In a recent LinkedIn conversation, the founder/CEO of ACR Global; Funmilola Adedeji-Bajulaiye in one of her CEO Drawing Board posts asked me to respond to the post quoted below; “How can we get Nigerian Brand Owners to dream bigger?”
First, let me say this: the question itself is revolutionary. Because what you’re really asking is, “How do we move naijapreneurs from trading to building institutions?”
Most Nigerian entrepreneurs are trapped in a survival-minimalist mindset. Revenue and margin feel safe. Locations and investment metrics feel risky—because they require trusting other people (franchisees, multi-unit owners, investors). But until a brand owner dreams in systems and scale, not just naira and kobo, they will remain a glorified trader.
So, would I personally shift from “N5bn at 40% margin” to “10 locations with franchise multi-unit owners + 50 seed investors”? Absolutely. Because the first metric is about my effort. The second is about my leverage.
What causes this shift? One thing: the painful realization that your personal bandwidth is the ceiling of your business. You wake up one day and realize you’re the richest person in your room—but also the most tired, most replaceable, and furthest from legacy.
Now, here are the 3 major steps to create this MINDSHIFT for Nigerian business owners.
STEP 1:
Shift from “Profit Extraction” to “Profiting from Purpose”
Most Nigerian brand owners start with a goal: “How much money can I make?” That question automatically limits your dream to your personal greed. But purpose—solving a real problem for real people—has no ceiling.
The mindshift:
Profit is not the goal. Profit is the proof that your purpose is working. When you build from purpose, you stop asking “How do I maximize margin?” and start asking “How many lives can I touch? How many problems can I solve? How many families can I employ?” That question scales infinitely. And ironically, it returns more profit than greed ever will.
A purpose-driven brand attracts better talent, loyal customers, patient investors, and franchise partners who believe in the mission—not just the money. Without purpose, expansion is just copying chaos. With purpose, expansion becomes a movement.
Action step for naijapreneurs:
Before you set any 2026 goal, write down your purpose in one sentence: “My brand exists to ______.” If that blank is filled by anything other than a problem you solve for others, go back to the drawing board. Purpose comes before profit. Always.
STEP 2:
Replace “Revenue Goals” with “Capital Deployment Goals”—Driven by Patriotic Ambition
A N5bn revenue goal makes you a hunter. A “10 locations with 50 seed investors” goal makes you a capital allocator. The difference is identity. But here’s what most founders miss: that shift isn’t just smart business—it’s patriotic duty.
The mindshift:
Nigerian brand owners must see themselves as platforms for other people’s capital and ambition, not just vendors of products. And they must see global expansion not as optional, but as the only way to honor the “Made in Nigeria” label. Patriotism without global ambition is just noise. The world is not coming to save Nigeria. Nigerian brands must go out and conquer.
When you shift from revenue to location/investor metrics, you’re not just getting rich—you’re planting the Nigerian flag on foreign soil through franchise locations in Accra, Nairobi, Kigali, and beyond. A patriotic founder doesn’t ask, “Can my brand survive global expansion?” They ask, “How dare I NOT take this Nigerian brand to the world?”
Action step for naijapreneurs:
Before you write your 2026 goals, ask yourself: “Which Nigerian flag will I plant where?” Let patriotism pull you forward when logic holds you back.
STEP 3:
Institutionalize “Legacy over Lifestyle” through Ownership Liquidity
The hidden reason brand owners hoard control? They think selling equity or franchising means losing relevance or money. Wrong. It means converting locked value into liquid leverage—time, capital, and geographic spread.
The mindshift:
A brand that can’t operate without its founder is a job. A brand that has 50 seed investors and 10 franchise owners is a movement. And a movement outlives its founder. That is legacy.
When you profit from purpose (Step 1) and deploy capital patriotically (Step 2), the natural next question is: “What happens when I’m no longer here?”
Ownership liquidity—selling equity, franchising, creating investor syndicates—is not exit. It is expansion of ownership. You are not leaving. You are inviting others to own the dream with you.
Action step for naijapreneurs:
1. Write your “Legacy Letter.” On one page, answer: “In 10 years, if this brand is thriving without me, what will be true?” Be specific. Example: “Our brand will have 50 locations in 8 African countries, owned by 35 franchise partners who each employ 20 people from their communities. I will own 0 operational roles but collect royalty from everywhere.” Read this letter every quarter. Let it guide every major decision.
2. Replace one revenue KPI with an ownership KPI on your dashboard. Stop tracking only “monthly sales.” Start tracking “number of locations not managed by me” and “number of investors who have received dividends.” What you measure, you prioritize.
FINAL WORDS
You are not dreaming too big. You are dreaming too small in the wrong direction. N5bn is a number. 10 franchise owners with 50 investors is a network—and networks compound. Revenue dies when you sleep. A system of owners and investors works while you sleep.
But none of that works without purpose as your foundation. Purpose is what makes customers loyal when prices rise. Purpose is what makes franchise partners stay when times get hard. Purpose is what turns a Nigerian brand into a global movement.
Let’s move from “How much did I make?” to “How many lives did I transform?”
From “How Nigerian is my brand?” to “How global have I taken Nigeria?”
And from “How long will I control this?” to “How long will this outlive me?”
That’s the naijapreneur way. That’s the MINE Media movement.
