World IP Day 2026 Your Nigerian Brand Is Not Protected Until You Have Done This

World IP Day 2026 Your Nigerian Brand Is Not Protected Until You Have Done This

Every week, we hear a story about a Nigerian business owner who has just discovered that someone else has registered their brand name as a trademark. Or that the logo their designer created is legally owned by the designer, not the business. Or that the technology they licensed from a foreign company cannot be enforced because it was never registered with NOTAP.
In every case, the business owner believed they were protected. They registered their business name with the Corporate Affairs Commission. They had a contract with their designer where they signed a license agreement but none of that was enough. And the cost of fixing it where feasible is always higher than the cost of getting it right in the first place.
On World IP Day, this article explains what it actually takes to protect a brand and its intellectual property in Nigeria in 2026.

Earth Day 2026 What Environmental Compliance Means for Nigerian Businesses

Earth Day 2026 What Environmental Compliance Means for Nigerian Businesses

Earth Day is a global reminder that environmental responsibility is no longer an ethical or reputational concern for businesses, it is a commercial one. For Nigerian businesses seeking international investment, DFI financing, or partnerships with multinational corporates, environmental compliance has become a fundamental prerequisite. For businesses in sectors with huge physical or operational footprints, it is a regulatory obligation backed by meaningful enforcement powers.

NIPC CAMA and Foreign Entry in Nigeria - The 2026 Compliance Checklis

NIPC, CAMA and Foreign Entry in Nigeria – The 2026 Compliance Checklist

There is no loan facility stronger than the security that underlies it. Any bank that doesn’t properly secure its assets is not a secured creditor. And a borrower that does not understand its perfection obligations might find that its representations to its lender were false. These are five security perfection mistakes we see often and every party involved in a Nigerian credit transaction needs to know about them.

Nigerian Lending - Perfection. Banks and Borrowers Keep Making These 5 Mistakes

Nigerian Lending – Perfection. Banks and Borrowers Keep Making These 5 Mistakes

There is no loan facility stronger than the security that underlies it. Any bank that doesn’t properly secure its assets is not a secured creditor. And a borrower that does not understand its perfection obligations might find that its representations to its lender were false. These are five security perfection mistakes we see often and every party involved in a Nigerian credit transaction needs to know about them.

CBN Fintech Licensing 2026 - It's The Nigerian Founder Who Keeps Confusing The World With Their 3-Licenses

CBN Fintech Licensing 2026 – It’s The Nigerian Founder Who Keeps Confusing The World With Their 3-Licenses

Most FinTech founders are aware they need a Central Bank of Nigeria license. But very few know which one to apply for – and the difference between applying for the wrong license and the right one is huge. A rejected application, wasted time, and regulatory exposure – and sometimes even a breach of existing commitments to clients and investors – are all examples of wasted time and regulatory exposure.

And in 2026, the revised payments framework makes the distinctions between license categories easier to understand and the consequences of operating in the wrong category more severe. Here are the three most commonly confused license categories for Nigerian FinTechs and the key questions to ask when choosing one.

How Nigerian Businesses Fall Behind In Growth And What Most Founders Miss In Legal Fixes

How Nigerian Businesses Fall Behind in Growth and What Most Founders Miss in Legal Fixes

Your product is validated, you have end users, your revenue is growing, and your team is getting bigger. And then it stops, and the founders can not understand why. This does not happen because the market changes or because the product fails. It’s because legal and structural foundations were built for a startup, and nobody updated the structures for a growing company. Every day, we see these problems in growth-stage Nigerian businesses, but these five are the most consistent, and we fix each one.

What Every Nigerian Board Should Know About Shareholders' Agreements in 2026

What Every Nigerian Board Should Know About Shareholders’ Agreements in 2026

A poorly drafted shareholders’ agreement is a time bomb waiting to happen and we have seen it happen in boardrooms across ownership disputes, deadlocked decisions and exits gone wrong. Not because the business failed but because the legal foundation was not built to last. Over time, the patterns we see are remarkably consistent: agreements drafted on templates, never reviewed after signing, and completely inadequate for the company that now exists. This article addresses the clauses that matter and the questions every board should be able to answer about the agreement that governs their company.

1. Pre-Emption Rights: Who Gets the First Right to Buy?
Pre-emption rights give existing shareholders the first opportunity to acquire shares before they can be sold to a third party. Without them or with poorly drafted versions, a shareholder can sell to anyone, including a competitor or simply someone the remaining shareholders would never have chosen.
The critical questions your agreement must answer are: What triggers the pre-emption obligation? Is it any proposed transfer or only certain categories? What is the valuation mechanism – a price agreed between the parties, an independent valuation or a formula? How long does the pre-emption window last? What happens if the pre-emption price is disputed?
An agreement that is silent or ambiguous on these points will fail at the exact moment it is most needed especially when a shareholder wants to exit the company.

2. Drag-Along Provisions: Can the Majority Force an Exit?
A drag-along clause allows a majority shareholder or a specified percentage of shareholders acting together to compel all other shareholders to sell their shares on the same terms in a company sale. The purpose is to allow a majority to execute a clean exit without a minority holdout blocking an otherwise agreed transaction. Without a drag-along, a minority shareholder can derail an acquisition by simply refusing to sell.