Between 2021 and December 2024, Microsoft trained four million Nigerians in digital and artificial intelligence skills, with 70,000 earning globally recognized certifications. What began as an ambitious national conversation has become one of Nigeria’s largest coordinated digital skilling efforts, aimed at tackling unemployment and closing the country’s widening skills gap.
When discussions first started between Microsoft executives in Nigeria and government officials in 2021, the target sounded almost unattainable. The goal was to reach five million Nigerians with future ready digital skills at a time when unemployment was high, the education system was under pressure, and access to advanced technology skills remained limited.
According to Microsoft, the scale of the programme was intentional. It was built through collaboration with government, academia, and civil society, with a strong emphasis not only on training but also on certification as proof of competence in a global digital economy.
Nonye Ujam, Director of Government Affairs at Microsoft West Africa, said the early conversations focused less on technology and more on jobs.
“The government was very focused on employability,” she explained during a press briefing on December 16, 2025. “Our discussions centred on how digital skills could translate into real economic opportunity.”
Microsoft aligned its skilling platforms with government priorities and worked through online tools and local partners to reach Nigerians across different states, income levels, and sectors. By the end of the first phase, four million people had accessed Microsoft’s digital learning resources. The company describes this as reach, but insists that exposure alone is not enough.
Out of the four million Nigerians reached, about 350,000 actively engaged with the training programmes. More importantly, 70,000 earned Microsoft backed certifications in areas such as AI, software development, and data engineering.
“Certification is the proof,” Ujam said. “It shows that someone completed the programme and met a global standard.”
Microsoft argues that this distinction is critical in labour markets where informal learning is common but difficult for employers to verify. Certified credentials give learners a portable and trusted signal of skill, reducing the need to constantly prove competence.
To scale effectively, Microsoft structured its strategy around three key groups. The first was organisational leaders in both the public and private sectors. While many are not technical, their understanding of digital transformation determines whether organisations adopt new technologies at all.
The second group was developers and engineers, who received deeper technical training on modern development tools, cloud platforms, and AI frameworks.
The third group was everyday technology users. Microsoft describes this as AI fluency, the ability to understand and use AI responsibly without being a specialist. The aim was to ensure AI skills are widely accessible rather than limited to a small elite.
“These three groups form an ecosystem,” Ujam noted. “If one is missing, transformation slows down.”
Microsoft says the programme’s reach would not have been possible without Nigerian partners. One of the most significant was Data Science Nigeria, which helped design and deliver locally relevant training.
“We didn’t just reuse existing content,” said Aanu Oyeniran, Business Lead at Data Science Nigeria. “We built blended curricula using Nigerian examples.”
The partnership adopted a hub and spoke model, with training centres across the country providing access to computers, internet connectivity, and trainers. Trainers were equipped to pass skills into their communities, creating a multiplier effect.
Oyeniran shared the example of a trainer in Edo State who now helps small businesses analyse data and improve operations, while also training others in his community.
Lagos Business School also played a key role, partnering with Microsoft to deliver AI leadership programmes for senior public sector officials. According to Professor Olayinka David-West, Dean of the school, the focus was on building capacity rather than chasing hype.
“You can build all you want,” she said, “but if there is no capacity to absorb it, you are building for the sake of building.”
Through the programme, 99 senior public servants from 58 government agencies completed intensive AI leadership training. Each participant developed a capstone project linked to their agency’s mandate, ensuring practical application of their learning.
Microsoft’s skilling efforts run alongside Nigeria’s National AI Strategy, which was co-created by more than 100 Nigerian AI experts from around the world. As an industry partner, Microsoft contributed global insights while adapting them to local realities.
Abideen Yusuf, General Manager of Microsoft Nigeria and Ghana, highlighted the urgency of the effort.
“Nigeria’s AI adoption is still under 10 percent,” he said. “But the potential upside is enormous.”
He noted that while Nigeria has growing data centre infrastructure, none are currently equipped to support AI workloads. Without a skilled workforce, investments in infrastructure alone will not deliver economic growth.
Microsoft says the publicly reported figures do not include its enterprise focused training programmes within private organisations. Even so, training four million people and certifying 70,000 represents a rare attempt at population scale digital skilling in Nigeria.
The company has announced an additional one million dollar investment to train another one million Nigerians, with the aim of completing its original target by June 2026.
For Microsoft, the long term impact lies in how skills spread.
“We see impact like an inverse pyramid,” Ujam said. “One person learns, teaches others, and the effect multiplies.”
Whether that momentum translates into sustained economic growth will depend on continued government support, infrastructure investment, and Nigeria’s ability to absorb newly skilled workers into productive roles.

