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From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World - Politics - Nairaland

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From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Great100000(op): 12:31am On Apr 06, 2025
Nigerians who moved abroad years ago are leading global industries, reshaping perceptions and showcasing the nation’s talent on the world stage.

Long before the current wave of Nigerian professionals fleeing the country – popularly known as japa, the Yoruba word for ‘escape’ – a generation of young citizens from the populous West African nation had already planted roots abroad.

Having left as teenagers, many of them have risen to prominence in finance, business and technology across the United States, the United Kingdom and beyond. These individuals have not only excelled in their fields but have also served as Nigeria’s ambassadors of talent and resilience on the global stage.

Some have risen to prominent positions in investment banking and asset management, helping bring more investment into Africa and showcasing the potential of the continent to global investors. A number of those who are entrepreneurs are reshaping industries with unique offerings that reflect their heritage and insights into both local and international markets.

Through their contributions in their adopted countries, they have reshaped perceptions about Nigeria as a nation rich in talent and promise. As they continue to break barriers and redefine industries globally, their stories reflect a rich narrative of excellence, resilience and the boundless possibilities that arise when talent meets opportunity.

Tope Awotona – founder and CEO of Calendly

Tope Awotona, who is based in Atlanta, Georgia in the US, was born in Nigeria’s commercial capital of Lagos 43 years ago. His family immigrated to the US in 1996 and he went on to study at the University of Georgia, earning a degree in management information systems in 2002.

His company Calendly, a scheduling and appointment platform that enables individuals, teams and organisations to automate meetings, has proven hugely successful with over 20 million users in 230 countries, according to its website.

Frustrated with the back-and-forth emails required to schedule meetings, he founded the company in 2013 after working as an enterprise software salesperson for various companies including IBM, Perceptive Software and EMC (now part of Dell).

Awotona, who had launched several startups that flopped, self-financed Calendly for eight years before taking on a $350m investment in 2021 that valued the firm at $3bn.

Today, Awotona is worth $1.4bn and Awotona is ranked the 2,324th-wealthiest man in the world, according to Forbes. He is the richest Nigerian immigrant and one of only two Black tech billionaires in the US.

Inspired by his parents, he supports aspiring entrepreneurs, particularly in Nigeria, and is passionate about diversity and inclusion in tech. He’s contributed to organisations like Black Girls Code and My Brother’s Keeper, aiming to nurture the next generation of innovators.

Tope Lawani – co-founder and managing partner at Helios Investment

Lawani, who grew up in Ibadan in the south-west of Nigeria, moved to the United States in the 1980s for his tertiary education. He started out at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1987 and earned a chemical engineering degree in 1991, followed by a law degree and an MBA from Harvard University in 1996.

He began his career as a mergers and acquisitions and corporate development analyst at the Walt Disney Company and later joined American private equity firm TPG Capital, where he had a lead role in the execution of several significant leveraged buyout and venture capital investments, including the acquisitions of Burger King Corp., Debenhams plc., J. Crew Group and Scottish & Newcastle Retail.

He founded Helios Investment Partners in 2004 with a fellow Nigerian, Babatunde Soyoye, to focus exclusively on private investment in Africa. The company, which prides itself as the largest Africa-focused private investment firm, has invested over $3bn in African businesses, with offices in London, Paris, Lagos and Nairobi, according to its website.

Helios has raised three private equity funds since its inception: $305m in 2006, $908m in 2010 and $1.1bn in 2014. In 2020, a transaction between Helios Holdings Limited and Fairfax Africa Holdings Corporation created the premier pan-Africa-focused alternative investment manager, Helios Fairfax Partners.

In 2024, the company was recognised for the fifth consecutive year as Africa firm of the year by Private Equity International. Lawani currently lives in the United Kingdom.

Chinedu Echeruo – founder of Beloved Ecosystem

US-based serial entrepreneur Echeruo, who grew up in the eastern part of Nigeria, grabbed the headlines in 2013 when Apple, the world’s biggest company, acquired his company HopStop.com for $1bn. The app, which he co-founded in 2005, helped millions of users navigate public transportation in many cities across the world.

He was 16 when his parents moved from Nigeria to New York City. He obtained a Bachelor of Science from Syracuse University and an MBA from Harvard Business School.

He started his career at JP Morgan Chase, where he was involved in various mergers and acquisitions, financing and private equity transactions. He later worked at hedge fund AM Investment Partners as an analyst.

