Every week,听91大神 seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it鈥檒l be revealing.

What鈥檚 your earliest memory of money?
It goes back to the late 90s/early 2000s, during my childhood days. Whenever we visited my maternal grandfather, he鈥檇 pull out 鈧500 notes for my siblings and me. 鈧500 was a fortune to a child, and we鈥檇 go wild buying biscuits and sweets. It was one of my first realisations of what money could do.
What was growing up like financially?
It was a rollercoaster. My parents were both bankers at Savannah Bank; they met and got married there. But around the time I was 6 or 7, the bank was liquidated, and they both lost their jobs. We went from “grace to grass.”
Phew. Just how bad did things get?
First off, we had to move from Bariga to some unknown place in Ikorodu to reduce expenses and survive. My siblings and I also moved from private schools to more affordable ones.
There鈥檚 a traditional Easter food called Frejon that we ate all the time. But after my parents lost their jobs, it became a once-a-year luxury. It got so bad that I鈥檇 follow my dad to pluck pawpaws, pineapples and pupuru tubers from people鈥檚 compounds just to have something to eat.
My parents eventually resorted to teaching. Despite the hardship, they were dutiful. They made sure all four of us kids focused on school without feeling like we had to look for money. It was only after secondary school that I started considering making money.
What did you do?
After graduating in 2011, I started offering home lessons for a neighbour鈥檚 kids three times a week for 鈧4,000 a month. I did that for close to a year.
Then my parents separated, and I moved to join my mum in another part of Lagos. I noticed my mum was fending for herself without any support, so to reduce the burden on her, I got a teaching job at a local primary school. They paid me 鈧4,500/month.
I worked there for four months, and the one thing I remember buying with my pay was a Nokia phone. I gave the rest of what I earned to my mum.
I did a few other teaching stints and some catering gigs in 2012, but my focus was JAMB, which I actually failed the first time. I finally got into university in 2014.
Did you try to make money at uni?
Oh yes. University was a mix of hustle and a massive miracle. My dad was carrying the financial weight alone because we lost my mum shortly before I gained admission. So, my pocket money wasn鈥檛 regular, and it was usually between 鈧5k – 鈧10k.
To survive, I did a few hustles. During a long strike in 2016, when I was in 200 level, I taught primary school students for 鈧10k a month to save up for my 鈧40k/year off-campus lodge. I also did some home tutoring around this period.
Then, in my third year, I got a scholarship from a telecoms company. They were paying me 鈧200k every year as long as I kept my CGPA up. That money made my life soft, and I moved from a one-room lodge to a flat. I didn鈥檛 need to hustle as much from that point up until graduation because the money covered my needs. I just needed to focus on maintaining my grades.
Love it for you. When did you graduate from uni?
2019. But I missed something: I interned at a tech firm in Ikoyi for my six-month IT in 2018, earning a 鈧25k/month stipend. That job introduced me to tech. I got to learn about programming languages like Java, and honestly, it was so hard I almost gave up. In fact, I didn鈥檛 return to it after school resumed.
However, after I graduated and did a stint in acting, I realised tech was the sure way to actually make money. So, during the 2020 lockdown, I sat down and used online resources to teach myself HTML, JavaScript and digital marketing.
Wait. Let鈥檚 not breeze over the stint in acting. How did that enter the picture?
I鈥檝e always been a drama kid and was part of drama and music groups in church as a child. In 2019, I had the opportunity to train at a film academy for free, and I grabbed it. I acted in stage plays and a few films, and met renowned Nollywood stars. I even did comedy skits on Instagram.
I didn鈥檛 get paid for all of this, though. The compensation was mostly refreshments, which, sadly, is how the industry works. The exposure, on the other hand, was huge. It just wasn鈥檛 bringing in money.
I was living with my dad and surviving on what I made from tutorial lessons. Acting and filmmaking were passion projects. I had to follow the money, so I picked up my laptop and returned to programming.
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Now we鈥檙e back to the tech chapter. Was it easier to learn this time around?
Somewhat. It helped that I was posted to a software company in Lagos for my NYSC. My role was 鈥渟oftware developer,鈥 and I basically learned on the job. They taught me languages like Angular, React, Typescript and a host of others. My salary was 鈧50k/month, and I also got the 鈧33k/month stipend from NYSC.
Right after NYSC in 2022, I landed a contract front-end developer role at a bank, earning 鈧250k/month. In 2024, they made me a full-time staff member, and my salary jumped to about 鈧557k.
That鈥檚 a big jump
It was. The increase even allowed me to move from a 鈧250k/year self-contained to a 鈧600k/year two-bedroom flat. However, in May 2024, mere months after my confirmation as a full-time staff member, I left the bank.
Oh. Why?
Convenience. I felt like a servant to the system, working from Monday to Friday. It wasn鈥檛 the kind of life I wanted to live. Also, I鈥檇 applied to a film academy to learn directing and film production, and there was no way I could do that while working at the bank. The whole 9-5 left just felt too restrictive. I wanted to live freely, so I resigned.
