While global headlines often fixate on the volatile swings of political cycles or the high-octane drama of “unicorn” tech funding, a more durable story is being written across the continent. It is a story of infrastructure, digital trust, and structural stability. This month, a Dubai-founded editorial agency with deep operational roots in Lagos and London, WebInfluencers Digital Limited, launches what is set to become the definitive record of African male leadership in the 21st century: Men of March.
Beyond the Hype: Documenting Substance
The Men of March series is not a pursuit of celebrity. Instead, it is a rigorous editorial project designed to spotlight the “quiet builders”—the engineers, financiers, legal minds, and educators who provide the actual scaffolding for a continent in motion.

“The men building Africa’s infrastructure are not invisible because their work is unimportant,” the project’s mission states. “They are invisible because the journalism to make them visible has not been produced.”
The Architecture of the Project
What distinguishes Men of March from standard business profiles is its commitment to longevity. The project is built on three pillars:
-
Long-form Journalism: Deeply researched biographical features that place each leader’s achievements within the context of global industry trends.
-
Multimedia Storytelling: Professionally produced video interviews filmed on location, distributed to a digital audience exceeding one million.
-
The Commemorative Book: A premium, annual collector’s edition. This physical archive is distributed to diplomatic missions, institutional libraries, and private collectors globally, ensuring these stories survive the ephemeral nature of digital news cycles.
A Global Triangulation: Dubai, Lagos, London
The geography of the project reflects the modern African reality. Founded in Dubai and led by Ifeanyi Abraham, WebInfluencers Digital operates at the intersection of Africa’s most vital economic hubs. This positioning allows the series to speak simultaneously to the Nigerian professional class, the diaspora in London and Toronto, and institutional investors tracking emerging markets.

By placing these profiles in the hands of policymakers and diplomats through the Commemorative Book, Men of March seeks to bridge the gap between African achievement and global perception.
A Generational Archive
Launching in the final week of March 2026, this first edition is the start of a “long game.” The goal is to build a comprehensive, year-by-year record of the men who shaped the second decade of the 21st century.
In an era of fleeting social media trends, Men of March is betting on the power of the primary record. It is a project that understands that for Africa to be truly seen, its builders must first be documented with the depth and ambition their work demands.











