became shorthand for ambition, proof that you’re serious about your future.

    But a growing number of Nigerians are quietly proving that you don’t need to pick up and move to get a global career. With high-speed internet, online communities, and a shift in how they approach work, they’re building high-value careers with Silicon Valley and European companies, from their apartments in Lagos, Ibadan, Abuja and across Nigeria. 

    And they’re not merely freelancing for scraps; they are integrating into the core operations of global teams, earning thousands of dollars a month, bypassing the third-world discount, and climbing the ladder through smart upskilling and psychological repositioning. Here’s how they do it.

    Why “Just Doing the Job” No Longer Works

    The first rule of the new global workforce is that generalists are vulnerable. In 2023, Eyiyemi* was a content writer earning $2,000 a month at a Portugal-based SEO agency, until AI changed everything.

    “When AI came into the picture, the company started downsizing. They wanted one writer doing the job of ten,” Eyiyemi says. He lost his job that November. Rather than fighting a losing battle against algorithms, he pivoted up the value chain. He discovered GTM (Go-To-Market) Engineering — a hybrid role blending marketing strategy, API automation, and AI tools to scale sales operations.

    Eyiyemi’s transition reveals a broader truth about global work: companies aren’t just paying for hours anymore; they’re paying for results.

    Lateef Maleek, a Strategy Operations Manager who has earned up to $10,000 a month managing SEO for international clients, argues that the era of “doing the task” is over. The market now rewards “diagnostic” thinking.

    “If a client says they are looking for a writer to produce four blogs, I ask myself: Why four? Why not ten? What are they trying to achieve?” Maleek explains. “I approach clients from a diagnostic point of view. I’m not hard-selling. I’m saying, ‘Based on your job description, you don’t need X, you likely need Y to get this specific result.’”

    This shift from order-taker to strategist is the primary defence against being easily replaceable. Oluwatoni Olujinmi, a B2B SaaS content writer who has worked with major brands like Visme for over three years, notes that while AI can generate text, it cannot replace high-level critical thinking.

    “AI can’t be their full writing team because they know their clients are people who can think and evaluate,” Olujinmi says. “It requires critical thinking to develop angles and expert insights. That is the skill so many don’t build.”

    The takeaway: Stop being a task-doer. Start being a problem-solver.

    Hyper-Specific Upskilling

    Success in global roles is more than having a fancy degree. It’s about knowing exactly what companies need, and then proving you can deliver.

    For Eyiyemi, the breakthrough came from an online community around a tool called Clay. He saw people being hired just for that skill. So, he went all in, aggressively consuming resources by learning everything he could from YouTube tutorials, free accounts, and AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

    “I joined the Clay community and saw people looking for Clay operators. That gave me insight that this role is in demand,” Johel recalls, “I spent two months learning Clay from scratch. That’s what got me hired.”

    Maleek agrees. His leap from writer to strategist came through investing in expensive, global-standard courses from reputable institutions like the CXL Institute.

    “If you want to play on the global level, you need to know what you’re doing. Buy the course. Read the latest research. Keep learning.”

    The principle is simple: benchmark your skills against the best, not just what’s available locally.


    Related: I Went From Earning ₦160k/Month to $7.8k Working Remotely. Here’s How I Flipped My Career and Income


    Mindset Matters

    Many Nigerians have the skills to integrate seamlessly, but the confidence to compete globally makes the real difference. 

    “If you enter a call thinking you’re lesser because of where you’re from, you’ll always earn less,” Maleek says. “Ask for what you deserve. Don’t undervalue yourself.”

    Interviews are about selling your value just as much as they are about answering questions.

    Eyiyemi explains: “It’s like you’re fighting bias before it even comes up. You need to know exactly what they want and show you’re the best choice.”

    Maleek adds a numbers perspective: “If I bring $150,000 in lifetime value from one lead, and ask $20,000 for my work that could generate $2 million in three years, the math is simple.”

    The Economics of Staying  

    For those who crack the code, the economic benefits are staggering in comparison to the local economy. However, the path is rarely linear. Income volatility is a feature, not a bug, of the high-growth global career.

    Maleek admits that his income has fluctuated wildly, peaking at $10,000 a month in 2024 before settling into a $5,000–$7,000 range as he prioritised a role offering more strategic growth over raw cash flow.

    “I’ve always leveraged where I’m going to get the best experience over where I’m going to get the highest money,” Maleek explains. “I’m learning how to be a leader and a decision-maker. Those things are much more valuable to me.”

    Eyiyemi, who earns about $1,500 a month, views his current compensation as a stepping stone to achieving his future goals. He is actively interviewing for roles in the $40k to $70k annual bracket, a realistic target for a mid-level GTM engineer in the global market.

    “Being paid $1,500 is not enough based on my experience,” Eyiyemi states. “But I believe that if I am going into any career path, I am competent enough to compete on a global scale. That is why I don’t start my journey locally. I start globally.”


    Related: How to Land a Global Remote Job While Living in Nigeria


    The Network Effect

    Getting global roles is as much about skills as it is about networking and strategically building digital relationships. 

    Olujinmi treats her online presence like a lead generation tool. She meticulously studied top content marketers in her niche, learning how to reverse-engineer their success.

    This enabled her to establish a LinkedIn presence that attracted high-value clients, including her current role at Visme.

    Eyiyemi takes a more direct approach, utilising “cold” outreach within professional communities. He cold-contacts founders or heads of growth, asking for advice or free resources. Sometimes, they even share access to courses worth $3,000 to $4,000.

    The Playbook for Young Nigerians

    For young Nigerians entering the global workforce, the core insights from the trio are consistent: Don’t just learn a skill; learn the business of the skill.

    “Anyone going into the international role now needs to know that it is saturated,” Eyiyemi warns. “You need to experience it locally first to get your hands dirty. Focus on expertise, and deep experience, not just skills.”

    Maleek offers a final directive for the next generation: “Don’t be a utility. Be a strategist. Be a consultant. The industry needs professionals who know what they are doing. Invest in courses, learn the right way to do it, and put yourself out there.”

    In a world where talent is distributed equally but opportunity is not, these Nigerians are proving that with the right systems and mindset, you can engineer opportunity from anywhere. They are not waiting for the world to come to Nigeria; they are building a bridge to the world, one strategic Zoom call at a time.

    Key Takeaways

    The pattern is clear:

    • Learn in-demand, hyper-specific skills.
    • Don’t chase every shiny new skill; focus on what actually moves the needle.
    • Think strategically, not just task-based.
    • Build confidence and the right mindset.
    • Network strategically, online and offline.
    • Treat every role as a learning opportunity, not just a paycheck.

    Read Next: How to Scale a Business — According to Experts Who Drove Early Growth at Nigeria’s Billion-Dollar Companies


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  • Bitcoin had a strong 2025, but it wasn’t the year’s biggest success story. While everyone was watching BTC’s new highs and dramatic dips, a different set of coins, some proven, some chaotic, some unexpectedly dominant, delivered even bigger gains.

    So we dug into the numbers to see which cryptocurrencies actually won 2025, filtering for projects with real weight behind them.

    Methodology:

    Using real-time data from CoinMarketCap, we ranked the top 9 best-performing cryptocurrencies of 2025 as of December 12, 2025. Cryptocurrency prices are highly volatile, so this ranking is subject to change as the market fluctuates.

    9 Top Cryptocurrencies by Year-to-Date Performance

    Below is a list of the nine best-performing cryptocurrencies with market caps above $1 billion — a number chosen to weed out less-established coins — ordered by 2025 returns.

    1.  Z-Cash (ZEC)

    Zcash was one of the biggest surprises of 2025. It started the year at about $58 and is now around $464. That’s a massive 707% jump. Most of that growth occurred in the last few months of the year, when privacy coins experienced a sudden surge in popularity, attracting new investors. With a $7.4 billion market cap, it’s one of the strongest big-coin comebacks this year.  

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 707.30%
    • Current Price: $464
    • Price in January: $58.81
    • Market Cap: $7.4 billion

    Market Simulation: If you’d put $100 (about ₦145k) into Zcash in January, you’d have bought 1.7 ZEC and be sitting on roughly $789 today, which is over ₦1.1 million. It’s one of the strongest large-cap rebounds the market has seen this year.

    What it is: Zcash is a 2016 privacy coin that lets people send money privately using advanced encryption. Created by the Electric Coin Company, it’s one of the leading privacy-focused cryptocurrencies alongside Monero.

