At the Emerge 2025 Conference in Lagos, the message to Nigerian youths was loud and urgent: learn Artificial Intelligence, but don’t forget Emotional Intelligence.
Technology alone, experts argued, will not keep tomorrow’s workers relevant. The future belongs to those who can combine the hard edge of machines with the soft skills of human connection.
Dr. Abiola Salami, convener of the annual event and founder of The Peak Performance Africa, warned that automation could wipe out nearly 30% of jobs by 2030. In his words, “a task that takes five hours today can be done by AI in under one hour — and those who cannot work with it will simply be left behind.”
But while AI equips young people with coding, automation, and data analysis skills, Salami emphasized that Emotional Intelligence (EI) is the “secret sauce” that keeps humans indispensable. EI builds empathy, communication, teamwork, focus, resilience, and leadership — qualities AI cannot replicate.
“AI on its own doesn’t guarantee promotion, leadership, or adaptability. That’s where Emotional Intelligence comes in. The future workforce will need both to thrive,” he noted.
The conference, themed “Career and Enterprise Growth for Young Africans,” drew hundreds of youth corps members in Lagos and a virtual audience from Abuja. Speakers included leaders from Nestlé Nigeria, TBC Communications, and dbrown Consulting, alongside the U.S. Consul General, Raisa Dukas.
They echoed the same point: AI is not coming for everyone’s job — only for the jobs of people who refuse to adapt. From medicine to law, music to finance, AI is already reshaping industries. But the winners will be those who merge technical fluency with emotional depth.
Nigeria’s policy shift — including the new AI framework launched by the Ministry of Communication, Innovation and Digital Economy — was also hailed as a step in the right direction. Still, the experts insisted that adoption must go hand in hand with regulation, inclusivity, and youth-friendly policies.
Participants, from young lawyers to engineers, expressed excitement. “AI will change medicine, law, and accounting. We must be part of that change,” said a group of attendees in unison.
For Nigeria’s 70 million youth, the takeaway was clear: mastering Artificial Intelligence might get you into the workplace. Mastering Emotional Intelligence will keep you there — and push you ahead.