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Nigeria’s Digital Identity Push Is Finally Seeing the Results It Deserves

by Covenant Aladenola
February 7, 2022
in Opinions & Perspectives
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Digital illustration of the Nigerian National Identity Number (NIN) card and digital identity network.

Digital identity has always been at the heart of Nigeria’s vision for a modern digital economy. For years, the National Identity Management Commission (NIMC) has been pushing to onboard citizens onto the National Identity Number (NIN) system, but anyone who has ever stood in those famously long queues at enrollment centers knows the real story. High footfall didn’t always translate into high enrollment numbers.

For a long time, the experience simply wasn’t working.

But something changed.

According to recently released numbers from the National Bureau of Statistics, enrollment has surged dramatically. In 2019, only about 5.8 million Nigerians successfully registered for NIN. In 2020, the figure remained close at 5.02 million. Then, 2021 arrived, and the number skyrocketed to more than 27 million.

That’s not a small bump. That’s a transformation.

A major factor in this shift is the extensive UX overhaul of the NIN enrollment platform. Many observers believe the redesign has finally begun to pay off. On a project of this scale, improvements aren’t just about attractive interfaces; they are about removing friction, reducing confusion, and ensuring the process feels straightforward for everyday citizens. When these elements come together, the results can be remarkable.

We also spoke to several NIN enrollment agents across different centres. Many confirmed that the process is now far more seamless and that wait times have dropped significantly. They consistently attributed these improvements to the UX enhancements rolled out on the platform, a real-world validation of the value of thoughtful digital design.

The effort was driven in partnership with Byteworks Technology Solutions, and the rollout was led by Senior Software Project Manager Prince Uchenna Chukwu, who oversaw key components of the redesigned platform. The results speak for themselves.

Now that NIMC is finally gaining traction and consistently hitting its onboarding targets, the next logical step is clear: harmonising other identity sources such as the Bank Verification Number (BVN) into a single, unified national identity system. A centralised framework would reduce duplication, streamline verification across sectors, and make digital services even more accessible to millions of Nigerians.

It’s a reminder that great user experience in government services shouldn’t be treated as optional. It is a powerful enabler that determines whether millions of people gain access to essential digital services or remain left out.

Kudos to NIMC and their technology partner, Byteworks, for demonstrating what becomes possible when public-sector technology meets thoughtful design.

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Covenant Aladenola

Covenant Aladenola

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

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