    2. OKB (OKB)

    OKB started 2025 at around $49.71 and is now worth approximately $116.72. That’s a 137.9% year-to-date gain. Most of that rise came after a major token burn in August, when the project permanently destroyed some of its coins, reducing supply to 21 million. Growing use of the OKX ecosystem and a generally strong market for exchange tokens also helped push the price up. With a $2.4 billion market cap, OKB is one of the stronger-performing exchange tokens this year.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 137.91%
    • Current Price: $116.72
    • Price in January: $49.71
    • Market Cap: $2.4 Billion

    Market simulation: A $100 (~₦145k) investment in January would have bought about 2 OKB. At today’s price, that’s worth roughly $234 (~₦340k), more than doubling in less than a year.

    What it is: OKB is the 2018-launched utility token of the OKX exchange and its broader Web3 ecosystem. The token is designed so that fewer coins are created over time, which can help maintain its value.

    3. Monero (XMR)

    Monero (XMR) started 2025 at around $196.64 and is now about $407.30 — a 110% year-to-date return. The rise came as privacy coins regained attention, Monero’s protocol continued improving, and late-year momentum pushed it past $400. With a $7.5 billion market cap, XMR is one of the standout privacy coins of the year.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 110.63%
    • Current Price: $407.30
    • Price in January: $196.64
    • Market Cap: $7.5 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you’d put $100 (~₦145k) into Monero (XMR) in January, you’d now be sitting on around $207 (~₦300k), more than twice what you started with.

    What it is: Monero (XMR) is a 2014-launched privacy coin that hides transaction details, making it untraceable and censorship-resistant. It’s one of the leading privacy-focused cryptocurrencies alongside Zcash.


    Related: 4 Nigerians Who Went for Gold and Why They’re Not Looking Back


    4. Tether Gold (XAUT) 

    XAUT started 2025 around $2,662 and is now about $4,308, a 64% year-to-date gain. This growth closely mirrors the record-breaking rally of gold this year. With a $1.6 billion market capitalisation, XAUT is a popular on-chain option for investors seeking a safe-haven asset or inflation hedge, rather than a speculative crypto bet.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 64.29%
    • Current price: $4,308
    • Price in January: $2,625
    • Market Cap: $1.6 Billion

    Market simulation: A $100 (~₦145k) investment in January would have bought about 0.037 XAUT, which today would be worth roughly $160 (~₦232k) — a solid gain reflecting the underlying gold price surge.

    What it is: Tether Gold (XAUT) is a gold-backed token launched in 2020 by Tether. Each XAUT represents one troy ounce of physical gold stored in Swiss vaults, making it easy to hold, transfer, and trade gold on-chain.

    5. PAX Gold (PAXG)

    In January 2025, PAXG was priced around $2,635 and climbed to roughly $4,318 by year-end, a 64% year-to-date increase. Its market cap sits at about $1.5 billion, reflecting steady growth that mirrors gold’s own record-breaking rally rather than crypto-native speculation.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 64.32%
    • Current price: $4,318
    • Price in January: $2,635
    • Market Cap: $1.5 Billion

    Market Simulation:  A $100 (~₦145k) investment in PAXG at the start of the year would have bought roughly 0.038 tokens, now worth around $164 (~₦240k).

    What it is: PAX Gold (PAXG) is a gold-backed token launched in 2019 by Paxos Trust. Each PAXG represents one troy ounce of LBMA-accredited gold stored in Brinks vaults, providing investors with a simple way to hold and move gold on-chain while remaining redeemable for physical bullion.

    6. Bitcoin Cash (BCH)

    Bitcoin Cash (BCH) experienced steady growth in 2025, rising from approximately $451 in January to around $579 by December, representing a year-to-date increase of roughly 33%. 

    The post-2024 halving supported its growth, which reduced the number of new coins being created. Meanwhile, renewed interest in its low fees, fast payments, and stronger performance compared to other big blockchains helped push it higher, even as many large-cap coins remained flat.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 33.48%
    • Current price: $579
    • Price in January: $451
    • Market Cap: $11.5 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had invested $100 in BCH at the start of 2025, you would have bought roughly 0.22 BCH, which would now be worth around $128(~₦185k), reflecting steady, moderate growth rather than extreme volatility.

    What it is: BCH is a Bitcoin fork from 2017 built for everyday payments. It has larger blocks (up to 32 MB) and lower fees, with the same 21-million-coin supply limit and halving schedule, making transactions faster and cheaper than on Bitcoin’s main chain.

    7. BNB (Binance Coin)

    BNB rose from approximately $709 in January to roughly $886 by year-end 2025, representing a year-to-date increase of around 27%, with a market capitalisation exceeding $120 billion. Its growth was supported by steady use across the BNB ecosystem, ongoing supply reduction through token burns, and gradual easing of regulatory concerns.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 26.53%
    • Current price: $886
    • Price in January: $709
    • Market Cap: $122 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had invested $100 in BNB at the start of 2025, you would have bought roughly 0.14 BNB, which would now be worth around $124 (~₦180k), reflecting steady, moderate growth rather than sharp swings.

    What BNB is: BNB (Binance Coin) started in 2017 as a token for trading fee discounts on Binance. It now operates on Binance’s own networks and is utilised for DeFi, NFTs, payments, and other on-chain applications.

    8. Hyperliquid (HYPE)

    Hyperliquid’s HYPE token rose from about $23.89 in January to around $29.21 by year‑end 2025, increasing by roughly 22%. This moderate growth reflects a consolidation phase after larger gains in 2024, as the platform solidified its position as a leading decentralised perpetual futures exchange.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 22.26%
    • Current Price: $29.21
    • Price in January: $23.89
    • Market Cap: $9.8 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had invested $100 in HYPE at the start of 2025, you would have bought roughly 4.19 tokens, which would now be worth about $122 (~₦177k), showing steady, moderate growth.

    What Hyperliquid is: Hyperliquid is a decentralised exchange (DEX) built for perpetual futures and spot trading. Its HYPE token is used for staking, governance, and incentives, with a portion of tokens regularly bought back to reduce supply and support the token’s value.

    9. TRON (TRX)

    TRON had a modest year in 2025, rising from approximately $0.25 in January to roughly $0.27 by year-end, representing a year-to-date increase of around 9%, with a market capitalisation of nearly $26 billion. The token’s steady performance reflects its strong position as a payments and settlement layer for USDT transfers, low‑fee transactions, and growing institutional participation.

    Market Snapshot:

    • Year-to-Date Growth: 9.30%
    • Current Price: $0.27
    • Price in January: $0.25
    • Market Cap: $26 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had invested $100 in TRX at the start of 2025, you would have bought about 400 TRX, which would now be worth around $108 (~₦157k), showing slow but stable growth rather than high volatility.

    What it is:  TRON is a blockchain network started in 2017. Its token, TRX, is used to make fast and cheap transactions, especially for transferring USDT stablecoins, and to participate in network activities on the blockchain.


    Related: Meme Coin Madness: 4 Nigerian Traders on the Wild Profits and Devastating Losses


    Sidebar: Crazy Memecoin Movers of 2025

    Meme coins are the wild, high‑risk corner of crypto. Unlike the utility-driven tokens listed above, they don’t power major ecosystems—they trade on hype, viral trends, and community attention, with gains often swinging hundreds or thousands of per cent in months, then crashing just as fast. 

    Here are some spectacular examples from 2025, with market caps above $1 billion — a number chosen to weed out less-established coins. 

    1. Memecore (M)

    Memecore exploded out of the gate in 2025, climbing from just $0.05 when it launched in July to around $1.54 by year‑end—a staggering 2,540% gain. Along the way, it reached an early peak near $0.90 before rising as high as $2.97 in September, only to tumble sharply afterwards, but still maintaining a decent momentum. 

    Market Snapshot:

    • YTD Growth: 2540.32%
    • Current price: $1.54
    • Launch Price: $0.05 
    • Market Cap: $1.9 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had put $100 in Memecore at its launch price of $0.05 in July 2025, you would have bought 2,000 M tokens. At the first peak near $0.90, those tokens would have been worth $1,800. At the all-time high of $2.97 in September, your holdings would have soared to $5,940 (~₦8.6 Million). By year‑end, with the price around $1.54, your 2,000 M tokens would now be worth $3,080, still an extraordinary return from the launch price, despite the sharp swings along the way.

    What it is: A meme‑themed token pitched as “infrastructure” for the meme coin world, aiming to centralise attention and trading activity.

