DiscoverIrish Tech News Audio ArticlesA Tale of Two Cities: Reflections from Nigeria Fintech Week
A Tale of Two Cities: Reflections from Nigeria Fintech Week

A Tale of Two Cities: Reflections from Nigeria Fintech Week

Update: 2025-10-20
Share

Description

Nigeria, home to more than 234 million people, is a country with a pulse and Lagos beats with ambition, with sound, with traffic, with style. Last week, it was also the beating heart of African innovation as the Nigeria Fintech Week, Nigeria Blockchain & AI Summit and BlockFest took over the city.

Nigeria Fintech Week 2025

When the conference organizers invited MeWe to join the program, it wasn't just another speaking slot, it was a chance to meet the digital future face to face. MeWe, as a privacy-focused social network now serving over 20 million users across 200 countries, found itself in a fascinating conversation: one about digital sovereignty, trust, and how social platforms can serve humanity rather than harvest it. From every conversation, it was clear that Nigerians are gearing up to position themselves on the global stage. The conference speakers were more articulate and confident than vast swaths of technology leaders I had met at other conferences.

As Wole Soyinka, one of Nigeria's greatest novelists said, "The greatest threat to freedom is the absence of criticism." Reflecting on my time in Lagos means doing exactly that: engaging with the tension between so much promise and persistent challenges.

Lagos, City of Hope

If there's one word that defines Nigeria, it's hope. It was woven into every sentence, every handshake, every smile.

"I hope you enjoy your time in Lagos."

"I hope your session goes well."

"I hope to try your app."

"I hope to visit Ireland someday."

Hope is not casual here, it's cultural. It's like an act of resistance. Nigeria's population has nearly tripled since 1982, growing from 80 million to over 232 million in 2024, with 43% under the age of 15. It's a nation where the youth seems restless, connected, and ready to code its own future.

But the real story is about education or rather, access to it. The energy in Lagos is unmistakable, but energy without guidance is like a smartphone without signal. Every conversation I had, with students, founders, gamers, developers, circled back to one key issue and that is that education is the key to unlocking any potential in the region.

Education is what turns curiosity into code and enthusiasm into execution. And yet, too many brilliant minds are left to teach themselves in isolation without much clear guidance or resources. I shared a few AI courses with a young enthusiast who looked at me as if I'd handed him a passport. Why isn't this knowledge already flowing freely? What can be done to improve the transmission of existing educational resources to the region?

A Foreigner Among Futurists

Standing on that stage in Lagos, I'll admit that I stuck out like a sore thumb. The conference floor was an ocean of vibrant fabrics and confident expression, and there I was, the most underdressed person in every room. Nigerians dress to impress. They treat the very act of attending a conference as a time to shine, a performance even. Every color choice is a declaration of pride and presence.

At first, it was intimidating, feeling like an outsider. But it was also eye-opening. There's an authenticity to Lagos that makes you reconsider how you show up in the world. Here, identity isn't curated for social media, it's played out in daily, physical interactions.

That authenticity extends to the youngest attendees too. I met teenage gamers, coders, and even primary school students who showed up to collect their conference bracelet, curiosity in their eyes and eager to learn. One 12-year-old asked me how to build a blockchain-based game. The hunger for knowledge isn't performative. It's a survival instinct. These kids aren't waiting for permission to innovate. They just need someone to show them where the door is.

Building for Nigeria, Not Just in Nigeria

The most powerful message from Nigeria Fintech Week wasn't about blockchain, AI, or the next unicorn startup. It was this: solve Nigerian problems first.

Too many startups, not just in Africa, but everywhere, aim straigh...
Comments 
In Channel
loading
00:00
00:00
x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

A Tale of Two Cities: Reflections from Nigeria Fintech Week

A Tale of Two Cities: Reflections from Nigeria Fintech Week

Simon Cocking