Forget the days of creators posing with products they don’t even use. Nigeria’s biggest stars are quietly ditching brand deals for something way more interesting: owning the business. Case in point: Nasboi recently pulled up on Sheyman, owner of Secret Palace, trying to sell him a “How to Become a Billionaire” book. Bold move, using the moment to hand the mic to his friend. But the real plot twist belonged to Sheyman. He used the video to rebrand himself in real time, from music star to hospitality king, dropping names like Secret Palace, Glass House, and Folixx Bukka like a man building an empire one viral clip at a time. That’s not content. That’s a business plan with good lighting.
BellaNaija saw the writing on the wall too. Their Next Gen Creator House wasn’t just a networking mixer; it was a bet. A bet that creators aren’t just influencers anymore; they’re investors in waiting. BellaNaija’s Chief of Staff and Head of Strategy, Mary Edoro, who served as Programme Director of the Next Gen Creator House, put it best: “Next Gen Creator House is BellaNaija’s answer to a question we’ve been asking ourselves throughout our 20th anniversary year: what does it mean to genuinely invest in the next generation, not just talk about them? This wasn’t just a conference about young creators. It is a space we have intentionally built for them, with the tools, mentorship, and access to actually build something real for Africa’s future.” Picture it: the same audience that made you laugh on Instagram could one day fund the next big idea. Ife Durosinmi Etti transformed the community into capital through Herconomy, proof that creator buzz is turning into real capital. Attention isn’t just currency anymore. It’s due diligence.