    2. Aster (ASTER)

    Aster rocketed from around $0.097 when it launched in September 2025 to roughly $0.95 by year‑end, a staggering 1,028% gain. Along the way, it reached jaw-dropping highs near $2.10 before pulling back, riding waves of speculation and sector hype, and now commands a market capitalisation of approximately $2.1 billion.

    Market Snapshot:

    • YTD Growth: 1028.37%
    • Current Price: $0.95
    • Launch Price: $0.097 
    • Market Cap: $2.1 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you bought $100 worth of Aster when it launched at (~$0.097), you would have bought roughly 1,031 ASTER. At its all-time high near $2.10, that holding would have been worth around $2,165 (~₦3.1 Million), an extraordinary return. By year-end, with Aster at approximately $0.95, the same holding would be worth about $980, reflecting significant overall gains but also the extreme swings and volatility along the way.

    What it is: A meme‑coin hybrid riding the decentralised perpetuals craze.

    3. Trump (Official Trump)

    TRUMP had one of the most explosive stories of 2025. Starting the year at just $1.20, it catapulted to an almost unimaginable $73–$75 in a single 24-hour frenzy, capturing headlines and retail attention alike, before crashing back down to around $5.69 by year-end, still a remarkable 370% gain. Its market cap now sits near $1.13 billion, a testament to the power of viral, meme-driven mania.

    Market Snapshot:

    • YTD Growth: 370.44%
    • Current price: $5.68
    • Launch Price: $1.20 
    • Market Cap: $1.13 Billion

    Market Simulation: If you had put $100 in TRUMP at the start of 2025 (~$1.20), you would have bought roughly 83 TRUMP. In a jaw-dropping 24‑hour surge to ~$73–$75, that holding would have been worth around $6,059–$6,225 (~₦9 Million)—an almost unimaginable spike. By year-end, with TRUMP at approximately $5.69, the same investment would be worth about $472, demonstrating massive overall gains but also the wild, rollercoaster volatility that characterises meme coins like this.

    What it is: A politically themed meme coin running on Solana, capitalising on Donald Trump–related viral marketing.

    Bottom Line

    2025 showed crypto still has fireworks, from steady big-coin gains to meme coins delivering jaw-dropping rallies. The year proved that utility, narrative, and hype all move prices, sometimes in equal measure. Heading into 2026, expect clearer regulations, more real-world adoption, and continued wild swings for attention-grabbing coins. The ecosystem is maturing, but the thrill and risk are far from over. 


    Disclaimer: This is not financial advice; always do your own research before investing.


    Next Read: 4 Nigerians Share Their Smartest Investments of 2025


    Glossary

    Market Cap

    The total value of a cryptocurrency. Formula: Price × number of coins in circulation.
    It helps show how “big” or established a coin is.

    YTD (Year-to-Date)

    How much a coin has gained or lost from January 1st to today. It helps measure yearly performance at a glance.

    Utility Token

    A token used within a specific crypto ecosystem for paying fees, staking, or accessing features.

    Staking

    Locking your crypto to help secure a network and earn rewards. Similar to earning interest, but riskier.

    Fork

    When developers copy and modify an existing blockchain to create a new version with different rules. Example: Bitcoin → Bitcoin Cash.

    Halving

    An event that cuts the number of new coins being created by 50%. It often affects supply and long-term price movements.

    Token Burn

    Permanently removing coins from circulation, like deleting them. This reduces supply and can support price growth.

    Deflationary Model

    A system where the total supply of a coin decreases or grows very slowly over time.

    Gas Fees

    The fees you pay to complete a transaction or use apps on a blockchain.

    ATH (All-Time High)

    The highest price a cryptocurrency has ever reached.

    Volatility

    How wildly a coin’s price moves up and down. Crypto is known for very high volatility.

    Meme Coin

    A cryptocurrency based on internet jokes, pop culture, or hype. They move quickly, are extremely risky, and often rely on virality rather than fundamentals.


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  • The Nigerian box office has seen a remarkable surge in 2025. With ticket sales projected to reach ₦15 billion by year-end, the industry is on track for a record-breaking year. By November, cinemas had already grossed over ₦10 billion, a 58% increase from the same period in 2024.

    While some hits from 2024, like Everybody Loves Jenifa and Alakada: Bad and Boujee, continued to attract audiences, this year’s standout story comes from fresh releases. These films demonstrated that Nollywood is maturing into an industry capable of producing commercially successful, culturally resonant films that draw large and diverse audiences across Nigeria.

    Here are the top 10 highest-grossing Nollywood movies at the Nigerian box office this year, the films that set the tone for a record-breaking year in Nigerian cinema.

    10. Something About the Briggs

    Gross: ₦91.3 million

    Running time: 2h 5m

    Director: Bukola Ogunsola 

    Genre: Family Drama, Relationship Drama

    Studio: Revelation Pictures

    Something About The Briggs has emerged as one of 2025’s standout Nollywood hits, showcasing the strength of character-driven storytelling in contemporary Nigerian cinema. The film delves into the complexities of a wealthy, fractured family as they navigate secrets, privilege, and personal ambition, blending emotional depth with sharp social commentary.

    The film made a solid impact at the box office, opening to ₦22.5 million in its first weekend and steadily building momentum to gross over ₦91 million.

    9. My Mother Is a Witch

    Gross: ₦100.6 million

    Running time: 1h 40m

    Director: Niyi Akinmolayan 

    Genre: Drama, Family Drama

    Studio: Anthill Studios and FrameFlixHQ

    Released in May 2025, My Mother Is a Witch centres on a fractured mother‑daughter relationship, exploring pain, memory, and the challenge of reconciliation. The film steadily performed  at the box office, hitting the ₦100 million mark — an impressive feat in 2025’s crowded market. Acclaimed for its emotional depth and strong performances led by Efe Irele and Mercy Aigbe, the movie affirmed that character‑driven drama still draws audiences hungry for grounded Nigerian stories.

    8. Red Circle

    Gross: ₦117.73 million

    Running time: 1h 59m

    Director: Akay Mason

    Genre: Thriller, Action

    Studio: Rixel Studios 

    Produced by Nora Awolowo, Red Circle is an action‑thriller that centres on a law‑enforcement lead trying to bring down a dangerous criminal network under intense time pressure. It mixes suspense, violent confrontations, and a fast‑moving plot, targeting fans of crime and action cinema. The film built word‑of‑mouth over its run and grossed roughly the ₦120 million mark at the Nigerian box office, ranking among the stronger homegrown performers of the 2025 cinema year.

    7. Abanisete: The Ancestor

    Gross: ₦152.8 million

    Running time: 2h 5m

    Director: Tope Adebayo and Adebayo Tijani, along with Ibrahim Yekini.

    Genre: Historical Drama, Epic

    Studio: FilmOne Studios and Hawks Studios

    Abanisete: The Ancestor tells the story of a revered patriarch whose legacy shapes the fate of his descendants, blending mythology with human drama. The film’s intricate storytelling and high production values drew audiences eager for culturally rooted narratives. It opened to strong numbers and steadily climbed the box office, ultimately grossing over ₦152 million, proving that historical epics remain a compelling draw for Nigerian audiences.

     With its authentic depiction of tradition and a talented ensemble cast, the film reinforced Nollywood’s capacity for large-scale, culturally resonant storytelling.


    Related: 10 of the Best Nollywood Movies of 2025, So Far


    6. Owambe Thieves

    Gross: ₦205.6 million

    Running time: 1h 40m

    Director: Adeoluwa Owu 

    Genre: Drama, Crime

    Studio: FilmOne Studios, Light House Pictures and collaborators

    This 2025 crime drama took off over Easter weekend with a ₦53.6 million opening, telling a gritty story about survival, desperation, and moral collapse when a struggling couple resorts to robbery. The film sustained momentum beyond its debut, eventually racking up over ₦200 million. As a mid‑year release, Owambe Thieves showed that compelling, locally rooted narratives can still capture box office success even outside peak seasons.

    5. Labake Olododo

    Gross: ₦264.28 million

    Running time: 2h 21m

    Director: Biodun Stephen

    Genre: Drama, Epic

    Studio: FilmOne Studios, Fespris Productions, co‑produced with input from Abazee Productions and other backers.

    Iyabo Ojo’s Labake Olododo has firmly anchored itself as one of 2025’s biggest Nollywood hits, underlining the commercial and cultural power of Yoruba-language cinema. Following strong anticipation, the film opened nationwide on March 28, drawing audiences eager for a story rooted in Yoruba heritage. 

