In a Silicon Valley ecosystem often distracted by the hype cycle, genuine outliers are rare. Yet, tracing the rapid ascent of Oladimeji “Ladi” Olaniyan offers a compelling case study in substantive leadership. To observe his career is to witness a professional who moves with the grounded precision of an engineer, yet executes with the strategic vision of a seasoned executive—a unique perspective that wasn’t forged in a coding bootcamp or a startup incubator, but on the oil fields of Lagos, Nigeria.
Before Ladi emerged as a prominent product leader in the field of Artificial Intelligence, he was a mechanical engineer in Lagos. It is a detail that might seem like a footnote in a tech resume, but research into his background suggests it is the key to understanding his trajectory. In mechanical engineering, if you get the system wrong, things break physically. That deep respect for structure and consequence appears to have followed him from his undergraduate days at Covenant University, Southwestern Nigeria, to his early career in the Nigerian oil and gas sector. There, he wasn’t just managing projects; he was innovating from scratch, turning raw ideas into tangible engineering solutions in a high-stakes industry, teaching him the fundamental lesson that innovation must always solve real problems.
It was this clarity of vision that earned him an Ivy League scholarship to Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. But Ladi, now 29, didn’t just come to study engineering management; he came to bridge the disconnect between rigorous engineering and agile business strategy. This ambition propelled him directly from the classroom to the heart of Silicon Valley, where he began his introduction to big tech through a pivotal internship at Amazon Web Services (AWS) in San Francisco, California.
That initial foray quickly evolved into a defining tenure. Ladi didn’t just join the team; he became a focused voice for its integrity. Helping to launch AWS App Studio, he realised that for AI to truly transform the enterprise, it had to be safe. He carved out a niche as a lead product voice on governance and security, ensuring that when organisations with millions in revenue deployed AI, they did so on a foundation of ironclad trust.
Then came the pivot that few can pull off successfully. He took that rigorous, safety-first enterprise mindset and applied it to the chaotic, vibrant world of consumer tech. Leading the revamp of Alexa+, Ladi was suddenly building for half a million users worldwide, daily. The challenge wasn’t just security anymore; it was engagement. By combining complex systems – leveraging Large Language Models and presence detection – he didn’t just increase engagement metrics; he fundamentally changed how millions of people interacted with their Smarthome devices.
Today, Ladi has taken on a new challenge within Uber AI Solutions, bringing his specific blend of enterprise security and consumer experience to help the company solve complex business problems. He is now applying his expertise to help bridge the gap between B2B logistics and B2C consumer magic, leveraging a career that has touched every corner of the AI stack.
Ladi’s story is more than a timeline of big-tech logos; it is a blueprint for what is possible. It is the story of a young leader who understands that the future of AI isn’t just about how smart the models are – it’s about how safely and humanely they can be woven into the fabric of our lives. For young Nigerians, whether at home or in the diaspora, his trajectory offers a definitive proof point that the journey from a local university in Nigeria to the forefront of global innovation is achievable. His rise serves as a powerful reminder that with the right blend of technical grit and strategic vision, no ambition is out of reach – and judging by his momentum, he is just getting started.
Dr. Olukayode Oyeleye, Business a.m.’s Editorial Advisor, who graduated in veterinary medicine from the University of Ibadan, Nigeria, before establishing himself in science and public policy journalism and communication, also has a postgraduate diploma in public administration, and is a former special adviser to two former Nigerian ministers of agriculture. He specialises in development and policy issues in the areas of food, trade and competition, security, governance, environment and innovation, politics and emerging economies.








