As of early 2026, Nigeria’s economic stability is increasingly linked to the survival of its family-owned enterprises. While these firms contribute $200 billion annually to the GDP and account for 60% of MSME jobs, a critical “legacy gap” remains: roughly 70% of Nigerian family businesses fail to survive the transition to the second generation.
1. The Coleman Case Study: A 50-Year Milestone
In 2025, Coleman Technical Industries Limited celebrated its 50th anniversary, a rare feat in the Nigerian manufacturing sector. Managing Director George Onafowokan attributes this longevity to a 24-year intentional transition that began in 2001.
-
The Strategy: Moving from trading to manufacturing while simultaneously grooming the second generation through “financial realism.”
-
The Lesson: Succession is not a one-time event but a multi-decade process of embedding core values and technical competence.
2. Cultural Frameworks of Continuity
Succession in Nigeria is not a “one-size-fits-all” model. According to recent reports, regional cultural values dictate the success of governance:
-
South-East (Igba-Boi System): An institutionalized mentorship model that prioritizes skill transfer and capital “settlement” for the next generation.
-
South-West (Consensus Leadership): Often mirrors corporate boardrooms, emphasizing consultation to prevent family friction.
-
Northern Nigeria (Reputational Protection): Strong adherence to religious principles and the preservation of the family name.
3. The $200 Billion Risk: Why Failure Happens
Dr. Muda Yusuf (CPPE) and other industry leaders identify three primary “killers” of Nigerian legacy firms:
-
Entitlement vs. Competence: Founders often mistake ownership for managerial ability, handing over reins to heirs without structured tutelage.
-
Turnover vs. Profit: A widespread misconception where high revenue is celebrated before cash recovery, leading to liquidity crises during generational handovers.
-
Lack of Governance: A 2024 Moniepoint report noted that 60% of businesses don’t even recognize themselves as “family businesses,” leading to an absence of formal constitutions or conflict resolution mechanisms.
Conclusion: The Macroeconomic Stakes
Prof. Uchenna Uzo of the Lagos Business School notes that “business continuity triggers the continuity of the entire economy.” For Nigeria to achieve its goal of a $1 trillion economy, it must move from a nation of “founder-centric” shops to a nation of “generational” institutions.
Key Takeaway for Founders: If your business cannot run for 30 days without your physical presence, you haven’t built a legacy; you’ve built a job. True industrial progress requires the discipline to be replaceable.