Since he embarked on his entrepreneurial journey, Echeruo has established several companies, including Tripology.com, a lead-generation service for the travel industry which was acquired by Rand McNally in 2010, and Gigameet, a social networking platform focused on charity and entrepreneurship.

He is currently leading Beloved Ecosystem, founded in 2022, to build an ecosystem of startups worth $25bn in 10 years, starting with 10 AI-powered startups in Newark, New Jersey, and expanding to 50 startups across major Northeast cities and then nationwide.

The startup builder is described as a new approach to redesign economic opportunity in distressed HUBZones (Historically Underutilised Business Zones).

He is also the founder of Talented Youth Academy, an AI-powered apprenticeship platform for 16- to 24-year-olds in distressed HUBZone communities.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala – director-general of WTO

Okonjo-Iweala made history in 2021 when she emerged as the first woman and the first African to serve as director-general of the World Trade Organisation. The global finance expert and economist was appointed for a second four-year term last November, set to begin on 1 September 2025.

Born in Delta State, Nigeria, she travelled to the US in 1973 as a teenager to study economics at Harvard University and later went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for a Ph.D. in Regional Economics and Development.

She spent 25 years at the World Bank as a development economist, rising to managing director of operations. As managing director, she had oversight responsibility for the World Bank’s $81bn operational portfolio in Africa, South Asia, Europe and Central Asia, and spearheaded several initiatives to assist low-income countries during the 2008-2009 food crisis and later during the financial crisis, according to her biography.

She twice served as Nigeria’s finance minister (2003-2006 and 2011-2015) and briefly acted as foreign minister in 2006, the first woman to hold both positions. She steered her country through various reforms ranging from macroeconomic to trade, financial and real sector issues; she spearheaded negotiations with the Paris Club of Creditors that led to the wiping out of $30bn of Nigeria’s debt, including the outright cancellation of $18bn.

Adebayo Ogunlesi – founding partner, chairman and CEO of Global Infrastructure Partners

Ogunlesi, a US-based billionaire investor who hails from Ogun State, Nigeria, was in the news earlier this month when he joined the board of OpenAI, the ChatGPT developer and one of the world’s leading AI research labs.

In 1979, he left Nigeria for the United Kingdom to study at Oxford University, after which he went to the US to attend Harvard Law School and Harvard Business School.

Last year, he sold his New York-based private equity firm Global Infrastructure Partners (GIP), which he founded in 2006, to BlackRock for $12.5bn. Prior to the deal, GIP had more than $100bn in assets under management with interests in the energy, transport, digital infrastructure, and water and waste management sectors.

GIP recently led a consortium to acquire major port operations at both ends of the Panama Canal. The $23bn deal saw GIP and its partners secure a 90% stake in Panama Ports Company from Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison Holdings, giving them control of the Balboa and Cristóbal ports at the canal’s Pacific and Atlantic entrances.

Ogunlesi, who has been chairman and managing partner of GIP since its inception, was appointed last year as a senior managing director of BlackRock and a member of the firm’s global executive committee and its board of directors.

He is known as one of Wall Street’s most powerful dealmakers who has advised some of the world’s most influential companies including Goldman Sachs, where he previously acted as lead director. In March, he was appointed as lead independent director at Kosmos Energy Holdings.
Source: https://www.theafricareport.com/380525/from-lagos-to-wall-street-how-nigerian-talent-is-conquering-the-world/

Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Ofemannnu: 6:50am On Apr 06, 2025
Okonjo,Mrs Amina Muhammed deputy SG of UNO are not business or startup persons.They are not supposed to be there.
Echeruo has made a comeback.Kudos to him.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by helinues: 6:58am On Apr 06, 2025
Eko Ile ogbon

If you can make it in Lagos, you can make it anywhere..
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by ComradeKunle(m):
helinues:
Eko Ile ogbon

If you can make it in Lagos, you can make it anywhere..
Why don't you emulate them instead of wasting your life on nairaland?
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by SeeWahala: 7:05am On Apr 06, 2025
helinues:
Eko Ile ogbon

If you can make it in Lagos, you can make it anywhere..
Wow! Is your Lagos really that useless and anti-progressive for you to drop this type of statement? shocked
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by helinues: 7:16am On Apr 06, 2025
ComradeKunle:
Why don't you emulated them instead of wasting your life on nairaland?
Laaro Sunday

Easy oo
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Spinflow: 8:15am On Apr 06, 2025
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by jetwonder(m): 8:19am On Apr 06, 2025
grin grin grin
Great Nigerians!!!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by blamingthedevil: 8:21am On Apr 06, 2025
What about the top of them all

Amina Muhammed - Deputy Secretary General, United Nations
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Antichristian2: 8:21am On Apr 06, 2025
Contrary to some noisy people!

