Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home Features/Spotlights

Bridging the Divide: How Osamudiamen Igbinijesu is Engineering a New Talent Pipeline for Africa’s Tech Economy

by Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola
September 15, 2025
in Features/Spotlights
Reading Time: 3 mins read
Osamudiamen

The narrative of the African tech ecosystem often centers on funding rounds and product launches. Yet, the engine that sustains this growth, human capital, faces a critical bottleneck: accessibility. For Osamudiamen Igbinijesu, the solution isn’t just about teaching skills; it is about dismantling the barriers that keep capable young Africans on the periphery of the digital economy.

Igbinijesu’s entry into technology was defined by isolation, a trial-and-error process without a roadmap. Today, she is leveraging that experience to build what was missing: a structured, sustainable pipeline that moves talent from novice to hired, serving markets in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, and the UK.

Democratizing Access to the Tech Workforce

The misconception that technology is reserved for coders remains one of the industry’s highest hurdles. Igbinijesu is actively challenging this by targeting non-tech professionals, from accountants to bakers, and proving that their skills are transferable.

Her work addresses a vital gap in the ecosystem: the need for non-technical roles like business development, product strategy, and operations. By guiding these individuals into sustainable tech careers, she is expanding the talent pool beyond engineering, ensuring that startups have the diverse skill sets required to scale.

Solving the “Consistency Crisis” in Education

Access to free knowledge is abundant, but completion rates remain low. Igbinijesu identifies consistency as the primary adversary of talent development. At the Morpheus Academy, she counters this through a high-touch mentorship model that goes beyond curriculum delivery.

Her approach integrates real-world simulations, product pitches, objection handling, and strategy refinement, creating a training ground that mirrors the pressures of the actual job market. By maintaining rigid accountability and close contact, she ensures that enthusiasm translates into employability. The results are measurable: graduates like Destiny, a top-performing mentee, have successfully pivoted into business development roles and are now co-building agri-tech solutions.

From Education to Placement: The Optima Core Vision

Training alone does not solve unemployment; placement does. According to the International Finance Corporation, Africa’s internet economy could contribute $180 billion to GDP by 2025. However, realizing this potential requires trusted pipelines that connect local talent to global demand.

Igbinijesu is formalizing this connection through the upcoming launch of Optima Core. Moving beyond informal referrals, this platform aims to institutionalize the recruitment process, linking vetted Nigerian talent directly with firms in the UK, Canada, and the US. This initiative is not just about employment; it is about positioning African talent as a global export.

A Vision for 2035: Lagos as a Global Hub

Looking forward, Igbinijesu envisions Lagos evolving into a genuine counterpart to Silicon Valley, a hub where Nigerians build products that solve indigenous problems while scaling globally. She points to the success of unicorns like Moniepoint as proof of concept.

Her forward-looking strategy also embraces Artificial Intelligence, viewing AI adoption not as a threat to jobs, but as a mechanism to reduce early-stage startup failure rates. Furthermore, her work carries a profound social dimension: in her home state, she frames tech careers as a viable, credible alternative to internet fraud, engaging youth in a narrative of legitimate economic empowerment.

Editor’s Note

Osamudiamen Igbinijesu’s work highlights a critical truth: the future of Nigeria’s tech sector depends on more than just code. It requires mentorship that breeds resilience and pathways that lead to employment.

As the continent’s demand for skilled workers grows, the ecosystem must move from sporadic training to structured mentorship models. If scaled, initiatives like hers will not only fill the talent gap but will define the caliber of Africa’s contribution to the global digital economy.

ADVERTISEMENT
Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Aladenola is part of Techsoma’s senior editorial team, where he helps shape the publication’s storytelling direction and editorial strategy...

Recommended For You

AI sovereignty Africa
Artifical Intelligence

Africa’s AI Choice: Why We Must Code, Not Just Consume

by Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola
February 20, 2026

When the stage lights went off at Tech Revolution Africa 2.0, one thing was clear. The future of artificial intelligence on the continent is not a theory. It is a...

Read moreDetails
Professor Rita Orji, a Nigerian-Canadian computer science expert at Dalhousie University, appointed to the United Nations Independent International Scientific Panel on AI.

Nigerian-Canadian professor Rita Orji appointed to United Nations independent scientific panel on AI

February 14, 2026
Tage Kene Okafor, former TechCrunch reporter, appointed Director of Communications at Terra Industries.

Tage Kene Okafor leaves TechCrunch to join Terra Industries as Communications Director as Joe Lonsdale’s 8VC backs the company

January 13, 2026
Onyemowo Onu product designer and mentor in African tech ecosystem

Leadership in African Tech Is About Building Products, and People

January 5, 2026
6 African Women Earned a Spot on Forbes’ 2025 World’s Most Powerful Women List

6 African Women Earned a Spot on Forbes’ 2025 World’s Most Powerful Women List

December 12, 2025
Next Post
Five Tech Skills Every Nigerian Professional Should Master

Five Tech Skills Every Nigerian Professional Should Master

Kredete Raises $22M Series A to Expand Credit Access and Stablecoin Transfers

Kredete Raises $22M Series A to Expand Credit Access and Stablecoin Transfers

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

Nigerian Airports go fully digital as FAAN introduces cashless payments

Nigerian Airports go fully digital as FAAN introduces cashless payments

March 3, 2026
Why Learning Tech Skills Takes Longer Than You Think: The Mindset and Strategy Most Beginners Miss

Why Learning Tech Skills Takes Longer Than You Think: The Mindset and Strategy Most Beginners Miss

March 2, 2026
America Just Arrived at Its Oppenheimer Moment with AI as Trump Bans Anthropic’s Claude

America Just Arrived at Its Oppenheimer Moment with AI as Trump Bans Anthropic’s Claude

February 28, 2026
Chiamaka Aniweta-Nezianya, Video Editor

From Engineering to Short-Form Storytelling: How Chiamaka Turned Creativity into a Career

February 27, 2026
MTN Nigeria makes 1.1 trillion profit

MTN Nigeria Made ₦1.1 Trillion Profit Last Year – Will Data Get Cheaper in 2026?

February 27, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.