Some people build law firms. Others build companies. But few, like Gbenga Oyebode, have mastered the art of doing both—and doing them at a scale that reshapes entire industries. For more than forty years, Oyebode has stood at the intersection of intellect and enterprise, transforming his mastery of law into a blueprint for business leadership.
From Law to Leadership: A Journey of Dual Excellence
Long before becoming the face of Nigeria’s palm oil success story, Gbenga Oyebode was shaping the nation’s corporate legal landscape. After earning his law degree from the University of Ife in 1979 and a Master of Laws from the University of Pennsylvania in 1982, Oyebode began building a reputation for combining technical precision with global insight. His later executive training at Harvard Business School and INSEAD fine-tuned his strategic thinking, preparing him for roles far beyond the courtroom.
In 1993, Oyebode co-founded Aluko & Oyebode, a firm that quickly became synonymous with excellence in business law. What began as an ambitious partnership has evolved into one of Nigeria’s most respected legal institutions, housing over 150 lawyers across Lagos, Abuja, and Port Harcourt. But for Oyebode, the firm’s legacy extends beyond prestige—it is a pipeline for grooming the next generation of African legal minds.
Redefining Agribusiness Leadership
Even while shaping Nigeria’s legal elite, Oyebode’s vision extended to agriculture—a sector he believed could power sustainable national growth. As Chairman of Okomu Oil Palm Company Plc, he took on the challenge of modernizing one of Nigeria’s oldest agro-industrial firms.
Founded in 1976, Okomu Oil was once a modest palm plantation in Edo State. Under Oyebode’s leadership, it has evolved into a ₦973 billion ($660 million) publicly traded powerhouse—one of the top 25 companies on the Nigerian Exchange.
The company now operates over 19,000 hectares of oil palm and 7,000 hectares of rubber, producing tens of thousands of tonnes annually for use in food, cosmetics, and manufacturing. But what distinguishes Okomu is not just its scale—it’s its philosophy. As a proud member of the Socfin Group, Okomu upholds strict environmental and social standards while creating jobs for over 7,400 people, empowering rural communities across Edo State.
Numbers That Tell a Story of Growth
Okomu’s financial trajectory mirrors Oyebode’s disciplined leadership. In 2024, revenue jumped from ₦75.1 billion ($50.8 million) to ₦130.2 billion ($88.1 million), while profits nearly doubled from ₦20.65 billion to ₦39.95 billion. Shareholders’ equity surged past ₦55 billion ($37.5 million), and stock prices climbed over 120% within a single year—turning Oyebode’s 4.37% stake into a ₦42.5 billion ($28.7 million) asset.
For investors, these aren’t just numbers—they represent a story of integrity-driven growth, careful governance, and a chairman who understands both the law and the market.
Legal Expertise Fueling Economic Transformation
Oyebode’s influence stretches beyond Okomu. As one of Nigeria’s top corporate advisors, he has played a role in structuring multi-billion-dollar energy projects, including the Brass LNG Project, ExxonMobil’s Natural Gas Liquids II, and Nigeria LNG’s Trains 4 and 5 expansion. His early work even contributed to the establishment of Nigeria’s first private Independent Power Project (IPP)—proof that his counsel often precedes the country’s biggest industrial shifts.
The Philosophy of a Nation Builder
What makes Oyebode exceptional isn’t just his résumé—it’s his philosophy. He sees law not as an endpoint but as a framework for progress. For him, every contract, merger, and board decision is a piece of a larger puzzle: building sustainable systems that outlast their founders.
In a country where many separate professional prestige from industrial innovation, Gbenga Oyebode has fused both into one lifelong pursuit—showing that true leadership doesn’t just interpret the law; it creates value, builds institutions, and inspires the next generation to dream even bigger.