At exactly 2:47 AM on a Tuesday in October, Chinedu refreshed his Stripe dashboard for the fifteenth time that hour. The payout notification finally appeared: $127.43. He’d spent ₦11,000 on X Premium that month and generated 8.2 million impressions across tweets about everything from Davido’s latest controversy to why Jollof rice debates would never end. The math was ugly, but Chinedu wasn’t quitting. Neither were thousands of other Nigerians who’d turned X’s creator revenue program into an increasingly desperate gamble.
Nigeria has approximately 5.75 million X users, and when the platform launched its ad revenue sharing program in 2023, many saw dollar signs. Initial subscription costs of around ₦3,000 for basic premium seemed reasonable, especially when American creators posted screenshots of four and five-figure payouts. The pitch was seductive: tweet, get engagement, and collect dollars while the naira kept tanking.
What followed was a gold rush that revealed more about Nigeria’s economic desperation than X’s monetisation model.
The Engagement Group Industrial Complex
Within months, engagement groups proliferated across WhatsApp, Telegram, and X DMs. The mechanics were straightforward: members dropped links to their posts, and everyone in the group liked, retweeted, and replied to boost visibility. The theory was that engagement from verified accounts would trigger higher ad impressions and, consequently, bigger payouts.
These groups operated with the efficiency of Lagos market traders. Some had strict quotas, a failure to engage with five posts daily, and you’re out. Others charged entry fees. The most organised created tiered systems where members with larger followings commanded premium spots. One group admin told friends he managed seventeen different engagement rings, each with 50-200 members.
But X wasn’t playing along. The platform began cracking down on “inorganic” engagement, pausing monetisation for accounts caught in obvious coordination schemes. The cat-and-mouse game escalated. Groups got smarter, spacing out engagements and varying response patterns to appear organic.
The Rage Bait Economy
When genuine engagement proved elusive, Nigerian creators discovered what their international counterparts already knew: rage bait (content deliberately designed to provoke anger and outrage) was algorithmic gold.
The formula was simple. Post something inflammatory about religion, ethnicity, gender politics, or regional rivalries. Watch Nigerians from opposite camps descend into the replies. Harvest the impressions. A tweet claiming “Igbo people are naturally better at business than Yorubas” could generate 50,000 engagements before lunch. One about whether women should split restaurant bills might hit a million impressions by evening.
The content didn’t need to reflect the poster’s actual beliefs. It just needed to trigger reactions. Some creators developed entire personas, the perpetually offended feminist, the aggressively traditional man, the diaspora Nigerian who “forgot” local realities, specifically optimised for maximum controversy.
Research into global engagement farming showed that creators in developing countries have made entire playbooks for generating revenue by catering to content that provokes partisan rage. Nigeria’s version added local flavour: tribe wars, church versus mosque, Lagos versus Abuja, and jollof rice nationalism.
What’s Really Being Sold
The irony is that X monetisation might not even be the real product. Savvy creators realised the platform served better as a funnel. Build followers through controversy, then redirect them to YouTube channels, consulting services, Substack newsletters, or cryptocurrency schemes. The blue checkmark became a credibility signal to sell elsewhere.
“Nobody’s getting rich from X payouts in Nigeria,” one creator with 47,000 followers admitted. “But the verification badge helps when I’m pitching brands for sponsored content. That’s where the real money is.”
The creator economy has created a perverse ecosystem: pay for verification to farm engagement to build an audience to monetise somewhere else.
The Cost Beyond Naira
What gets lost in payout discussions is what engagement farming has done to Nigerian discourse on the platform. The race for impressions has made it nearly impossible to distinguish genuine grassroots sentiment from manufactured outrage, particularly during protests, elections, and political events.
During the 2023 elections, for instance, separating authentic political discourse from engagement-optimised rage bait required forensic-level analysis. The platform that once facilitated #EndSARS organising had become cluttered with people whose primary incentive was virality, not truth.
Young Nigerians with real creative talent and sharp analytical minds spend hours crafting the perfect inflammatory take instead of building genuine skills or pursuing opportunities with actual long-term value. As one observer noted, that ₦11,000 monthly subscription could buy a Udemy course that provides tangible skills.
The engagement farming phenomenon reveals something uncomfortable about Nigeria’s current economic reality: when traditional employment fails an entire generation, even exploitative platform economics start looking rational. The problem isn’t that young Nigerians lack hustle; it’s that the hustle increasingly involves gaming algorithms instead of building sustainable value.
X’s monetisation program will likely continue attracting Nigerian creators as long as the economic fundamentals remain unchanged. But nobody should confuse this for an opportunity. It’s just another way to work harder for less, wrapped in the language of creator economy empowerment. The real winners are platform shareholders banking on global south users to inflate engagement metrics. Everyone else is just buying lottery tickets with their time.









