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Industry News

Tizeti Restructures Leadership Team as Nigeria Broadband Race Intensifies

Martin Ogumah
Last updated: April 17, 2026 8:47 pm
Martin Ogumah
April 17, 2026
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Tizeti Network Limited has overhauled its executive leadership as the Nigerian internet provider positions for a new growth phase centred on fibre expansion, operational scale, and stronger competition in the country’s fast-evolving broadband market.

The company said the changes, which take effect from July 1, 2026, are intended to create a more specialised management structure as demand rises for reliable high-speed internet across homes, businesses, and digital platforms.

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The move reflects a wider shift underway in Nigeria’s connectivity industry, where broadband providers are moving from startup-style expansion models to more disciplined infrastructure businesses focused on execution, capital efficiency, and customer retention.

Technical Chief Moves to Operations Frontline

Under the new structure, Ikenna Uche, currently chief technical officer, will become managing director, taking responsibility for day-to-day operations, network rollout, and service delivery.

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The appointment places operational control in the hands of an executive with deep engineering and deployment experience, suggesting that Tizeti Network Limited sees execution capacity as central to its next chapter.

In broadband markets, strategy can attract investors, but network uptime, installation speed, and service consistency win customers. By elevating a technical operator to managing director, the company appears to be prioritising infrastructure performance over corporate symbolism.

Fresh Appointments Across Finance, Marketing and Fibre

The restructuring also introduces a broader leadership bench across core functions.

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Modupe Sapaye has been appointed chief financial officer, a role that becomes increasingly important as fibre expansion demands larger capital commitments, tighter cost controls, and more sophisticated funding strategies.

Amadi Ama becomes vice-president for marketing, where responsibilities will include brand growth, customer acquisition, and expansion across both consumer and enterprise markets.

Emmanuel Agosu has been named vice-president for FreeFiber, the unit expected to drive the company’s fibre access growth strategy, while Ijem Okolugbo assumes the role of vice-president for operations, overseeing network performance and field execution.

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Together, the appointments suggest a company preparing for scale through managerial specialisation rather than centralised control.

Why the Timing Matters

Nigeria’s broadband sector is entering a more competitive phase.

Demand for dependable internet has accelerated due to remote work, streaming, fintech services, cloud adoption, e-commerce, and digital learning. Yet service quality remains uneven, while many consumers still face slow speeds, high costs, and unreliable uptime.

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This creates opportunity for agile infrastructure players such as Tizeti Network Limited, especially those able to combine wireless flexibility with fibre depth.

But it also raises the stakes. Customers now compare providers less by promises and more by experience.

That means the next battle in Nigerian broadband may not be fought through advertising campaigns alone, but through installation efficiency, network reliability, and response time when outages occur.

Strategic Separation of Vision and Execution

Chief executive Kendall Ananyi said the company had reached a stage where separating strategic leadership from operational management had become necessary.

That statement carries broader significance.

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Many African growth companies struggle when founder-led strategic energy is not matched by systems capable of scaling. As businesses mature, they often require a shift from entrepreneurial improvisation to institutional discipline.

In management theory, this is the transition from founder mode to operating mode. By separating oversight from execution, Tizeti Network Limited appears to be making that transition.

The Fibre Economy Beckons

The company’s emphasis on FreeFiber and network rollout is particularly notable.

Across emerging markets, fibre networks increasingly function as economic infrastructure. They support cloud computing, AI adoption, online education, digital payments, and remote commerce. Countries seeking digital competitiveness often require far deeper fibre penetration than current levels.

For Nigeria, where population scale meets connectivity gaps, fibre expansion is not merely a telecom story. It is an economic productivity story. Providers that successfully extend affordable last-mile broadband could benefit from rising demand across households, SMEs, estates, schools, and enterprise clusters.

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Risks Ahead

The opportunity remains substantial, but so do the constraints.

Broadband operators in Nigeria must navigate:

  • High right-of-way and infrastructure deployment costs
  • Power supply instability and diesel dependence
  • Currency pressure on imported equipment
  • Vandalism and theft risks
  • Aggressive pricing competition
  • Rising customer expectations

Execution, therefore, is not simply a managerial buzzword. It is the decisive variable.

BrandiQ Takeaway

Tizeti Network Limited’s leadership reshuffle is more than a routine appointment notice. It is a signal that Nigeria’s broadband market is maturing.

The era of opportunistic expansion is giving way to the era of structured scale. Investors want discipline. Customers want reliability. Markets reward operators that can build infrastructure efficiently and sustain quality at speed.

If the company’s new leadership model delivers faster rollouts, stronger service consistency, and broader fibre reach, it may strengthen its standing in one of Africa’s most consequential digital markets. In Nigeria’s broadband race, ambition still matters. But operations may matter more.

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ByMartin Ogumah
Martin Ogumah, is BrandiQ Head of Content Assets and Marketing. He is a graduate of sociology, with a master’s degree in political science, and over 15 years’ experience in content development, marketing and public relations.
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