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Brand & Marketing

PalmPay’s ‘Purple Woman’ Initiative Reframes Gender Inclusion in Nigeria’s Fintech Boom

BrandiQ Analyst
Last updated: March 18, 2026 2:02 pm
BrandiQ Analyst
March 18, 2026
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6 Min Read
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As Nigeria’s fintech sector continues its rapid expansion – recording an estimated 70 per cent growth in the past year – leading digital payments platform PalmPay is advancing a new narrative around inclusion with its flagship Purple Woman Programme, an initiative designed to address gender imbalance across the technology ecosystem.

Beyond the metrics of transaction volumes and user acquisition, the programme signals a deeper shift in how fintech companies are approaching talent development in one of Africa’s fastest-growing digital economies. At the centre of the intervention is a stark industry reality: women currently account for only about 17 per cent of Nigeria’s tech workforce.

For many aspiring professionals, the barriers to entry into technology extend beyond skills to perception and identity.

“I’d seen the conversations online, but I always thought tech was about hardcore coding and hacking,” one participant in the 2025 cohort shared. “It didn’t feel like a space I could belong in.”

That perception is precisely what the Purple Woman Programme seeks to dismantle.

From Access to Transformation

The initiative selected 100 women for its highly competitive three-day masterclass in 2025, offering them exposure to multiple career pathways within fintech. What begins as a short-term learning experience often evolves into long-term professional transformation.

For a select group, the programme extends into a six-month internship within PalmPay’s core business units. Only ten participants from the cohort progressed into this phase, gaining hands-on experience in high-impact roles across the organisation.

One such participant, who transitioned into the Human Resources function, described the experience as career-defining.

“Interning in HR was more than I imagined. I’m not just learning processes—I’m learning aspiration, resilience, and responsibility,” she said.

Beyond Coding: A Multi-Dimensional Talent Model

Unlike traditional tech bootcamps that focus narrowly on software development, PalmPay’s approach reflects a broader understanding of what drives a sustainable fintech ecosystem.

The programme integrates training across three key dimensions:

  • Technical capabilities such as software engineering, data analytics, and UI/UX design
  • Business and operational functions including product management, digital marketing, and human resources
  • Financial literacy and workplace readiness, equipping participants with tools for long-term economic resilience

This multi-track model reflects a growing industry consensus that innovation in fintech is no longer the exclusive domain of engineers, but a convergence of technology, business strategy, and user experience.

Building a Pipeline for Inclusive Growth

Now in its third year, the Purple Woman Programme is beginning to show measurable impact:

  • Approximately 250 young women trained since inception
  • 20 internship placements facilitating transition into the workforce
  • Continuous annual masterclasses focused on career acceleration and workplace adaptability

The initiative also aligns with PalmPay’s rising profile in Africa’s fintech landscape. The company was recently ranked among Africa’s fastest-growing firms in the Financial Times and Statista 2025 report, reinforcing its influence in shaping industry standards.

Culture as a Competitive Advantage

A defining feature of the programme is its exposure to PalmPay’s internal corporate culture, which deliberately challenges traditional hierarchical structures common in many African organisations.

Participants are introduced to an open, collaborative environment built around a “no-door policy,” where even interns are encouraged to engage directly with senior leadership, including the Managing Director.

“It completely changed how I see the workplace,” another intern noted. “There are less hierarchy and more collaboration. It feels empowering and far from the toxic environments people often talk about.”

This cultural orientation is increasingly being recognised as a strategic differentiator in talent attraction and retention, particularly among younger professionals seeking purpose-driven and inclusive workplaces.

The Strategic Imperative for Fintechs

As Nigeria consolidates its position as a leading tech hub in Africa, initiatives like Purple Woman highlight a broader strategic shift among market leaders: inclusion is no longer a corporate social responsibility add-on – it is a business imperative.

With fintech adoption accelerating across payments, lending, and digital banking, the demand for diverse perspectives is becoming critical to designing products that reflect the realities of a broad and varied user base.

By investing in both technical and non-technical talent, PalmPay is positioning itself not just as a payments platform, but as a builder of human capital within the digital economy.

BrandiQ Insight

PalmPay’s Purple Woman Programme reflects a new phase in African fintech evolution – where talent inclusion becomes a growth strategy, not a moral obligation. As competition intensifies, the companies that scale fastest may not just be those with superior technology, but those that build the most inclusive ecosystems around

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