Close Menu
  • Home
  • Opinion
  • Region
    • Africa
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Middle East
    • North America
    • Oceania
    • South America
  • AI & Machine Learning
  • Robotics & Automation
  • Space & Deep Tech
  • Web3 & Digital Economies
  • Climate & Sustainability Tech
  • Biotech & Future Health
  • Mobility & Smart Cities
  • Global Tech Pulse
  • Cybersecurity & Digital Rights
  • Future of Work & Education
  • Trend Radar & Startup Watch
  • Creator Economy & Culture
What's Hot

Modeling Thermoelectric Coolers in SOLIDWORKS Circulate Simulation

February 11, 2026

Jumia’s China pivot fuels 82% surge in worldwide gross sales

February 11, 2026

High IRS scams to look out for in 2026

February 11, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn RSS
NextTech NewsNextTech News
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn RSS
  • Home
  • Africa
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Middle East
  • North America
  • Oceania
  • South America
  • Opinion
Trending
  • Modeling Thermoelectric Coolers in SOLIDWORKS Circulate Simulation
  • Jumia’s China pivot fuels 82% surge in worldwide gross sales
  • High IRS scams to look out for in 2026
  • Microsoft releases Home windows 11 26H1 for choose and upcoming CPUs
  • Sony Alpha 7 V overview: Higher sensor for motion, stage pictures
  • European Publishers Council hits Google with EU antitrust grievance
  • Onafriq faucets Conduit to make use of stablecoins for cross-border funds
  • ByteDance’s CapCut Launches Seedream 5.0-Preview Picture Mannequin with Actual-Time Net Search Functionality
Wednesday, February 11
NextTech NewsNextTech News
Home - Africa - How Nigerian startups are de-dollarising their operations
Africa

How Nigerian startups are de-dollarising their operations

NextTechBy NextTechJune 5, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
Follow Us
Google News Flipboard
How Nigerian startups are de-dollarising their operations
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


It was easy. You constructed one thing folks wished, obtained investments to purchase the instruments you want and create the staff you should scale exponentially—perhaps just a few sensible hires from overseas. The tech ecosystem was flush with money and hope for startups and their know-how, so the numbers labored.

Till 2023, the numbers stopped working for startups in Nigeria; the naira worth has depreciated in opposition to the greenback. This eroded progress: income, regardless of rising exponentially in naira, regressed in greenback phrases, whereas bills have ballooned. To maintain their companies going, founders are altering their methods and discovering methods to make fewer greenback bills, and. usually, spend much less cash on their day-to-day operations.

On Friday, April 30, TechCabal, in partnership with CloudPlexo, an AWS service supplier, hosted a salon-style dialogue well-attended by founders and executives from notable corporations, together with Piggyvest, Kuda, Sycamore, GetEquity, PaidHR, Moniepoint, and extra. We gathered Africa’s brightest minds to share how they’re slicing prices of their startups.

Hearth chat with Deji Olowe

The occasion was headlined by Deji Olowe, founding father of Lendsqr, a B2B startup offering infrastructure for digital lenders and board chairman at Stripe-owned Paystack. In an intimate chat with Fu’advert Lawal, Editor-in-Chief of TechCabal, he shared his perspective on main value centres and efforts to maintain bills reined in. 

He defined switching to open-source instruments that permit his staff to speak free of charge as a substitute of utilizing platforms like Slack that cost as a lot as $12 per worker. “It’s not the software program that makes staff accountable to answer messages,” he quipped.

Deji Olowe on the hearth chat on the TechCabal Ecosystem Mixer.

Acknowledging that staff are the largest value centres, Olowe advocated for prioritising native hires in any respect ranges. He famous that hires from Silicon Valley for C-suite roles carry little to no distinctive experience that native staff or ecosystem operators lack. He went a step additional to say that he is aware of no international government whose work has measured as much as the pay.

Olowe additionally encourages coaching native expertise, as banks do, accepting attainable churn as a trade-off for decrease prices and constructing ecosystem expertise. Olowe, himself a banker for over a decade and beforehand an government at banks like Entry Financial institution, urged startups to create native coaching initiatives inside their corporations, slicing prices and boosting progress. 

DSC08110
Babatunde Akin Moses, founding father of Sycamore.

He urged them to collaborate regardless of competitors, like banks, forming consortia to share sources or push initiatives that remedy exhausting issues for everybody within the ecosystem.

Founders associated to his measures, some sharing how they’ve approached decreasing prices by checking for prices as a consequence of latency, and in addition using a mixture of on-premises storage and cloud storage. Some famous that they prepare their staff. 

The participating 40-minute chat concluded with an open suggestions session the place founders supplied invaluable enter on TechCabal’s position within the tech ecosystem.

Ideas included the revival of the “Getting into Tech” flagship collection, options on startup workplace environments to showcase inside staff dynamics, and extra product-focused articles detailing new launches and updates.

The occasion was complemented by nice drinks and simply networking. 

Mark your calendars!  Moonshot by TechCabal is again in Lagos on October 15–16! Be part of Africa’s prime founders, creatives & tech leaders for two days of keynotes, mixers & future-forward concepts. Early fowl tickets now 20% off—don’t snooze! moonshot.techcabal.com. 

Moonshot Announcement Flyers1200 x 630
How Nigerian startups are de-dollarising their operations 3



Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
NextTech
  • Website

Related Posts

Jumia’s China pivot fuels 82% surge in worldwide gross sales

February 11, 2026

Onafriq faucets Conduit to make use of stablecoins for cross-border funds

February 11, 2026

Listing of cell phone manufacturers banned in Kenya in 2026

February 11, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Economy News

Modeling Thermoelectric Coolers in SOLIDWORKS Circulate Simulation

By NextTechFebruary 11, 2026

The Peltier impact is a phenomenon noticed in thermoelectric coolers when an electrical present is…

Jumia’s China pivot fuels 82% surge in worldwide gross sales

February 11, 2026

High IRS scams to look out for in 2026

February 11, 2026
Top Trending

Modeling Thermoelectric Coolers in SOLIDWORKS Circulate Simulation

By NextTechFebruary 11, 2026

The Peltier impact is a phenomenon noticed in thermoelectric coolers when an…

Jumia’s China pivot fuels 82% surge in worldwide gross sales

By NextTechFebruary 11, 2026

Jumia’s worldwide gross sales, largely pushed by China, grew 82% within the…

High IRS scams to look out for in 2026

By NextTechFebruary 11, 2026

It’s time to file your tax return. And cybercriminals are lurking to…

Subscribe to News

Get the latest sports news from NewsSite about world, sports and politics.

NEXTTECH-LOGO
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube

AI & Machine Learning

Robotics & Automation

Space & Deep Tech

Web3 & Digital Economies

Climate & Sustainability Tech

Biotech & Future Health

Mobility & Smart Cities

Global Tech Pulse

Cybersecurity & Digital Rights

Future of Work & Education

Creator Economy & Culture

Trend Radar & Startup Watch

News By Region

Africa

Asia

Europe

Middle East

North America

Oceania

South America

2025 © NextTech-News. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Service
  • Advertise With Us
  • Write For Us
  • Submit Article & Press Release

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Subscribe For Latest Updates

Sign up to best of Tech news, informed analysis and opinions on what matters to you.

Invalid email address
 We respect your inbox and never send spam. You can unsubscribe from our newsletter at any time.     
Thanks for subscribing!