    It follows Labake, a fearless heroine challenging injustice in her community while navigating societal pressures, blending high-stakes drama with emotional depth and cultural nuance. The film made an immediate mark at the box office, debuting with ₦50 million in its first weekend, quickly surpassing ₦200 million, and ultimately grossing over ₦264.2 million. 

    4. Iyalode

    Gross: ₦306.36 million

    Running time: 2h 6m

    Director: Adebayo Tijani

    Genre: Historical Drama, Epic

    Studio: FilmOne Studios and Toyin Abraham Productions

    Released in early June to coincide with the Eid El Kabir holiday, Toyin Abraham’s Iyalode tells the story of a strong-willed woman navigating power, tradition, and personal ambition, combining compelling drama with cultural resonance. Abraham’s performance, paired with high production quality, made the film a must-see for audiences across Nigeria.

    Iyalode made an immediate impact at the box office, opening to ₦81.54 million in its first weekend and surpassing ₦137 million by the end of its opening week. It maintained momentum for three consecutive weekends, fending off competition from international blockbusters like Ballerina and Mission: Impossible 8, and ultimately grossed over ₦305 million. 

    The film’s success not only reinforced Toyin Abraham’s status as a reliable box-office draw but also secured Iyalode a place among the top Nollywood earners of all time, demonstrating the commercial strength of homegrown storytelling.

    3. Reel Love

    Gross: ₦356.82 million

    Running time: 1h 38m

    Director: Kayode Kasum

    Genre: Romance, Drama

    Studio: FilmOne Studios, Film Trybe and Next Thought Entertainment Company

    Reel Love marked a major milestone for Timini Egbuson, who made his debut as a producer on this 2025 romantic drama. Released on Valentine’s Day, the film explores the highs and lows of performative relationships and the pursuit of social media fame. It opened to ₦40.5 million on its first day and closed its debut weekend with ₦99.3 million, quickly building momentum. Within three weeks, the film crossed ₦200 million and eventually grossed ₦356 million, holding the top spot at the Nigerian box office for five consecutive weeks. 


    More: Best Nollywood Movies to Watch On Netflix (December 2025)


    2. Ori: Rebirth

    Gross: ₦419.57 million

    Running time: 2h 15m

    Director: Muyiwa Ademola

    Genre: Yoruba-language Drama, Epic

    Studio: Ademola Productions & T&A Pictures

    Muyiwa Ademola’s Ori: Rebirth has emerged as one of 2025’s biggest Nollywood successes, showcasing the commercial and cultural strength of Yoruba-language cinema. The film follows a resilient hero navigating family, legacy, and societal expectations, blending epic storytelling with emotional depth and cultural authenticity. It made an immediate mark at the box office, grossing over ₦114 million in its first week, surpassing ₦300 million within a month, and ultimately grossing approximately ₦419.5 million.

    1. Gingerrr

    Gross: ₦509.3 million

    Running time: 2h 10m

    Director: Yemi Morafa

    Genre: Action, Comedy, Heist

    Studio: COTS Production

    The Nigerian action-comedy Gingerrr has become a box-office juggernaut, blending suspense, humour, and high-stakes heist thrills. The story follows four friends whose daring plan to escape their pasts unravels as secrets and hidden agendas surface. Executively produced by Ope Ajayi, Bukunmi Adeaga-Ilori, Bisola Aiyeola, Wumi Toriola, Bolaji Ogunmola, and Creative Catalyst, the film premiered and was released nationwide in September. Gingerr opened to ₦82 million and soared to ₦378 million in five weeks, ultimately grossing over ₦509 million, making it 2025’s highest-grossing Nollywood film and the fifth highest of all time.


    Read Next: The 10 Highest-Grossing Nollywood Movies of All Time


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  • AI is constantly reshaping how students learn, research, and interact with the academic environment. Many Nigerians have already begun experimenting with AI for exam preparation, and studies indicate that students utilising AI tools can reduce their study time by up to 30% while enhancing comprehension and retention.

    For many Nigerian students, juggling lectures, assignments, exams, and side hustles can feel like a chaotic experience. Imagine having an AI tool that can summarise lecture notes, generate practice quizzes, help brainstorm assignments, and even organise your study materials.

    Among the growing number of AI tools, Google Gemini stands out for its advanced research capabilities and academic support, offering a more innovative and faster way to tackle university life. Here, we explore 10 practical ways Nigerian students can use Gemini to study smarter and level up their academic game.

    1. Turn Confusing Lectures Into Clear Notes

    Sitting through a lecture only to leave feeling confused? Google Gemini can help you summarise key points instantly, turning dense slides and lecture notes into digestible summaries. You can even highlight essential sections or create bullet-point versions for quicker revision. No more staring at a 50-slide deck and wondering where to start. Gemini makes your notes crisp, clear, and easy to revise, saving you hours of rewrites and stress before exams.

    2. Conduct In-Depth, Cited Research

    With Deep Research, Gemini can generate detailed, cited summaries of academic topics. Need references for your essay or background for your project? Gemini pulls together information you can trust, helping you go beyond simple Google searches. Instead of spending hours piecing together articles and journals, you get the context and sources in minutes, letting you focus on analysis and critical thinking, and the skills lecturers actually value.

    3. Generate Practice Quizzes for Revision

    Exams don’t have to be terrifying. Gemini’s quiz generation tool lets you turn your notes into custom practice tests. Multiple-choice questions, short answers, or scenario-based prompts, all created instantly. This makes revising interactive and much more effective. By testing yourself with quizzes generated by Gemini, you identify weak points and retain information faster, so exam prep feels strategic rather than stressful.

    4. Brainstorm and Draft Assignments Quickly

    Gemini helps you brainstorm ideas, draft essays, or structure reports in minutes. Whether it’s a business plan for class, a history essay, or a science project, Gemini helps you iterate faster and more efficiently. You’re not outsourcing your thinking, but using AI to organise thoughts, explore angles, and kickstart your writing so deadlines don’t feel impossible.

    5. Create Visuals and Infographics Easily

    Some assignments require visuals, such as charts, diagrams, or illustrations. Gemini’s image upload and creation features enable you to turn data into visual content instantly. From biology diagrams to presentation slides, you can generate images that make your work more engaging and easier to understand. Gemini handles the heavy lifting, making your assignments look polished and professional.

    6. Build a Digital CV While You Study

    Uni isn’t just about studying for exams; you also need to prepare for the future. Gemini can help you document achievements, projects, and skills, creating a ready-to-go digital CV. From summarising internships to highlighting extracurricular work, you can showcase your academic and professional growth while still in school. By building this portfolio early, you’re setting yourself up to stand out in internships, applications, and future job opportunities.

    7. Store and Organise Study Materials With 2TB Storage

    Nothing is worse than losing essential files the night before an assignment is due. With 2TB of storage, Gemini Pro serves as your digital filing cabinet, storing all your lecture notes, PDFs, presentations, and research in one secure location. Organisation matters as much as studying, and Gemini ensures everything is easy to access, search, and manage, saving you from the panic of lost work and last-minute scrambling.

    8. Learn on the Go With Audio Overviews

    For students who are always on the move, Gemini’s Audio Overviews enable you to convert notes and research into audio clips. You can listen while commuting, exercising, or even waiting for class to start. This is perfect for revision on the go, helping you internalise concepts without being tied to your laptop. Audio summaries turn downtime into productive study time, making learning flexible and stress-free.

    9. Leverage Multiple AI Models for Different Tasks

    Gemini Pro isn’t just one tool — it’s a suite of specialised AI models. You get access to Gemini 2.5 Pro for powerful summarisation and drafting, Nano Banana for next-level image generation, and Veo3 for high-quality video creation. Depending on your task: research, drafting, or creating presentations, Gemini provides specialised assistance, making complex projects feel manageable. You get AI support tailored to the type of work you’re doing, boosting both efficiency and output quality.

    10. Upgrade Your Study Game Before the Deadline

    Finally, the most important tip: act now. The free 12-month Google Gemini Pro offer for Nigerian students ends December 9, 2025. 

    To access it, you’ll need to verify your student status using your valid student ID card. Once that’s done, you’re in.

    By claiming it, you’re giving yourself a year-long advantage: unlimited AI chats, image uploads, quiz generation, 2TB storage, and advanced models that help you study smarter, innovate faster, and excel academically. Gemini isn’t just an AI tool — it’s a study partner and skill builder in one, preparing you for university success and the professional world beyond.

    Claim your offer here: Gemini.google/students.


