Where the Nigerian talent gap actually sits in 2026
Every panel deck in Lagos this year leads with the same number. Nigeria is short roughly 3 million tech professionals. That's the figure the Federal Ministry of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy keeps quoting, and it lines up with what the founders we speak to are seeing in their hiring pipelines. Moniepoint's CEO Tosin Eniolorunda has been on record saying the company has had roughly 500 senior technical vacancies open for months at a time. And that's a fintech with the budget, the brand, and the equity story to compete for talent.
If you're an EdTech vendor, a corporate-training provider, or a global L&D platform looking at Nigeria as a 2026 priority market, the gap is your buyer. The trick is that the gap doesn't sit where most pitch decks assume. It's not a pure shortage of "developers". Nigerian universities push out tens of thousands of CS, electrical engineering, and ICT graduates every year. The gap is between graduate-level baseline and what fintechs, banks, and global capability centres can actually deploy on a real codebase.
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The four-tier talent breakdown buyers are using
From conversations with hiring leads at three Lagos fintechs (Moniepoint, Flutterwave, Kuda) and two banks (Access, GTBank), here's roughly how they segment the incoming applicant pool in 2026:
- Tier 1. Senior, multi-stack, capable of leading a squad. Around 3% of the active applicant pool. Heavy poaching, ₦25M to ₦45M annual packages, or USD-denominated remote offers from abroad.
- Tier 2. Mid-level, three to six years, can deliver against a spec with minimal supervision. Around 12%. ₦12M to ₦22M range. The most contested tier.
- Tier 3. Junior with production exposure, one to two years. Around 25%. ₦6M to ₦11M. Heavy churn into remote USD roles.
- Tier 4. Bootcamp or fresh-grad with no shipped work yet. Around 60%. Cannot be billed to a client on day one. This is the cohort the 3MTT and corporate-training providers are competing to convert.
For a B2B EdTech vendor, the buyer in this map is anyone trying to get Tier 4 to Tier 3 (or Tier 3 to Tier 2) on a predictable timeline. That's where the contracts are.
What 3MTT actually buys, and what it doesn't
The Three Million Technical Talent (3MTT) programme was launched by the Federal Ministry in late 2023 with the goal of training 3 million Nigerians in technical disciplines by 2027. The 3MTT Partner Network, unveiled in 2026 with EU support and a roster of co-funding partners, expands the buy-side beyond the federal government to corporate sponsors. That matters for vendors because the unit economics shift.
Under the core 3MTT track, the government pays an agreed unit rate per trainee per cohort, currently in the ₦80,000 to ₦150,000 band depending on track and provider tier. Volume is high (cohorts of 5,000 to 20,000 per stream), margins are thin, and the procurement cycle is slow. What 3MTT doesn't buy is what most foreign vendors assume on first read: bespoke enterprise programmes, learning analytics dashboards for ministry use, or premium credentialing infrastructure. Those are sold separately, and usually outside the 3MTT contract.
The smarter B2B play is to use 3MTT as a flywheel (sustainable volume, government brand validation, a talent pipeline you can recruit graduates from) and sell the higher-margin enterprise products into the fintechs and GCCs that are downstream of it.
The buyers worth prioritising in Lagos right now
| Buyer | L&D budget signal | Decision cycle | What they actually buy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moniepoint | High; senior-tech upskilling is a CEO-level priority | 3 to 4 months | Engineering bootcamps, distributed-systems training, ML/AI cohorts |
| Flutterwave | High; product-engineering and compliance heavy | 4 to 6 months | Senior IC tracks, compliance-tech upskilling, payments-systems specialism |
| Access Bank | Medium-high; large but slower procurement | 6 to 9 months | Digital-bank track conversions, cybersecurity, AI risk |
| GTCO (GTBank) | Medium; selective and prestige conscious | 6 to 9 months | Leadership-tech programmes, fintech-product certificates |
| Kuda | Medium; lean team, ROI-driven | 2 to 3 months | Hire-train-deploy models, junior-to-mid conversions |
| Microsoft ADC Lagos | High but procurement is controlled from Redmond | 9 to 12 months | AI engineering, Azure-specific cohorts |
One conversation that changed a vendor's pricing
An EdTech founder I spoke to in March was selling a 12-week senior-engineering bootcamp at a flat ₦450,000 per seat into Nigerian fintechs. Three months of pitches, two LOIs, zero signed contracts. Then he ran the same pitch into a fintech procurement lead who told him, in roughly these words: "Your price is fine. Your guarantee is the problem. We don't pay for seats. We pay for trained engineers who pass our internal assessment six months in." He restructured. ₦200,000 upfront per seat, ₦300,000 contingent on the trainee passing the buyer's internal assessment at month six, with a partial refund if cohort outcome dipped below 70% conversion. Three signed contracts in eight weeks.
Outcome-linked pricing isn't a marketing line in Nigeria. It's how procurement leads (most of them with banking backgrounds) actually think about L&D spend.
The competitive set you're actually fighting
Direct vendor competition in Lagos isn't where most foreign players assume. The big national-brand competitors are Decagon Institute, Semicolon (acquired in 2024 and now expanding), Andela's domestic operations, AltSchool Africa, and a long tail of corporate-led academies like the Access Banking School. Each one sits in a slightly different lane.
- Decagon dominates senior-engineering training with hire-or-refund placement guarantees. Strong enterprise relationships, premium pricing.
- Semicolon focuses on the junior-to-mid tier and has been pulling fintech and bank cohorts at scale.
- AltSchool plays the global-remote angle, with a learner base spread across West Africa and a vocational-style curriculum that buyers like for predictability.
- The corporate-led academies (Access, Sterling, GTCO) are insourced training arms, but most of them subcontract specialised tracks (AI, cloud, payments-systems) to external vendors. That subcontracting motion is the actual door for foreign vendors.
Foreign EdTech vendors typically lose to these incumbents on local network, alumni placement, and cultural fit. They win, when they win, on specialised content (AI/ML, advanced cloud, security) and on solid outcome data the local incumbents can't yet show.
What procurement leads keep saying off the record
Two patterns keep coming up from enterprise buyers in Lagos.
First, "show me your churn data". A vendor who can prove that the trained cohort stays for 18 or more months post-hire has a faster sales cycle than one quoting completion rates. Nigerian fintechs are losing trained engineers to USD-denominated remote roles inside six months of qualifying. The buyer's calculation isn't "did the cohort finish the course". It's "did we get 18 productive months out of the cohort". Vendors who structure their programmes (and their measurement) around retention rather than completion are pricing 15 to 20% above the market.
Second, "we want training that maps to our actual stack". Generic React and Node bootcamps are commoditised in Lagos. Buyers want programmes that ship a trainee already familiar with their internal payments rails, their compliance workflows, their AWS account structure. That implies bespoke discovery work upfront, which most vendors price separately as a paid scoping engagement. The fintechs are willing to pay for it.
One opinion before you build the deck
If you go into Nigeria in 2026 leading with "we operate at scale across emerging markets", you'll lose. The buyers have heard it twenty times this quarter. The pitch that lands in Lagos this year is the opposite. Deep, specific, embedded in one or two named buyers, with case-study data the buyer can verify by calling the named contact. The market is small enough that everyone is two phone calls from confirming any claim you make on a slide. Pick your first two reference customers carefully. Everything that follows in the next 18 months is downstream of the credibility those two contracts give you.