In 2025, Nigeria’s startup founders emerged not just as entrepreneurs, but as key economic actors, directing hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign and domestic capital into critical sectors of the economy.
Beyond products and sectors, investors concentrated hundreds of millions of dollars behind a small group of executives whose professional histories, governance discipline, and execution track records inspired confidence in a cautious global funding climate.
Nairametrics data shows that while 98 startups raised funding during the year, just 11 companies accounted for an estimated 83% of total capital inflows, underscoring how investor capital increasingly clustered around founders with institutional credibility and long-term execution track records.
Founders such as Oluwatosin Michael Eniolorunda of Moniepoint, Chief Diana Chen of Lagride, and Ridwan Akangbe Olalere of LemFi stood out not merely for the size of capital raised, but for the depth of experience they brought into payments, mobility, and energy sectors critical to Nigeria’s financial inclusion, infrastructure resilience, and productivity growth.
No publicly available information exists on the dates of birth for Chief Diana Chen, Adeola Adedewe, Deepankar Rustagi, Victor Alade, Seyi Ebenezer, Mouloukou Sanoh, and Christopher Longbottom.
Across fintech, energy, retail, and logistics, 2025 reinforced a defining shift in Nigeria’s startup economy, leadership credibility, governance maturity, and capital efficiency now matter as much as innovation itself.
Founders who attracted most startup funding into the economy in 2025

- 2025 funding: $15 million (Debt & Grant)
- Startup founded: 2013
- Sector: Energy & Water
- Co-founder(s): Jono West
Christopher Longbottom is the co-founder and CEO of Mopo, an energy access company providing battery rentals through solar-powered hubs in underserved communities. A graduate of the University of Stirling in the UK, Longbottom has spent more than a decade building long-cycle energy infrastructure across Africa.
In 2025, Mopo secured approximately $15 million in combined debt and grant funding to expand its hub network and battery assets. Longbottom’s approach prioritizes steady infrastructure deployment over rapid consumer scaling, aligning with development finance and impact-oriented capital structures.