    Read Next: 6 Online Platforms That Pay Nigerians to Train AI


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  • Scaling a business in Africa requires a strategic approach, precise timing, and a deep understanding of both the target market and the product. Onyedikachim Nwankwo, who spent five years leading product marketing at Flutterwave before heading marketing at Transactworld Digital Services, knows what it takes to turn ambition into scale.

    Bili Sule, who led growth marketing at Jumia during its hyper-growth years, briefly served as Chief Growth Officer at Moniepoint, and now runs the growth agency alGROWithm, bringing the frameworks and insights that separate scalable businesses from those that plateau.

    Together, they reveal the strategies, structures, and decisions that actually drive growth in Africa’s startup ecosystem.

    Why Products Fail Before Launch

    For context, a Unicorn is a startup valued at more than $1 billion, and both experts, Onyedikachim at Flutterwave and Bili at Moniepoint, have contributed to growing companies that have achieved this level of success. 

    In the high-octane world of African business, a dangerous fallacy persists: the idea that marketing begins only after the product is built. According to Onyedikachim, this “build first, sell later” mentality is the primary reason promising startups stumble out of the gate.

    “I quickly learned that if you want success, you have to connect product and marketing from day one,” Onyedikachim says. “You can’t build A and sell B. That is the disconnect that many businesses fall into. Most companies finish a product, then call the market and say, ‘Buy this.’ It doesn’t work that way. You have to build growth into the product itself — every feature, every experience, engineered to sell.”

    For Onyedikachim, marketing is an investigative tool used to analyse the market gap before a product exists. This synergy enables subtle brand alignments to be integrated into the product’s DNA. He cites the example of a luxury brand ensuring its ethos, like Mercedes’ “The Best or Nothing,” appears in physical details like headlamps, or a playful brand designing receipts that mirror their social media voice.

    Bili reinforces this, referencing the “50/50 rule” from the book Traction. Startups often overemphasise engineering and underemphasise market viability.

    “Founders focus 100% of their effort just trying to build the product,” Bili notes. “What invariably happens is that the product is not fit for the market. They then put the onus on the growth person to sell this product when the foundations are already bad. If the foundation of a building is rocky, there’s no amount of fancy technology that can build that house.”

    Understanding the African Consumer

    Both experts argue that African founders frequently rely on inflated Total Addressable Market (TAM) numbers, often citing Nigeria’s 200 million population, without understanding the nuances of purchasing power and cultural behaviour.

    Onyedikachim uses a vivid analogy to dismantle this thinking: “If you wanted to sell caviar in Nigeria and you put up a list of all the rich people, you can’t stop there. Because the rich trader in Idumota is still not going to eat caviar even if he can afford it. He still wants to eat his regular fufu and soup. That’s what he has eaten for 15 years.”

    To truly scale, founders must stop trying to fit customers into a pre-conceived “product box” and instead obsess over the customer’s actual needs in their daily life. Bili advocates for an “Audience Definition Framework” that goes beyond demographics. She pushes founders to visualise a day in the life of their user, from the moment they wake up to their interactions with their gateman or the petrol station attendant. 

    “Stop assuming that you know your customer,” Bili warns. “A lot of times, I see founders trying to fit customers into the product that they’ve created rather than trying to understand the customer and create a product for them.”

    The Western Playbook vs African Reality

    A recurring theme in the growth of Nigeria’s unicorns, like Moniepoint and OPay, is the rejection of purely Western, digital-first distribution models. In the West, online ads and digital funnels might suffice. In Africa, scale is physical.

    “One of the biggest misconceptions I see on the continent is that people think they can sit in an office, run ads, and achieve significant scale,” says Bili. “If you look at the businesses that have become unicorns, you will see that most of them have a significant aspect of the business that is interfacing offline with people.”

    Onyedikachim agrees, emphasising that trust in the Nigerian market is visual and tangible. He points to the dominance of agency banking colours: Moniepoint’s blue and OPay’s green, as distinct brand markers that signal reliability to the mass market.

    Key strategies for African distribution include:

    • Offline Touchpoints: Leveraging physical items to build trust. Onyedikachim points to Transactworld’s “payment aprons”—washable aprons printed with QR codes that let merchants accept hands-free payments in busy markets. It’s a simple, tangible tool that makes digital payments visible and trustworthy. Moniepoint’s POS rollout follows the same principle: providing users with a physical touchpoint turns abstract technology into something people can rely on.

    • Low-Tech Accessibility: Rejecting the assumption that every user has a smartphone with data. Bili criticises AgriTech startups building high-bandwidth apps for rural farmers who often don’t need, or even have, smartphones. For many, simple USSD solutions work just as well, proving that growth starts with meeting users where they actually are.

    • Strategic Partnerships: Utilising existing offline networks rather than trying to build purely digital communities from scratch.

    Growth Engineering: The Science Behind the Scale

    Once a product has traction, how do you systemise growth? It is not, as Onyedikachim clarifies, simply about “changing keywords on Google Ads every two weeks.”

    Sule challenges the notion that growth is a siloed marketing function, instead introducing the concept of “Growth Engineering”, a diagnostic approach that treats the business as a machine with three pillars: Marketing, Product, and Operations. For Bili, effective scaling is the result of deep integration across every facet of the business. “Growth has to be engineered across the value chain,” she asserts.

    Her agency, alGROWithm, utilises Growth Models to run simulations before spending capital.

    “We look at numbers and start running simulations,” Bili explains. “Okay, if we’re able to increase awareness, what is the impact on your growth goal? We map out the entire funnel, pinpointing the friction points and the highest-leverage opportunities. That way, we can identify where in the value chain is the most efficient place to unlock growth.”

    The Growth Process Loop:

    1. Analysis: Deep dive into customer behaviour and value chain pillars.
    2. Hypothesis: An informed guess on what will move the needle.
    3. Experimentation: Iterative testing. Here, Bili notes: “Once an experiment fails, that’s great. It’s a good way to know what is not working.”
    4. Systemisation: Once a tactic works, build the infrastructure (server capacity, customer support) to handle the volume.

    The Trap of Scaling: When Innovation Dies

    There is a distinct difference between growing and scaling, and  Onyedikachim believes the transition between the two is where many companies lose their soul.

    Growth is the grind: writing weekly newsletters, engaging with early users, and building a community. Scaling is when the numbers explode, the press announcements drop, and suddenly, the whole system shifts.

    “When it comes to scaling, you don’t always know what it is that is blowing you up anymore,”  Onyedikachim says “A simple raise announcement is enough to spike your user signups. But then it brings fresh problems. People create accounts they don’t plan to use, and you struggle to keep your messaging consistent across both product and communications as activities increase.”

    This operational drag creates a new crisis. As the pressure to report “big numbers” mounts, the creative, community-led strategies that built the company are often swapped for mechanical, “tried and tested” methods. The result: a company that looks impressive on a pitch deck but feels hollow to its core user base. 

    The dangers of the scaling phase include:

    • The Loss of Community: As numbers become the only metric that matters, the “crazy spark” and personal touch that attracted early adopters often fade.

    • Bureaucracy vs. Speed: New layers of management and professionals who understand theory but lack practical knowledge of the startup’s history can stifle innovation.

    • Vanity Metrics: The pressure to show big numbers can lead to acquiring non-paying users, creating a customer base that looks good on paper but generates no revenue.

    The Path Forward: Focus and The North Star

    For founders navigating the current investment dry spell, the advice from both experts is unified: focus on the core mission and ignore the noise.

    Onyedikachim advises against the temptation to dilute the product offering in search of quick cash. “Don’t say you want to improve education, and tomorrow your app has started selling airtime and data,” he says. “You are going to have to invent something new to say to your audience, which means you are losing them.”

    Instead, startups should “do more of what got them there.” If a developer community drove early growth, double down on that rather than pivoting to generic PR.

    For Bili, the future of African growth lies in intellectual honesty. Founders must stop catering to Western investor biases and build for the reality on the ground, whether that means USSD solutions for feature phones or agent networks for cash-heavy economies.

    “If you really want to leverage the population size,” Bili concludes, “we need to be able to get these solutions to the grassroots.”


    Read Next: How I Made ₦586 Million From Selling Clothes in 2024


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  • Every year, tens of thousands of young Nigerians move to the UK in search of a better life. Edidiong* (25) came for a master’s degree after his family scraped together every naira they could find. A year after graduation, he’s still hustling for a job that will sponsor his work Visa. The pressure is real, and failure could mean losing everything.

