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7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only - Career - Nairaland

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7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by SmartPolician(op): 12:00pm On Sep 25, 2025
Once seen as male-only territories, these careers are now being reshaped and getting dominated by Nigerian women.

Progress in education, changing hiring practices, and stronger role models have led many sectors to shift from a male-dominated culture to one with visible female leadership.

More women are now enrolling in professional training, reaching senior ranks, and starting businesses that reshape workplace expectations.

Factors such as mentorship, expanded scholarship programmes, flexible work arrangements, and deliberate promotion policies have helped women move into roles that were once closed to them.

The result is practical change in who leads teams, runs firms, and shapes policy across sectors.

Below are seven careers where Nigerian women have moved from the margins to the mainstream, and how that shift has occurred in practice.

1. Law and legal practice
Law used to feel like a male preserve in courtrooms and leadership roles, but women now occupy significant portions of chambers and senior counsel positions. Female lawyers lead litigation teams, run corporate departments, and accept judicial appointments more often than before.

However, a study by the International Bar Association in 2023, highlighted problematic gender disparities across the country’s senior legal roles. Greater access to legal education and mentorship programs, as well as firm policies that prioritise diversity, explains much of the change.

There is a 50:50 by 2030 project which hopes to have fully tackled gender disparity in law by the year 2023.

2. Medicine and pharmacy
Medicine and pharmacy were once top-heavy with men in specialist roles, but today many hospitals and clinics are staffed and led by women clinicians and pharmacists. Women run outpatient units, head clinical departments, and own private practices.

Increased female enrolment in medicine and other medical-related courses, along with better workplace support for maternity leave and shifts, made clinical careers more sustainable.

3. Accounting, audit, and finance

Professional accounting was historically male-dominated, especially at the senior partner level, but women now lead audit teams, finance functions, and run accounting firms.

Professional training scholarships, female networks, and targeted mentorship opened promotion pipelines. Women in finance also utilise certifications and continuous learning to advance into executive roles and board positions.

4. Banking operations and retail management
Banks once promoted men to branch and regional manager jobs; yet, today, many branches and corporate units are led by women who manage operations, credit, and customer portfolios.

Targeted leadership programmes, inclusive policies, and more precise parental leave terms helped women advance. Their visibility encourages more young women to aspire to executive positions.

5. Human resources, corporate communications, and people roles
These functions were once viewed as support areas with limited strategic influence. Yet, women in HR and communications now play a significant role in shaping hiring strategy, employer branding, and leadership development.

Their impact on talent pipelines, culture, and retention gives them clear leverage and pathways into chief of staff and director-level roles across sectors.

6. Academia, research and education leadership
Men in senior positions once long dominated academic faculties and research teams, but female professors, department heads, and research leads are now more common.

Women secure grants, lead labs, and set curriculum priorities, which changes who trains the next generation. Fellowship schemes and hiring reforms accelerated this progress.

7. Media content creation and creative leadership
Editorial boards, production studios, and agency leadership once skewed heavily male, but women now run newsrooms, produce hit shows, and lead creative agencies.

Female founders in digital media and production build monetisation strategies and scale teams. Mentoring circles and more affordable digital tools lowered barriers for women to create and lead in the media.
Source: https://www.pulse.ng/articles/lifestyle/careers-nigerian-women-dominate-formerly-male-only-2025092313585544803

Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by SmartPolician(op): 12:01pm On Sep 25, 2025
If women are running all these industries, wetin come remain for men again? grin The funny thing is that most ladies are hypergamous, meaning that single motherhood will take over our society in the coming years.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by franchasng: 12:16pm On Sep 25, 2025
True.

Add medicine, especially Optometrists and Ophthalmologists, it's now more of women cool
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by LordIsaac(m): 1:13pm On Sep 25, 2025
That will reduce the menace of dependency, erode societal inequality regarding gender, and perhaps, cause the emergence of true love (not one inspired by economics), in "romantic" relationships!

Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by ExudeLoveToAll: 1:55pm On Sep 25, 2025
LordIsaac:
That will reduce the menace of dependency, erode societal inequality regarding gender, and perhaps, cause the emergence of true love (not one inspired by economics), in "romantic" relationships!
You are wrong, same women who are now economically ok will still be looking up to see a man who is richer to get married to meaning there will be rise of single women and single motherhood in our society. That a woman is empowered doesn't mean she will love not based on money, you are mistaken.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by LordIsaac(m): 3:17pm On Sep 25, 2025
ExudeLoveToAll:
You are wrong, same women who are now economically ok will still be looking up to see a man who is richer to get married to meaning there will be rise of single women and single motherhood in our society. That a woman is empowered doesn't mean she will love not based on money, you are mistaken.
And it doesn't mean she won't act contrary to your argument, one I dare regard as stereotypic.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by free2ryhme: 4:35pm On Sep 25, 2025
SmartPolician:
Once seen as male-only territories, these careers are now being reshaped and getting dominated by Nigerian women.

