LAGOS — While most 22-year-olds are just entering the corporate workforce, Adekoya Ezekiel is celebrating his eighth year as a CEO. His company, Adeze Footwear Ltd, has evolved from a secondary school curiosity into a fully operational leather-making outfit that is now competing for corporate and school contracts across Lagos.
Ezekiel’s story is a case study in Bootstrapping and the Vocational-to-Industrial transition that is currently defining the “New Nigerian Economy.”
1. The Strategy of “Value and Quality”
In a market flooded with cheap synthetic imports, Ezekiel has carved out a niche by doubling down on 100% genuine leather.
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The Competitive Edge: Since 2025, Adeze Footwear has shifted from individual “bespoke” orders to a B2B (Business-to-Business) model.
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Corporate Pivot: By sending out formal proposals and quotations, the company has secured contracts for customized school shoes and organizational footwear. This move from “retail” to “bulk supply” is the key driver of his current expansion.
2. Bootstrapping via “Factory Labor”
Ezekiel’s path to capital is a masterclass in grit for any startup founder.
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Capital Sourcing: Instead of waiting for a loan, he worked as a factory hand in established firms like World Record Footwear and other Lagos-based plants.
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The Dual Benefit: This wasn’t just about money; it was Industrial Espionage for Good. He used his time as a worker to learn the assembly-line efficiencies of large-scale plants, which he is now implementing at Adeze Footwear.
3. The “Social Enterprise” Model: Seed Funding for Staff
Perhaps the most unique business aspect of Adeze Footwear is Ezekiel’s approach to Labor and Retention:
The Exit Grant: Recognizing the “Startup Capital” hurdle, Ezekiel provides a “graduation grant” (averaging ₦40,000) to his staff once they complete their apprenticeship under him.
By funding his own future competitors, he is essentially building a Supply Chain Ecosystem where he remains the “Master Craftshub” while his former employees expand the market footprint of Nigerian leather.
4. Policy Advocacy: The Demand for “Enabling Capital”
Speaking at the Woman of Substance (WOS) 2026 conference, Ezekiel highlighted the primary bottleneck for the 2026 entrepreneur: Standardized Funding.
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The Ask: He is calling for a government-led “Skill-to-Capital” bridge. It’s not enough to train youths; the government must provide the “Starter Kits” or micro-loans immediately upon graduation to prevent skill atrophy.
The Verdict
Adeze Footwear represents the Micro-Multinational of tomorrow. By focusing on durability and “unrelenting execution,” Ezekiel is proving that the Nigerian leather industry (traditionally centered in Aba or Kano) has a vibrant, tech-ready hub in Lagos. For your company, Ezekiel represents the growing “Service-to-Product” middle class that is hungry for expansion capital and better logistics.