    As told to Aisha Bello

    I arrived in the UK in August 2023 with a suitcase full of big dreams and a heart full of hope. I was ready to take on the world, or at least, that was the plan. 

    My family and our extended network back home had scraped together every naira they could spare to send me here for a master’s degree in International Business Management and Entrepreneurship. Everyone believed in me and expected me to succeed. I believed it, too.

    My first year in the new country passed in a blur of routine and cautious optimism. I worked as a healthcare support worker, assisting patients with their social and physical needs and providing hands-on support in hospitals and clinics. It paid roughly £700 a week, enough to cover rent, bills, groceries, and a small amount of pocket money. 

    I was surviving and also learning the rhythms of the UK: how to get around, how to live, and how to stretch every pound, while quietly imagining the future I hoped to build.

    By September 2024, I had finished my master’s. With my degree in hand, I applied for the graduate visa, which would give me two years to work without restriction. It cost around £3,000 — money I had painstakingly saved over the year. I remember the day the confirmation came through. I felt a small tinge of hope. Finally, I thought, a bridge to the life I had been chasing.

    Then the job hunt began.

    I thought naively that an MSc would swing open doors on its own.  A polished CV and a degree would carry the weight of my ambition. I pictured employers lining up, eager to hire me. 

    I was wrong.

    The reality hit harder than I expected. To remain legally in the UK after my visa expired, I needed to find a job that would sponsor a Skilled Worker visa, which felt impossible.

    I sent my CV everywhere: Indeed, LinkedIn, and company websites. I applied to any role that seemed doable, including customer service, marketing, sales, business operations, and retail. I prepared four different CVs, each tailored to a different type of role. 

    By the time I stopped counting, I had sent out almost a thousand applications, each one carrying the hope that this time, something would finally stick. Responses were so rare,  reminding me how distant I was from finding a job.


    Related: I Quit My Job a Year Ago. 500 Applications Later, I’m Still Jobless


    And the few that did respond evaporated when they learned I needed sponsorship. Suddenly, I wasn’t a promising candidate. 

    I could sense the unspoken calculations in their heads: the cost, the paperwork, the uncertainty. I couldn’t blame them. I wasn’t a prodigy. I didn’t have years of experience back home; just a couple of internships, and a freshly minted master’s degree, and apparently, that wasn’t enough.

    I hadn’t considered this before moving. I hadn’t thought about sponsorship costs, the competitive job market, or my lack of UK experience. International students face a brutal landscape. Millions of graduates from different racial backgrounds compete for every available position, so a master’s degree, along with a few internship experiences, barely counts. 

    Over a year has passed. Still nothing. I’ve had to double down on the healthcare job just to survive. It pays the bills, but it doesn’t pay off expectations, ambition, or the sense that I’ve truly “made it.”

    Every day, the calendar mocks me. Another year. Another 365 days of existing, surviving but not thriving. The pressure from home hangs over me heavily. They must think I’m doing better. I should be. I should have a proper 9-to-5 job, a clear trajectory, and a semblance of security. Instead, I’m navigating a rollercoaster of hope and rejection. 

    I’m at a crossroads. My graduate visa gives me another year. The pressure is crushing. I’ve started to consider every possible way to stay in the UK, even options I never imagined before. 

    Could I arrange a marriage to secure residency? Could I study the immigration laws closely enough to find a loophole? Could I somehow fund another degree, perhaps even a tuition-free PhD in another European country, to buy more time?

    The truth is, I have no desire to start from zero again in another country. I’ve poured too much time, energy, hope, and money into grounding my feet in the UK. 

    Frustration, worry, and anger have become my daily companions. Every rejection, every cold automated “We regret to inform you” email chips away at my soul. Each morning, anxiety gnaws in my stomach as I question my choices, my abilities, and whether any of this was worth it.

    Hindsight is ruthless. At night, I lie awake, running scenarios over in my head. Perhaps I should have gained more experience in Nigeria, networked harder while studying, or chosen a master’s degree that offered a clearer path to employment.

    I’ve learned a hard truth: as an international student, you start at a disadvantage. The visa clock ticks relentlessly. Every day without a proper job edges me closer to a deadline I cannot ignore. I have to face it: If sponsorship doesn’t work, what do I do?

    So here I am, working my healthcare job, and sending out yet another hundred CVs, caught between desperation and determination. I don’t know what the future holds. However, I do know this: I refuse to give up, and I refuse to return home to Nigeria as someone who failed.


    Read Next: “It’s Exhausting But It Pays the Bills” — 4 Nigerians on Working UK Care and Support Jobs


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  • When most people think of Nigerian creators, they imagine glossy brand deals, viral TikToks, and that one influencer whose only job seems to be posting selfies and unboxing products. In reality, that’s only a fraction of the hustle. The truth is, creators in Nigeria are pulling in money in ways most of us don’t notice, from clever side hustles to consistent, quiet efforts that never go viral.

    Here’s a breakdown of seven ways creators actually make money that nobody talks about, and why it’s changing the way Nigerians think about the creator economy.

    1. Micro-Deals With Small Businesses

    You don’t have to be a 100k follower influencer to get paid. Small businesses in Nigeria, ranging from fashion vendors and thrift stores to skincare brands and local cafés, frequently hire creators to shoot content, tag their pages, or promote their products. The cash isn’t always big, sometimes just a few thousand naira per post, but it’s consistent and real.

    For many creators, these micro-deals are the bread and butter of their online hustle. They show that influence doesn’t have to be viral to be valuable. A creator who posts consistently for small businesses can earn more than one who waits for a single “big break” that might never come.

    2. Community-Based Influence

    Nigerians love to share what works. Creators know this, and they’ve turned community influence into income. Whether it’s a WhatsApp group, a Telegram channel, or even their Instagram DMs, creators are quietly helping brands and apps gain traction by:

    • Recommending services to friends and family
    • Sharing vendor links with their networks
    • Answering questions or giving tips that drive people to try products

    This influence isn’t flashy, but it’s powerful. Brands notice when a creator’s community consistently acts on their advice, and sometimes they pay for it. It’s like being a digital ambassador without the title.

    3. Getting Paid From Engagement Numbers

    You’ve probably seen creators obsessing over likes, comments, and shares. That’s not vanity — it’s business. Even if a creator’s posts aren’t viral, brands and agencies track engagement metrics like:

    • 1,000 consistent views
    • 100 authentic comments
    • 200 meaningful likes

    …and pay creators accordingly. It’s why those seemingly random posts you scroll past are actually small income generators. Every swipe, every share, every comment can indirectly translate into revenue.

    4. User-Generated Content (UGC) Freelancing

    Some creators earn more by creating content for other people than for their own pages. Local brands, startups, and online businesses hire creators to produce content for social media campaigns. It could be a 30-second TikTok, an Instagram reel, or even a static post.

    What’s great about this hustle is that it rewards skill and consistency over follower count. A creator doesn’t need 50k followers — they need creativity, quality production, and reliability. And that’s often more lucrative in the long run than chasing virality.

    5. Teaching What They Know

    If you’ve ever taken an online workshop, bought an e-book, or attended a class on social media growth or video editing, chances are you’ve supported a Nigerian creator without realising it. Many creators monetise their expertise by:

    • Hosting paid workshops or online classes
    • Selling e-books on how to grow Instagram or TikTok
    • Offering one-on-one coaching for small creators

    It’s not just about showing your face online; it’s about showing your knowledge. For creators, teaching others is an additional income stream that can complement their content creation.

    6. Affiliate Links, Discount Codes, and Referral Commissions

    Here’s one you’ve seen, even if you didn’t realise it: affiliate marketing. Many Nigerian creators quietly earn money through:

    • Referral links for apps or services
    • Discount codes for products
    • Commission for signups, they drive

    It’s low-key, but effective. Every time someone clicks a link, downloads an app, or signs up for a service because of that creator, it can translate into cash. And the more consistently they do it, the more predictable their income becomes.

    This is also where the first structural idea of creator earning starts to emerge — people are being rewarded for actual effort and measurable outcomes, not just clout.

    7. The New Wave: Earn-As-You-Create Systems

    Finally, a wave of new earning opportunities is changing the game. Some platforms are now rewarding creators for the things they already do every day:

    • Posting content and getting views
    • Engaging with followers and generating comments, shares, and saves
    • Driving new signups or referrals
    • Building community and consistency online

    These systems work because they recognise what creators already contribute: influence, effort, and time, and attach real value to it. It’s subtle but powerful: creators are no longer waiting for a brand deal or a viral moment to see money. Instead, their everyday work is rewarded in a structured, trackable way.