Progress in education, changing hiring practices, and stronger role models have led many sectors to shift from a male-dominated culture to one with visible female leadership.

More women are now enrolling in professional training, reaching senior ranks, and starting businesses that reshape workplace expectations.

Factors such as mentorship, expanded scholarship programmes, flexible work arrangements, and deliberate promotion policies have helped women move into roles that were once closed to them.

The result is practical change in who leads teams, runs firms, and shapes policy across sectors.


Below are seven careers where Nigerian women have moved from the margins to the mainstream, and how that shift has occurred in practice.


1. Law and legal practice
Law used to feel like a male preserve in courtrooms and leadership roles, but women now occupy significant portions of chambers and senior counsel positions. Female lawyers lead litigation teams, run corporate departments, and accept judicial appointments more often than before.

However, a study by the International Bar Association in 2023, highlighted problematic gender disparities across the country’s senior legal roles. Greater access to legal education and mentorship programs, as well as firm policies that prioritise diversity, explains much of the change.

There is a 50:50 by 2030 project which hopes to have fully tackled gender disparity in law by the year 2023.

2. Medicine and pharmacy
Medicine and pharmacy were once top-heavy with men in specialist roles, but today many hospitals and clinics are staffed and led by women clinicians and pharmacists. Women run outpatient units, head clinical departments, and own private practices.


Increased female enrolment in medicine and other medical-related courses, along with better workplace support for maternity leave and shifts, made clinical careers more sustainable.

3. Accounting, audit, and finance

Professional accounting was historically male-dominated, especially at the senior partner level, but women now lead audit teams, finance functions, and run accounting firms.

Professional training scholarships, female networks, and targeted mentorship opened promotion pipelines. Women in finance also utilise certifications and continuous learning to advance into executive roles and board positions.

4. Banking operations and retail management
Banks once promoted men to branch and regional manager jobs; yet, today, many branches and corporate units are led by women who manage operations, credit, and customer portfolios.

Targeted leadership programmes, inclusive policies, and more precise parental leave terms helped women advance. Their visibility encourages more young women to aspire to executive positions.

5. Human resources, corporate communications, and people roles
These functions were once viewed as support areas with limited strategic influence. Yet, women in HR and communications now play a significant role in shaping hiring strategy, employer branding, and leadership development.

Their impact on talent pipelines, culture, and retention gives them clear leverage and pathways into chief of staff and director-level roles across sectors.

6. Academia, research and education leadership
Men in senior positions once long dominated academic faculties and research teams, but female professors, department heads, and research leads are now more common.

Women secure grants, lead labs, and set curriculum priorities, which changes who trains the next generation. Fellowship schemes and hiring reforms accelerated this progress.

7. Media content creation and creative leadership
Editorial boards, production studios, and agency leadership once skewed heavily male, but women now run newsrooms, produce hit shows, and lead creative agencies.

Female founders in digital media and production build monetisation strategies and scale teams. Mentoring circles and more affordable digital tools lowered barriers for women to create and lead in the media.

Source: https://www.pulse.ng/articles/lifestyle/careers-nigerian-women-dominate-formerly-male-only-2025092313585544803
una still need man to fund una lifestyle
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Suicideboy: 5:38pm On Sep 25, 2025
Engineering na no go area for wpmen


Na only few women day , the rest na men with tomboys grin



Engineering sweet, kudos to any enginering babe put rhere
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by doncartel: 6:03pm On Sep 25, 2025
We need female billionaires and politicians. Don’t be surprised if Nigeria produces a female president even before America.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Gerrard59(m): 7:26pm On Sep 25, 2025
SmartPolician:
If women are running all these industries, wetin come remain for men again? grin The funny thing is that most ladies are hypergamous, meaning that single motherhood will take over our society in the coming years.
This is why marriage rates have dived across the developed world. Women don't see the dire need to marry because the core aim - financial provision - is something they can achieve. It's why they come with a myriad of non-financial requirements for men because they earn their own money. Aside from money, what else do you bring to the table?

