In 1999, when most of Nigeria’s current startup founders were still in primary school, FATE Foundation quietly began what would become one of the most consequential experiments in African enterprise development. A quarter of a century later, the numbers tell a story that’s difficult to argue with.
The Lagos-based non-profit has now trained 256,277 entrepreneurs across Nigeria — a figure that spans all 36 states and the FCT, with its reach extending further into Kenya, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Of those, 8,945 have graduated from its flagship programmes since inception, while 247,332 more have been reached through short courses, self-paced learning, and digital tools. Its podcasts and online platforms have pushed the total audience past 1.7 million people.
For an organisation that operates without the profit motive, those are serious numbers.
But the headline figure is almost beside the point. What FATE has built over 26 years isn’t just a training institution — it’s an infrastructure layer beneath Nigeria’s MSME sector. Its alumni are running businesses, creating jobs, and anchoring value chains across industries that rarely make the news but collectively form the backbone of the economy. The foundation didn’t just train people. It trained people who then built things that employ other people. That compounding effect is harder to quantify than a graduation count, but it’s ultimately the more important metric.
Ayomide Akindolie-Igwe, the foundation’s executive director, marked the anniversary with a reaffirmation rather than a victory lap. “As we mark this anniversary, we are celebrating our legacy and reaffirming the core mission that has defined our impact since inception,” she said — before pivoting immediately to what comes next: deeper digital inclusion, broader financial access for women and youth, and continued support for Nigerian businesses at every stage from launch to scale.
It’s a notably forward-facing posture for a milestone moment. Most organisations at 26 years would be tempted to dwell on what they’ve already done. FATE appears more interested in the gap that still remains.
Bambo Adebowale, Dean and Director of The FATE School, captured the on-the-ground reality of what the numbers actually represent: “We witness the power of entrepreneurship every day — ideas turning into businesses, and businesses into livelihoods. The impact lives in the businesses still standing, the jobs sustained, and the markets transformed.”
That framing matters in a country where the entrepreneurship conversation is frequently dominated by venture-backed tech startups and unicorn ambitions. FATE’s work sits in a different — and arguably more foundational — register. The entrepreneurs it trains are not predominantly chasing Series A rounds. They are building the kind of durable, employment-generating businesses that economies actually run on.
Two hundred and fifty-six thousand entrepreneurs trained. One point seven million people reached. Twenty-six years of staying in the room when it would have been easier to leave.
