As Otunba Mike Adenuga turns 72 on April 29, the spotlight returns—albeit briefly—to a man who has built an empire with resounding silence and thunderous impact. The reclusive billionaire and founder of Globacom, Nigeria’s fully indigenous telecom giant, remains a fascinating paradox—powerfully present, yet rarely seen or heard.
Adenuga is no ordinary businessman. His influence stretches across telecom, oil and gas, banking, real estate, and construction—yet he shuns publicity with a discipline that’s almost mythical. His lifestyle contrasts sharply with his disruptive legacy, particularly in a telecom sector once dominated by inefficiency, outrageous costs, and foreign monopolies.
Back in the late 1990s and early 2000s, Nigeria’s telecom landscape was a tale of frustration. The state-run NITEL was a crumbling giant—expensive, outdated, and riddled with corruption. Even after the digital mobile revolution began in 2001 with MTN and Econet Wireless, services remained elitist. Consumers paid N50 per minute, with even a one-second call charged as a full minute.
Then came 2003—the year Mike Adenuga and GLO changed everything.
With a revolutionary per-second billing system, GLO dismantled the long-held belief that such billing was impossible. That single act was a masterstroke of disruption. It gave consumers affordability, reshaped competition, and elevated GLO from an underdog to a market force. The “Disruptor-in-Chief” had arrived.
But GLO’s success wasn’t just about innovation. It reflected Adenuga’s dogged determination. When his company CIL lost its GSM license in 2001 under controversial circumstances, many counted him out. He had already lost a $20 million deposit. But instead of backing down, Adenuga fought harder—and won a far greater prize: Nigeria’s Second National Carrier license.
That tenacity—bullish, visionary, relentless—is vintage Adenuga.
Today, per-second billing is standard in Nigeria. Millions of Nigerians now enjoy affordable mobile services because Adenuga challenged the status quo, not just for profit, but from a deep sense of patriotism. He built not only a business but a belief—that Nigerians can fix Nigeria.
Beyond telecom, Adenuga has been a pillar of Nigeria’s entertainment industry. Through massive sponsorships in music, Nollywood, sports, and comedy, he’s empowered a generation of creatives. GLO has bankrolled the careers of artists and athletes, with a clear message: Nigerian talent deserves global recognition—and compensation.
When late Super Eagles coach Stephen Keshi threatened to resign after winning the Africa Cup of Nations, it was Adenuga’s personal intervention that convinced him to stay. His role in the GLO CAF Awards further cemented his place as a top patron of African football.
In a country where many billionaires take their wealth abroad, Mike Adenuga keeps investing in Nigeria—with Nigerians. His story is not just one of success but of faith in a nation that often tests it.
As he clocks 72, Adenuga deserves more than just a birthday wish. He deserves gratitude, for proving that brilliance can be homegrown, that silence can be more powerful than noise, and that a single bold idea can liberate millions.