Nigeria to the world!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Holluwhakemmy(f): 8:22am On Apr 06, 2025
Lord Have Mercy on me too. I shall be great in Jesus mighty name.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by unity004(m): 8:23am On Apr 06, 2025
Give Nigerians a chance, greed will turn all of them to wolves of wall street
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by autoez: 8:26am On Apr 06, 2025
Nigeria will become a world power someday. Disunity, religious bigotry and politics of hate will keep dragging us back.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by gracefoundmme(m): 8:28am On Apr 06, 2025
There is just something about the USA, a country of possibilities for black folks
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by autoez: 8:29am On Apr 06, 2025
SeeWahala:
Wow! Is your Lagos really that useless and anti-progressive for you to drop this type of statement? shocked
After reading that beautiful article above, you had nothing positive to comment. The best you could do was respond negatively to helinues. What a shame.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by YemyTemmy: 8:33am On Apr 06, 2025
Where are the abokis?
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by ponlear(m): 8:39am On Apr 06, 2025
At some point they left Nigeria.
There’s a pattern… use whatever information you find valuable in this post
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Chimaokigwe: 8:45am On Apr 06, 2025
Spinflow:
Jaga jagaban remains the last president of the forest..
But your fathers living in trees and fighting over bananas said Jagaban would never be President.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Chimaokigwe: 8:46am On Apr 06, 2025
Those ones going to the UK are merely slaves of His Majesty.

Their parents served Eliza, they are serving Charlie. Their children will serve Willie.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Kirchoffs: 8:57am On Apr 06, 2025
YemyTemmy:
Where are the abokis?
with the cows
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Love800(m): 9:02am On Apr 06, 2025
No sense in this article!

These are guys are already well-to-do nigerians or families back then in their early days, then afterwards move to abroad!

I need a story of an hustler, who migrated to abroad and became a giant(very successful) with investments here and there!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by YemyTemmy: 9:03am On Apr 06, 2025
Kirchoffs:
with the cows
Hehehehehe.... Na dem still dey rule naija sha
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by SmartyPants(m): 9:06am On Apr 06, 2025
This list doesn't make sense. What is a technocrat like Ngozi Okonjo Iweala doing there. Instead add Wemimo Abbey who just became a billionaire at the age of 32!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Shikena(m): 9:08am On Apr 06, 2025
Where are our millionaires and billionaires in our beloved countries like China, Russia, and Iran?

God bless America! God bless Nigeria!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by SmartyPants(m): 9:09am On Apr 06, 2025
Love800:
No sense in this article!

These are guys are already well-to-do nigerians or families back then in their early days, then afterwards move to abroad!

I need a story of an hustler, who migrated to abroad and became a giant(very successful) with investments here and there!
Oh there is one you will love. Some call him Amoda Ogunlere, others call him Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Ppogbae: 9:09am On Apr 06, 2025
gracefoundmme:
There is just something about the USA, a country of possibilities for black folks
This. Despite all the racism in the media, it is the best country for Black folks in the world. Take a look at all of the Black Americans in media. Nigerians in Ivy Leagues. Black Latinos are tearing it up in the MLB and MLS. God I wish I got American papers cause Canada just sucks man! It is too cold here and there are barely any opportunities!
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by razzydoo(m): 9:09am On Apr 06, 2025
I find more inspiration with Dangote than all these people.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by motymop:
Only 5 people out of 200m

We celebrate mediocrity here in Nigeria
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by shegzhkn: 9:17am On Apr 06, 2025
Nope.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by Love800(m): 9:18am On Apr 06, 2025
Lol, guy abeg nor make me laugh this morning. See as i just dey laugh like hyena!