Additionally, this takeover of hitherto male careers is why there has been a rise in men demanding women contribute to the households, and one cannot really blame such men. When 50% of the jobs have been taken over by women, hypergamy can't really exist because the jobs men held in order to be a provider have been taken over by women.

I've written it here countless times, should Nigeria become as rich as Malaysia, many of our women won't marry.

As for human resource, no be today. Someone went for CIPM exams and could count the number of men. Zenith Bank employs more women than men.

Currently, it's a Woman's World. It's only a man's world if he is well-to-do.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Melagros(m): 9:59pm On Sep 25, 2025
COMRADES, dominate? I doubt, maybe competing with the male counterpart
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Luckybelt: 10:00pm On Sep 25, 2025
You forgot truck driving, have been seen them lately
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Basic123: 10:02pm On Sep 25, 2025
franchasng:
True.

Add medicine, especially Optometrists and Ophthalmologists, it's now more of women cool
The Medicine own is scary.

For every 5 new house officers there are 4 females and 1 male
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Mosco100(m): 10:02pm On Sep 25, 2025
And they're now intruding engineering. Don't mind me: be what God created you to be, no matter your gender💜. Amen.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by WellWisher96(m): 10:02pm On Sep 25, 2025
Women are really working very hard lately. They are doing all sort of jobs done by men.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Epinbiz(m): 10:04pm On Sep 25, 2025
Lol I think is still 50/50 sincerely I think you can Google it
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by MrIcredible: 10:04pm On Sep 25, 2025
Nonsense

Pharmacy has always been a female career...
In the past 20-30 years ago, na female full am.
Na now men dey run am ...
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by zuby4real10(m): 10:06pm On Sep 25, 2025
Most of the them are white collar jobs. What are the percentage of labour force can these jobs employ?
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by yemmit90: 10:07pm On Sep 25, 2025
Women everywhere you go these days.

Those randy ceo and directors doesn't help the matter at all.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Gbadugbakun(m): 10:08pm On Sep 25, 2025
Please spell words correctly when you post, and try to use perfect grammar and punctuation.
22. Don't ask Nairaland members for contact details (email, phone, bbpin) or investments.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by yemmit90: 10:16pm On Sep 25, 2025
zuby4real10:
Most of the them are white collar jobs. What are the percentage of labour force can these jobs employ?
Not only white collar jobs o, except you are talking about construction workers or commercial drivers. They also also the majority in higher institutions, the quality of young men is downgrading these days due to their focus on quick money and girls.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Villagesquare: 10:18pm On Sep 25, 2025
The number of woman on planet earth is times 10 of the number of men and the cultural and knowledge barrier that restricted woman's pursuit for a decent career to the kitchen has been broken so expect more women in professionals fields in the nearest future.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by U09ce: 10:18pm On Sep 25, 2025
Teaching should top the list. Once upon a time, most teachers were male because the job was enough to make a good living. But these days, you'd find more females than males especially in public schools. As our tertiary institutions are joining the infamous of poor worker welfare, the trend is poised to continue.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Emanodimo(m): 10:21pm On Sep 25, 2025
No crime seeing them at the top of the ladders in different profession. However, there shouldn't be bias but your competence.

Some of them will appreciate the support received from their male counterpart.

But pushing a bias narrative, manipulative agenda and entitlement for them against men is what i dont like.

There is a bill to reserve seat for women in politics by Oct 20. Haba! this is politics not classroom where a Unilag lady will call her female friend to reserve seat for her in class when she is still at home for a distance of 1 hour.

This is bias against the constitution, democratic principles, our faiths and rights to equal opportunities.

Countries that has women as their presidents, do they have a reserved seat for women to clinch political power?
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by zuby4real10(m): 10:21pm On Sep 25, 2025
yemmit90:
Not only white collar jobs o, except you are talking about construction workers or commercial drivers. They also also the majority in higher institutions, the quality of young men is downgrading these days due to their focus on quick money and girls.
Mention jobs that are not white collar jobs that women can do.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by Nobody: 10:47pm On Sep 25, 2025
And everyone can now see how those careers have been destroyed and degraded since they left their kitchens and child care and jumped into them.
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by ednut1(m): 11:38pm On Sep 25, 2025
Yet those same women will say they are oppressed and subjugated in Nigeria
Re: 7 Careers Nigerian Women Dominate That Were Once Male-only by penearth(m): 11:44pm On Sep 25, 2025
These u mentioned are soft landings na. Talk more of , carpentry, show cobbling, truck driving, bus driving, factory painting. Women now control male dominated earlier careers now
1 2 3 Reply

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