…A women’s-leadership veteran turns two decades of fieldwork into software: a digital ecosystem helping everyday Africans grow their careers and leadership
The limits of manual impact
When women leaders from across Nigeria’s public, private and civic sectors gathered in Abuja on June 3rd & 4th for WILAN’s Leadership Lab & Cross-Sector Convening, the agenda was leadership: the panels, the roundtables, the familiar work of connecting people who rarely share a room. But for Abosede George-Ogan, the convening doubled as something else. It was the first chance to put a new piece of work directly in front of the people it’s built for.
For more than twenty years, She has been one of the definitive architects of social development and women’s political and economic empowerment in Nigeria. From the classrooms of the Harvard Kennedy School to the frontline strategy of the Lagos State Employment Trust Fund, ActionAid, the co-founding of ElectHER and the founding of WILAN, her footprint is hard to miss.
But anyone who spends two decades at the top of the social impact sector eventually hits the same wall: scale and sustainability.
Traditional development models, essential as they are for foundational work, run into hard limits when they try to grow. They lean on manual delivery and physical workshops, they are bound by geography, and they often pour their energy into fundraising rather than into building anything permanent.
Her conclusion was that to close the leadership and governance gap across Africa at real scale, she had to stop treating development as a series of isolated projects and start building it as infrastructure.
There, between sessions, she introduced the result: the WILAN Suite, a digital ecosystem of apps designed to make career and leadership growth accessible to everyday Africans, not just the well-connected few.
An expansion, not an exit
Her move into technology, she is careful to say, is not about leaving her roots behind. It is a deliberate, structural expansion. Alongside the long-standing non-profit WILAN Global, she has built a for-profit arm, the WILAN Institute, creating what she describes as a self-sustaining, dual-engine model.
The mission stays where it was: WILAN Global continues the trust-heavy public-interest work, from civic engagement and political participation to digital safety. The Institute is the commercial engine, offering career and leadership tools, with the aim that its growth helps fund the wider ecosystem, including its own software development, rather than depending on grant cycles alone. The ambition is to reach far beyond the platform’s first users and, over time, to scale to millions.
“For twenty-three years I delivered this work by hand: workshops, mentoring, one room at a time. It changes lives, but it doesn’t scale, and it depends on whoever’s funding it that year. The only way to reach the numbers I want to reach was to stop running projects and start building infrastructure.”
Turning twenty years of context into code
Abosede is not chasing a trend. She positions herself as the architect of the platform, the person who defined the problems each tool solves and shaped how they work, grounding the design in data gathered from years of working with people at ground level. Each app in the Suite, she says, is a real-world bottleneck she once solved by hand, now rebuilt as software.
Two are already live. Biird is a leadership-journey companion, connecting women with mentors, cohorts and a community that understands their path, in place of advancement left to luck and scattered networks.
The Learn App, by the WILAN Institute, offers structured, accessible career and leadership development, opening up the kind of guidance that once lived inside expensive, one-off corporate seminars.
Three more are on the way. Launching this month is a civic-participation tool that maps the full landscape of Nigerian public offices, turning citizens who feel shut out of governance into informed, active participants.
Arriving later this year are a step-by-step companion for women preparing to run for office, giving them strategic guidance, mentorship and practical resources, and a secure, deliberately isolated digital safety tool built to support women facing technology-facilitated abuse.
It is an ambitious bet, and a young one. The Suite is early in its rollout. But introducing it to a room of 100 leaders across sectors was, for Abosede, a deliberate choice: these are the people who shape institutions, and their feedback is part of how the platform grows.
“I didn’t want to build this in a lab and hope. I wanted to put it in front of the women who actually do this work, hear what’s missing, and keep building. That’s how you make tools people genuinely use.”
For a leader long associated with the language of social impact, the vocabulary now is product, users and platforms. The mission, she’s quick to say, hasn’t changed. Only the engine behind it has.
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