My training at the film academy lasted four months, and I paid about 鈧250k for the course. I also got the opportunity to work as a production assistant for a major Netflix project.
How were you surviving during this period without an income?
After resigning, I focused on finding remote gigs. That was the only mode of work that would allow me to explore my other interests.
Thankfully, I found one almost immediately as a front-end developer at a fintech that paid 鈧350k/month. In the mornings, I鈥檇 attend scrum meetings, then take my laptop to the film set and work from there.
I still work at the fintech, and my pay is now 鈧420k/month. I鈥檝e also worked for different companies since 2024, sometimes for only a few months and often juggling multiple roles at once. Even now, I earn the bulk of my income from short-term freelance gigs on Discord, LinkedIn, Indeed and wherever I see money. I鈥檓 also currently building my own startup.
Nice. Tell me about that
It鈥檚 a startup focused on pioneering STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) solutions in Africa. Our first product is a marketplace that connects skilled service providers with recruiters and clients.
I got the idea for the startup in 2024 and got the business incorporated in 2025. We also recently entered into a service-level payment agreement with Paystack for payment processing on our platform. We plan to go live on the App Store and Play Store this month. So, a lot of resources will need to go into marketing and all that stuff.
What have been the financial implications of founding a startup?
I bootstrap everything. There was a time when I was juggling three jobs and using almost all my income to pay a UI/UX designer to build the web application. That cost me about 鈧600k (including the necessary registrations with the and ).
Right now, I have close to 10 people on my team: two front-end developers, two back-end developers, two quality assurance people, and then UI/UX designers and marketers. Most of them are contract staff since it鈥檚 not a full-fledged company yet, and we haven鈥檛 made any money.
However, since October 2025, I鈥檝e been paying at least 鈧500k/month in staff salaries out of pocket. To afford this, I juggle my main remote job with the freelance gigs I mentioned earlier.
What does your average monthly income look like with those gigs?
The freelance gigs pay in dollars, so it varies. Some months, I鈥檓 doing short-term contracts in the $1k-$2k range. On average, I bring in between 鈧1.1m and 鈧1.7m monthly, in addition to my 鈧420k salary.
I still dabble in filmmaking, and I鈥檓 currently working on a couple of short films. I just don鈥檛 make an income from it yet. I plan to establish my own production company in the future, but that鈥檚 after the money from my startup starts pumping in.
Do you have a timeline in mind for this 鈥減umping in鈥?
We鈥檒l start earning revenue from the day we get our first user, since they need to pay an annual activation fee. Of course, it鈥檒l probably take some time before user numbers enter millions and the big money starts to flow in.
But you know how they say, 鈥測ou have to spend money to make money鈥? We plan to go really big on marketing and put ourselves out there. To make that happen, I plan to start searching for angel investors when we go live.
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Rooting for you. Let鈥檚 talk about your relationship with money
I believe money is a spirit. For someone to make money, they have to 鈥渇eel it鈥 first. If a poor person thinks that he鈥檚 wealthy, he鈥檒l begin to attract wealthy people and ideas that, once implemented, can put him on the path to creating wealth.
Right now, I鈥檓 focused on spending as prudently as possible so I can get my startup up and running, then see how to get to the wealth-building part. Immediately I get paid from my gigs, I pay my staff salaries first, give my fianc茅e something, and then keep savings aside.
What鈥檚 your approach to savings?
I save between 10% and 20% in a savings app and another 鈧20k to 鈧50k in crypto. I鈥檓 using crypto as a fixed deposit. Every month, depending on the vibe, I buy a few coins and just leave them in my crypto wallet to appreciate over time.
Currently, I have about 鈧1m in my savings app and $700 in crypto.
Let鈥檚 break down your typical monthly expenses

Is there an ideal amount you think you should be earning monthly?
I don鈥檛 have an ideal figure. I just want my startup to grow; there鈥檚 no cap on that one. I can make up to 鈧100 billion in the near future. The goal is transcontinental impact; travelling across the world and taking our solutions everywhere.
Out of curiosity, do you intend to keep juggling multiple gigs once your startup goes live?
I鈥檒l have to, at least for the next one to two years. I鈥檓 still bootstrapping, after all. So, the first few years will be to monitor the trend before focusing solely on the startup.
What鈥檚 something you want right now but can鈥檛 afford?
A car. I have a Ford Edge or Explorer in mind, and I鈥檒l need about 鈧15m – 鈧20m for a Tokunbo.
How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1-10?
5. I鈥檓 still juggling between survival and stability, and I haven’t even reached success yet. To hit a 10, it鈥檒l mean I鈥檓 finally able to travel the world without ever having to check the ticket price. Until then, the hustle continues.
If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.
Find all the past Naira Life stories听here.