    And while this trend is still relatively new, it’s growing quickly, offering an additional revenue stream that doesn’t depend on being “famous” overnight. For creators ready to play the long game, it’s a game-changer.

    Turn Your Influence Into Income (Literally)

    Here’s the part nobody tells creators: the same influence you use to put your audience onto new brands, apps, events, or tools? You can actually monetise that directly, not through ads or views, but through real community action. That’s the whole idea behind the AltFellowship.

    The AltFellowship is a community ambassador programme that gives influential people — including creators, digital storytellers, youth leaders, market trendsetters, and anyone with a loyal audience — a chance to earn from the trust they’ve already built. You become a go-to guide for people who want simple, accessible banking, and you get rewarded every time someone in your community takes action because of you.

    And the best part? The earning structure is designed exactly the way creators like to work: flexible, performance-driven, and uncapped.

    Here’s how the point system works

    • Earn points for real actions: opening accounts, hosting or joining community activations, or referring your audience (or other creators) to join the fellowship.
    • Points = Cash:
      • 10 points for every account you open (₦500)
      • 300 points for 30 accounts (₦15,000)
      • 500 points for 50 accounts (₦25,000)
      • And extra points when you refer new AltFellows who become active.
    • No earning limits: If your community responds well to you, you can scale your income as high as your influence goes.
    • Level up to Super AltFellow: Refer 10 active AltFellows and unlock monthly stipends, a branded kit, official leadership status, and even a free Wakeel POS device for offline communities.
    • Your community wins too: They get easy access to digital banking, support, and someone they already trust guiding them through it.

    It’s creator monetisation, but with guaranteed payouts, no algorithms, and impact you can see. If your voice moves people, this is one of the easiest ways to make it pay.

    Learn more about the AltFellowship rewards and how to join here.


    Read Next: 5 Secret Items on Every Nigerian Creator’s Starter Pack


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  • Extra income used to mean late nights or weekends working a second job. Now, with tools like ChatGPT, earning income can be surprisingly beginner-friendly. 

    Since its launch in 2022, ChatGPT has assisted millions with various tasks. But some people are taking it a step further: turning AI into a real money-making machine.

    If you’re looking for ways to make extra cash without overloading your schedule, there are simple, creative ways to start earning today. Here are 15 options to explore: 

    1. Tutoring

    If you’ve mastered a subject: Math, English, Sciences or Arts, tutoring can be a solid way to make extra cash. Tutors usually set their own rates, depending on experience and subject.

    ChatGPT can help you create practice questions, quizzes, and study guides tailored to a student’s grade level. However, you need to remember to double-check everything — AI often generates incorrect information. 

    2. Virtual Assistance

    Virtual assistants help busy people, freelancers, and small business owners stay on top of their work. You can manage emails, calendars, social media, or customer messages, and ChatGPT makes this much easier by drafting emails, writing captions, or even suggesting schedules. 

    It’s a flexible role that can be performed remotely, and the rate can vary between ₦125,000 and ₦300,000 per month, depending on the client. The AI support enables you to offer more services without requiring any specialised technical skills.

    3. Landing Page & Sales Copy Creation

    Small businesses and entrepreneurs need compelling landing pages that convert. ChatGPT can help you write headlines, product benefits, call-to-action messages, and overall page copy tailored to the brand’s voice. You don’t need a marketing degree; you just need to understand your audience and the problem your product solves. Landing page copywriting is a high-value service: one page can earn $100–$ 500 or more on freelance platforms, making it a lucrative side hustle.

    4. Language & Translation Services

    If you’re multilingual, ChatGPT can speed up translation tasks. It can produce a first-pass translation, and you refine it to make sure the wording, tone, and meaning are accurate. Your fluency is still key. ChatGPT isn’t perfect, but it can save a significant amount of time when combined with your knowledge.

    5. Travel Planning

    Love planning trips? As a travel agent, you can help people design itineraries, find deals, and create travel guides. ChatGPT can assist by suggesting destinations, day-by-day plans, packing lists, and even personalised travel tips. Travel agents earn commissions or service fees, and side hustlers can make hundreds of thousands per month, depending on how much time they put in.

    6. Resume & Cover Letter Writing

    Job seekers are willing to invest in resumes and cover letters to make a strong impression. ChatGPT can analyse job descriptions, highlight skills, and draft polished documents that catch the eye of recruiters or applicant tracking systems. You can offer these services efficiently, but make sure your personal touch shows — fully AI-written resumes may feel generic and not provide clients with the edge they need.

    7. Editing & Proofreading Services

    Writers, bloggers, and businesses need clean, clear, and professional text. ChatGPT can help you catch grammatical errors, tighten sentence flow, and suggest more effective word choices. 

    You can even offer different levels of editing, including light proofreading, style enhancement, or a complete content overhaul. By combining AI with your attention to detail, you can scale faster and deliver higher-quality work in less time. 

    8. Social Media Management

    Businesses and professionals need engaging social media, and that’s where you come in. ChatGPT can help you generate post ideas, write captions, find hashtags, and even organise a content calendar. This means you can manage multiple accounts efficiently and help brands grow without endlessly staring at a screen.

    9. Video & Podcast Scriptwriting

    Content creators and brands need scripts for YouTube videos, TikToks, or podcasts. ChatGPT can generate engaging outlines, dialogue, and talking points based on your topic, audience, and preferred style. You provide the finishing touch: adding humour, examples, or personality to make it authentic. Scriptwriting can be billed per script or per episode, ranging from $30 to $200 per project, depending on your experience, client, and the complexity of the script.

    10. Product Description Writing for E-Commerce

    E-commerce sellers consistently require compelling product descriptions to convert browsers into buyers. ChatGPT can draft catchy titles, bullet points, and persuasive descriptions for a wide range of products, from fashion items to gadgets. Your role is to tweak for accuracy, tone, and brand voice. Sellers pay well for high-quality content because good descriptions have a direct impact on sales.


    Related: 5 Nigerians Break Down the Side Hustles That Pay More Than Their Salaries


    11. Digital Products

    Selling digital products is a low-effort, high-reward way to earn money. ChatGPT can help you create printables, such as planners, guides, budget trackers, or worksheets. You can sell these on platforms like Etsy, Paystack Storefront or Flutterwave store, reach buyers instantly, and make a steady side income without managing physical stock or complicated design software.

    12. Online Courses & Workshops

    Turn your knowledge into a course. ChatGPT can help you draft lesson plans, educational content, and workbooks. You can sell these on platforms like Selar, Mainstack or Gumroad. 

    Set your prices, offer bundles, or even subscription plans. The platform handles payments and delivery, so your primary focus is on teaching and letting AI handle the heavy lifting.

    13. YouTube Channel

    Starting a YouTube channel is a fun and profitable side hustle. ChatGPT can help brainstorm video ideas, create compelling titles, and even draft descriptions that attract viewers. To start earning, you’ll need 1,000 subscribers and 4,000 hours of watch time (or 10 million Shorts views). Once you meet the requirements, you can monetise with ads, memberships, and more.

    14. Personalised Meal Plans & Nutrition Guides

    If you have a background or interest in nutrition, fitness, or healthy eating, you can use ChatGPT to generate tailored meal plans for clients. Simply input your dietary preferences, restrictions, and goals, and ChatGPT will create weekly meal guides and shopping lists. You provide the personal touch, checking for health accuracy, making substitutions, and adding tips. This can be monetised per plan or via monthly subscriptions for recurring income.

    15. Research & Report Assistance for Entrepreneurs and Graduate Students

    Struggling to dig through mountains of information for a project, thesis, or business idea? ChatGPT can save hours of research by summarising articles, comparing data points, and generating structured reports. Entrepreneurs can quickly understand market trends or competitors, while students can get an organised starting point for essays or dissertations. The key is always to fact-check — ChatGPT is fast, but it can get details wrong. Charge per report, per hour, or per project, depending on complexity. 

    Tips for Maximising Efficiency and Earnings With ChatGPT

    ChatGPT can save hours, but the key is knowing how to use it effectively.

    1. Batch similar tasks together, such as generating multiple product descriptions or video scripts simultaneously. 
    2. Use detailed prompts to get more accurate and creative results. Don’t just settle for the first output; refine, tweak, and personalise it.
    3. Repurpose content whenever possible: a blog post can be transformed into a newsletter, a social media thread, or even a video script. 
    4. The faster you work, the more clients or projects you can take on, which directly means more money. Efficiency isn’t just about speed; it’s about turning ChatGPT into a high-earning sidekick.

