The biggest mistake in the world of technology is the assumption that one size fits all. For years, Nigerians have used digital systems that were essentially “colonised” — tools that only understood English and followed Western cultural norms. But in 2026, we have broken that mold. We have realised that for a digital system to be effective in Nigeria, it must be “localised” to the core. Teaching digital systems to understand the “Nigerian Context” is the most important innovation task of our time.
Take the example of “Natural Language Processing” (NLP). In the past, voice assistants struggled with Nigerian accents or Pidgin English. Today, through projects like “Yankari” (a massive Yoruba dataset) and “Masakhane” (a pan African NLP community), we are building models that can process our 500 indigenous languages. This involves “Tokenisation” strategies that respect the tonal nature of languages like Yoruba and Igbo. When a system can understand a farmer in rural Benue speaking in his native tongue, we have achieved true digital inclusion.
This matters for “Governance” and “Public Services.” Imagine a healthcare agent that can explain a prescription in Hausa or a legal assistant that can translate complex court documents into Pidgin. This is not just about translation; it is about “Semantics.” A Nigerian “LLM” understands that “The light is not stable” is a technical observation about the power grid, not a comment about weather. It understands the “Slang” and the “Nuance” of our daily interactions. This makes technology feel like a helper rather than a foreign invader.
From a technical perspective, we are using “Fine Tuning” and “Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback” (RLHF) to align these systems with Nigerian values. Our youth are acting as “Annotators” and “Subject Matter Experts,” feeding the systems the cultural context they need. They are teaching the “Machine Learning Models” about our festivals, our food, our history, and our social structures. This “Cultural Alignment” ensures that when an AI system suggests a business strategy, it accounts for the “Social Capital” that is so vital in the Nigerian market.
For the executive, “Local Context” is a competitive advantage. Nigerian businesses that use “Context Aware” systems will outperform those using generic tools. A logistics company that has an agent that understands the “informal rules” of a particular port or market will be more efficient. An e-commerce platform that uses “Recommendation Engines” based on Nigerian buying habits — like bulk buying for ceremonies — will see higher sales. This is where “Innovation” meets “Reality.”
We are also addressing the “Data Scarcity” problem for our local languages. By using “Data Augmentation” and “Generative Models,” we can create high quality training data for languages that have very little written content online. This is a massive area for “Youth Innovation.” Our young researchers are at the forefront of “Low Resource NLP,” a field that is becoming globally significant. By solving this for Nigeria, they are creating a template for the rest of the Global South.
In 2026, the goal is “Digital Empathy.” We want systems that don’t just process our data but understand our lives. When technology speaks our language and understands our hustle, it becomes a powerful tool for “Economic Survival” and “Social Progress.” We are no longer trying to fit Nigeria into a global digital box; we are building a digital world that is as diverse and as vibrant as Nigeria itself.
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Olusoji Adeyemo is a professional with over 17 years of experience. Currently serving as an Azure Application Innovation & AI Specialist at Microsoft UK, he has held key positions at Wipro, Huawei Technologies, Oracle, and Dell, showcasing his expertise in cloud infrastructure, Application modernization, and Business continuity solutions. He holds a Master’s degree in Computer Science with distinction from the University of Hertfordshire and Caleb University. He is currently running his PhD research in Explainable AI and ML. He is also certified in various cloud and project management technologies, including Microsoft Azure Expert, Google Expert, AWS and Scrum. He can be reached at mastersoji@gmail.com and on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/olusoji-adeyemo/








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