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Oge Elumelu Is Quietly Building Bridges For Africa’s Next Generation

Ironically, the journey didn’t begin with a festival. It began with conversations

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By Temilade Ologbenla

There’s something refreshing about young people who choose to create opportunities instead of simply talking about them.

For many in their twenties, life is about exploration, travelling, building careers, discovering passions and making memories. For Oge Elumelu, however, these years have also become an opportunity to invest in the future of others’ because of her early realisation that Investing in others is one of the most rewarding ways to drive both personal growth and lasting impact.

That commitment came to life at the recently concluded Africa & Everywhere Festival in Lagos, where a select group of young Nigerians spent a day engaging with employers, business leaders, entrepreneurs and professionals across different industries. More than a conference, the event was designed to answer a question that confronts thousands of young Africans every year: How do I get access to opportunity?

Ironically, the journey didn’t begin with a festival. It began with conversations.

In 2024, Oge launched Africa & Everywhere: Conversations with Oge, a podcast that explores the journeys of African entrepreneurs, executives, innovators and changemakers. Through honest conversations, listeners gain practical insights into leadership, business, resilience and the realities of building successful careers across the continent.

But conversations, valuable as they are, can only go so far.

The festival became the natural evolution of that idea, moving beyond inspiration to creating real-world access. Instead of merely encouraging young people to dream bigger, it placed them in the same rooms as organisations capable of offering internships, mentorship, networking opportunities and career pathways across sectors including finance, technology, healthcare, engineering, law, communications, energy and the creative economy.

The demand alone tells its own story.

According to Oge Elumelu, more than 7,000 young Nigerians applied to attend the inaugural Careers Fair. Following a rigorous selection process, only about 170 participants were eventually chosen.

Behind those numbers lies a powerful reality that, across Nigeria and much of Africa, young people are eager for jobs, guidance, exposure, mentorship and meaningful opportunities to prove themselves.

That is where initiatives like Africa & Everywhere find their relevance.

While conversations around youth unemployment often focus on policy, economic statistics and government interventions, platforms that directly connect talent with opportunity remain relatively few. Africa & Everywhere attempts to fill that gap by creating spaces where ambition meets access.

The Elumelu family has long been associated with entrepreneurship, innovation and expanding economic opportunities across Africa. Oge’s work complements that broader legacy while carving out its own identity. Rather than focusing primarily on enterprise funding, she is investing in something equally valuable: social capital. She is creating spaces where relationships begin, ideas are exchanged and careers can take shape.

Sometimes, the most important opportunity isn’t a job offer. It is the introduction that changes your career, the mentor who believes in your potential or the conversation that gives you the confidence to pursue something bigger.

For many of the young people who attended the inaugural Africa & Everywhere Festival, that may well become its lasting legacy.

The event has come and gone, but for those who walked through its doors, it may have marked the beginning of something much larger.

If this first edition is any indication, Africa & Everywhere is more than a festival. It is the start of a growing movement to ensure that Africa’s brightest young minds are not limited by a lack of access, but empowered by meaningful connections.

And perhaps that is the true measure of impact. Making sure more young Africans have the opportunity to walk through them.

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