    Ethics, Safety, and Legal Things to Keep in Mind

    AI is powerful, but it comes with responsibility. Always fact-check information before delivering it to clients or publishing it. Avoid presenting fully AI-generated content as your own without adding value, as you may encounter copyright or plagiarism issues.

    If you’re dealing with sensitive data: client info, student work, or personal health details — handle it carefully. Transparency is key: let clients know how you’re using AI to assist your work. Doing so builds trust and protects both you and your side hustle from legal or ethical complications.

    Tools & Apps That Make ChatGPT Money-Making Easier

    You don’t need coding skills to automate and scale your ChatGPT side hustles. No-code tools can make a huge difference:

    • Zapier / Make (Integromat): Automate workflows like sending AI-generated content to Google Docs, emails, or social media.
    • Canva: Turn ChatGPT-written copy into visual content for social media or digital products.
    • Notion / Trello: Organise content calendars, client tasks, and ideas efficiently.
    • Buffer / Hootsuite: Schedule AI-generated social posts across multiple platforms.

    Combine ChatGPT with these tools, and you can handle more clients, deliver faster, and earn more without burning out.

    Common Mistakes People Make When Using ChatGPT for Money

    Even the best AI is useless if used incorrectly. Common pitfalls include:

    • Relying 100% on AI: You still need a human touch, especially for proofreading, creativity, and client-specific customisation.
    • Poor prompt crafting: Vague prompts = vague results. Be specific about tone, style, and format.
    • Ignoring copyright and plagiarism rules: Using AI-generated content without adding your own input can be a risky practice.
    • Overpromising: Don’t guarantee results you can’t control, like viral social posts or guaranteed sales.
    • Skipping fact-checking: ChatGPT can hallucinate; double-check numbers, dates, and information before delivering.

    Avoid these mistakes, and your side hustle will run more smoothly, efficiently, and profitably.

    The Bottom Line

    ChatGPT is a tool that can help you make money, even if you’re not tech-savvy. 

    The trick is to combine human creativity, ethical practices, and smart workflows. Start small, refine your process, and scale gradually. With a bit of planning and a lot of curiosity, ChatGPT can transform a simple side hustle into a reliable revenue stream or even a full-time opportunity.


    Read Next: 6 Online Platforms That Pay Nigerians to Train AI


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  • 2025 was a year of bold moves and smart money decisions for some young Nigerians. They took calculated risks that paid off in ways that could change their financial futures. 

    From crypto trades that multiplied in days, stocks that quietly doubled over months, to property investments that promise multimillion-naira returns, these four Nigerians show there’s no single path to investing.

    “I turned $1,200 into almost $10,000 by taking profits early from a crypto trade” — Korede, 25

    I’m a full-time crypto trader, so I’ve spent a significant part of my year rotating money into different coins, taking profits when possible, and protecting my capital when the market turns.  When I talk about my smartest investment of 2025, one trade stands out.

    On September 17, a relatively unknown token called “A S T E R” began gaining attention after CZ, the co-founder of Binance and one of the most influential voices in the crypto industry, mentioned it on Twitter. His endorsements tend to move markets, so I took it seriously.

    I caught the token early, at around $0.17 per unit, and allocated about 10% of my portfolio — roughly $1200 —  to it. At the time, it didn’t feel like a big, calculated bet. I was just trading how I typically do: get in early, monitor sentiment, and react fast.

    But it became my most profitable trade of the year.

    My trading income fluctuates between ₦700k and ₦1m monthly, sometimes more when the market is bullish. Still, nothing this year matched what that token “A S T E R” did. Once it started pumping, I sold in stages. Any time I saw a 200–300% pump, I took partial profits and left the rest to compound. 

    By the time I exited fully after 48 hours, selling portions at $0.40 and eventually the rest at around $0.80, my $1,200 had grown to almost $10,000 — an 8x return.

    The token eventually crossed a 10x surge, but I had already taken all my profits. I needed the win more than I needed the perfect top, so I wasn’t going to be greedy. The combination of discipline and the luck of catching the token early made it my smartest investment of 2025.


    Related: These 10 Nigerian Stocks Quietly Turned Investors Into Millionaires in Just 6 Months


    “I don’t chase quick riches; I show up, invest, and compound over time” — Emmanuel, 25

    I work in media and earn between ₦200k and ₦500k a month. My financial priority this year has been simple: to build a long-term buffer and grow my wealth. Investing is the tool that helps me do that, so it’s central to everything I do.

    Stocks are my smartest investments in 2025. I bought into Coreweave, an AI startup, which nearly doubled in value. But if I  look at all my holdings, Viasat has been my biggest winner since I started investing last year, up more than 300%. I saw a recommendation from an analyst, did some digging, and noticed strong prospects, especially its contracts with the US government. When a congressperson disclosed a purchase earlier this year, I doubled down.

    I don’t invest to become wealthy overnight — so the power of investing shows over the long term. My strategy is simple: diversify, be consistent, and balance risk. Stocks are my higher-risk plays, while fixed deposits, Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), mutual funds, Treasury bills (T-bills), and equity funds provide steady foundations. This balance lets me take bigger bets on opportunities like Coreweave without jeopardising my base.

    I invest a set portion of my income each month, currently a little over ₦30,000, and let my income growth determine the increases. Even if I earn more than usual in a month, I stick to the plan. This year, I’ve invested approximately $80 in US stocks using wealth-tech apps like Bamboo to buy fractional shares. That means I don’t need to pay the full share price. I can invest as little as $2, with roughly $1 going to fees. My $80 has already returned $115, and combined with other alternative assets, my portfolio has surpassed $300, including returns. 

    It’s proof that small, consistent steps build financial discipline over time, and those habits compound far more than any single “big win.”

    For example, Coreweave nearly doubled this year. I bought it at $5 per fraction, and it’s now worth $8.77 per fraction. Viasat remains my most profitable overall investment: I bought it at $3.71, and it’s now worth $15.37. Across all my assets, I’ve more than doubled my capital, reinforcing the value of patience, consistency, and thinking long-term.

    Investing won’t make me rich instantly, but I know that by starting early, sticking to my plan, and combining it with other wealth-building moves like starting a business, owning equity, or supporting friends’ ventures, I’m setting myself up to win the long game.

    “Knowledge plus positioning equals opportunity. That’s my smartest investment this year,”  — Mariam, 22

    I’m a student working in Web3, with a primary focus on community, content, and ecosystem growth. My income sits between ₦200k– ₦500k, and at the start of 2025, my main goal was simple: to increase my income and build a proper financial cushion without spreading myself too thin.

    My smartest investment this year was putting both time and money into learning Web3 properly and getting in early on a few solid projects. At first, it wasn’t about the money at all; it was about understanding the space.

    Web3 rewards people who are early and consistent. I realised that knowledge plus positioning equals opportunity, so I treated learning, content creation, and early participation like an investment.

    I started small with beginner-friendly projects, dedicating a few hours a week to learning, creating content, and consistently showing up. The returns weren’t just financial; they came in the form of growth, connections, job opportunities, and project incentives.

    It’s my most brilliant move because it changed my earning power. It also taught me that at this stage of my life, the best investment isn’t always money; it’s skills, knowledge, and showing up early in the right spaces.

    “I bought land today for my future self. Patience now, multimillion returns later” — Shittu, 26

    I bought a plot of land in Ibadan this year for ₦3.5 million, and it’s probably my smartest long-term investment yet. I didn’t just stumble into it. I’d been saving for over three years, cutting back on unnecessary expenses, and being deliberate about setting aside money for something that would grow in value over time.

    It isn’t about instant gratification. Land is a patient investment. I know the ₦3.5 million I spent isn’t going anywhere tomorrow, and I’m okay with that. In ten years, that same piece of land could easily be worth five times what I paid, maybe more, and potentially pay me in multimillions. It’s the kind of asset that doesn’t just sit there; it appreciates, and it protects you against inflation in a way that a savings account can’t.

    The best part is that this was money I could afford to put away — money I know I could do without in my day-to-day life, which gave me the confidence to commit without stress. Every time I think about it, I view it as an investment in my future financial freedom. It’s about patience, strategy, and understanding that some of the smartest investments aren’t flashy or quick; they’re the ones that grow quietly, steadily, and reliably over time.


    Read Next: How I Built a £100K Stock Market Portfolio 2 Years After Moving to the UK


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