Most entrepreneurship programmes offer one of two things: knowledge or money. Blacknest Africa is quietly building a model that delivers both in the same room — and then hands over a cheque before participants leave.
The Nigerian organisation has disbursed over ₦1 million in grants through its Business Plan Workshop series, held across Lagos and Jos over the past year, combining structured business training with live pitch sessions that end with real funding awarded on the spot. It is a format that cuts through one of the most persistent frustrations in Nigeria’s entrepreneurship support ecosystem: the gap between learning and actually getting the capital to act on what you’ve learned.
The programme launched in Lagos in April 2025, drawing entrepreneurs for training focused on business planning, financial structure, and funding readiness. The session culminated in a pitch competition where one participant walked away with a ₦100,000 grant — modest in isolation, but significant as proof of concept for a model that ties training directly to funding access.
By November 2025, the programme had moved to Jos, where it drew one of the largest gatherings of entrepreneurs for a training event on the Plateau. Three entrepreneurs split ₦1 million in grants following a pitch session that evaluated business ideas against clear criteria for growth potential and sustainability. The event signalled that the Lagos format wasn’t a one-off — it was a replicable structure that could travel.
Across both locations, the training targeted a specific and well-documented gap: the business knowledge deficit that prevents many Nigerian entrepreneurs from accessing formal funding channels in the first place. Banks and grant programmes alike routinely cite weak business plans and poor financial documentation as the primary reasons applications fail. Blacknest Africa’s workshops directly address that bottleneck — and then immediately test whether participants can apply what they’ve absorbed by pitching for real money in the same session.
“Our focus is simple,” a representative of the organisation said. “We are not just teaching — we are equipping and funding entrepreneurs to build businesses that can survive and scale.”
The next phase is expansion. Blacknest Africa has announced plans to take the workshop format to additional Nigerian cities, with a longer-term ambition to extend the programme beyond Nigeria’s borders to other African markets. The details of which cities and timelines remain to be confirmed, but the direction is clear: a model that has shown results in two geographically and economically distinct Nigerian cities is being positioned for continental scale.
The grants disbursed so far are not large by institutional standards. But that may be beside the point. What Blacknest Africa is building is less about the size of any individual cheque and more about demonstrating that training and funding belong in the same conversation — delivered at the same time, to the same room, without the months-long lag that typically separates a workshop certificate from an actual business opportunity.
In an environment where entrepreneurs consistently cite access to capital as their single biggest constraint, the organisations closing that gap fastest are the ones worth watching.
