28/10/2025
A few years ago, Mama Nkechi ran a small foodstuff shop.
Every week, she’d travel to the next town to buy palm oil from middlemen.
Sometimes the oil was good.
Other times too watery, too dark, or mixed.
But what could she do? She had to buy to keep her business going.
Then one day, after another bad batch, she said,
“I’m tired of depending on people for what I can control.”
She didn’t have much money, but she had sense.
She went home, borrowed a small plot from her cousin, and planted palm trees.
She also partnered with a local miller who agreed to help her process her own fruits at a small fee.
Fast forward 3 years later
Mama Nkechi no longer buys palm oil…
Other traders now buy from her.
:
Sometimes, growth is not about opening more branches.
It’s about taking control of what feeds your business.
That’s called backward integration producing what you used to buy.
It might look small now, but it’s how local hustlers become industry owners.