SmartyPants:
Oh there is one you will love. Some call him Amoda Ogunlere, others call him Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
Re: From Lagos To Wall Street: How Nigerian Talent Is Conquering The World by anonimi:
Great100000:
Source: https://www.theafricareport.com/380525/from-lagos-to-wall-street-how-nigerian-talent-is-conquering-the-world/
What is holding us up from conquering our own country and stop it from being the world capital for extreme poverty, out of school children, hunger, starvation and deprivation of basic common services and utilities?

anonimi:
David Hundeyin
May 4, 2022


I want to sell a script to a Hollywood studio. The story is about a guy who owns a farm that constantly runs at a loss but never quite shuts down.

The farm is massive and underutilised, and the protagonist has all the opportunities in the world to improve its output and get a bumper harvest.

He has access to credit, machinery, free irrigation and gifts from neighbouring farmers, but all he ever does with these things is drink and smoke them away while his family suffers.

Nigeria has refused to grow up and achieve something, but it somehow feels as if it is living vicariously through the achievements of its estranged children around the world

Apart from drinking, smoking and generally being utterly useless, his other pastime is to pump out children at an industrial rate. Needless to say, he takes no care of his children whatsoever, and many of them fail to survive childhood.

Those who do survive have to leave the farm and hire themselves out as hired labour to the neighbouring farmers, having picked up some survival skills from home.

With time, a number of them rise through the ranks and become senior managers, directors and even shareholders in these other farms while their father continues mismanaging his farm.

When good news about some of these successful children gets home, their father is filled with pride and joy, but when they end up on the wrong side of life, he acts as if he never knew them.

The successful ones make efforts to revamp their childhood home by sending back money and volunteering their skills and time, but all this guy ever wants to do is be a 62-year-old underachieving idiot carried through life by charity and luck.

Famzing” diaspora success is dishonest
I’m sure before the end of the second paragraph, you figured out whose story I was telling. The 62-year story of post-independence Nigeria — which the Hollywood studio would surely reject for being too sad with no redemption — is that of our fictional antihero.

Nigeria has refused to grow up and achieve something, but it somehow feels as if it is living vicariously through the achievements of its estranged children around the world.

Remember how everyone from corporate brands to Abike Dabiri made a big song and dance about supporting Anthony Joshua the “Nigerian,” whose only chance to become someone in life came when his parents emigrated from Nigeria?

Remember how things turned when he somehow lost against that chubby Mexican dude whose name I can’t remember? Remember when the Super Falcons won the female AFCON title and received a congratulatory tweet from the president, only for them to have to stage a protest before being paid their camp allowances?

That’s what we do in Nigeria. We try to live vicariously through the achievements of people who have achieved great things under their own steam, simply because said people happen to be called ‘Ifeoma,’ ‘Efe’ and ‘Ayotunde.’

Even when Nigeria had absolutely nothing to do with said success, or in fact happened in spite of Nigeria, as with Divine Oduduru, we bask in the reflected glory of their personal achievements.

Sometimes when those people wear a Nigerian flag or post something about Wizkid or Jollof Rice on Instagram, we go crazy with the Nigerian flag emojis because oh my god, they identify with us!

This is not about being a Killjoy
Somehow, the complete failure of Nigeria and our complicity in its failure is more bearable when we point at Nigerian immigrants doing great things in life and say “I knew Femi before he started calling himself Anthony.

His father and I were classmates in Aiyetoro.” It is unclear how exactly this helps our situation but hey, it’s also unclear how chugging the amount of alcohol we do helps either.

Escapism is a key part of our culture, and anyone who dissents must be a non-Jollof-eating, vegetarian heretic, and possibly also an atheist.

Now while all this is painfully cringey to my eyes, some will also point out that Nigeria is not the only country that has a weird obsession with its diaspora population.

Even ‘first-world’ countries like Ireland continue to have deep emotional and economic connections to their diaspora, and in any case Nigerians proudly supporting Anthony Joshua or the NBA’s Giannis Ante…African-sounding-name is basically harmless fun. They’re not hurting anyone. Why be such a killjoy, David?

The reason this matters can be found in a quote that has been dubiously attributed to Russian President Vladmir Putin, where he describes Africa as the place where its diaspora does not invest in, but returns to only to die and be buried with their ancestors.

While there is no concrete evidence that Mr. Putin ever actually made that comment, the truth in it is painfully poignant.

For diaspora success to be meaningful to Nigeria, it must correlate to on-ground results in Nigeria. The example of Somalia shows that having a well-educated, globally successful diaspora while being an absolute basket case are both possible at the same time.

I’d imagine we do not aspire to be Somalia.
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