Stella Ayika: Rooting for entrepreneurship, leadership, and employability in Nigeria – The Nation Newspaper
Arts & Life
December 4, 2023 by Our Reporter
- By Jerrywright Ukwu
As the country seeks solutions to youth unemployment, poverty, quality education, access to affordable healthcare, governance, and an often overlooked entrepreneurial ecosystem, some individuals have quietly but steadily contributed to shaping solutions.
Stella Ayika’s commitment to enterprise education, youth development, and employability has empowered her students and also strengthened Nigeria’s body of knowledge in entrepreneurship and leadership.
At the Centre for Entrepreneurship Development, Yaba College of Technology, Stella Ayika is an inspiration for young Nigerian students seeking knowledge, skills and abilities to find their pathway in a volatile society.
For over a decade, she has been building an ecosystem that prioritises human dignity, creativity, innovation, resilience, and sustainable economic transformation.
Contributions to knowledge and practice
As an educator, Stella Ayika has designed and taught entrepreneurship courses that integrate employability, leadership, and innovation. Her research interests: enterprise education, entrepreneurship sustainability, and youth development, reflect her core commitment to producing graduates who are not just job seekers but job creators.
Her academic and professional pursuits have taken her to international platforms across Europe, Africa, and Asia, where she has participated in programmes on innovation management, sustainable consumption and production, project management, and global environmental policy. These experiences have enriched her teaching, allowing her to situate Nigeria’s challenges within global best practices.
Empowering the next generation
What stands out about Stella Ayika is not only her academic credentials but her passion for mentorship. She believes that “mentoring is a sure guide” for navigating uncertainties.
At Yaba College of Technology, she engages her students beyond the lecture hall, encouraging them to discover themselves, seek opportunities, and create value to real problems.
Her impact can be felt in diverse sectors: from agriculture to catering, from higher education to small-scale business planning. In all these, she demonstrates empathy, integrity, and optimism, values she insists are essential to meaningful entrepreneurship and healthy lifestyle.
Bridging policy and practice
Nigeria has long struggled with translating entrepreneurship policy into practice. While successive governments have rolled out programmes targeting youth empowerment, many of them fall short because they lack depth, consistency, or proper linkage with higher education.
Stella Ayika teaches entrepreneurship education, advocates for youth empowerment and but also analyses policy.
She understands barriers that frustrate entrepreneurs, ranging from access to finance to regulatory bottlenecks, and she advocates for reforms that align with global best practices.
Her policy insights, grounded in real-world experience, ensure practical recommendations that leaders can confidently and effectively implement.
Building resilience in uncertain times
In Nigeria’s volatile socio-economic and cultural environment, some young people struggle endlessly. The lack of jobs, unstable governance, and global competition create an atmosphere of discouragement. But educators like Stella Ayika remind us that the true wealth of a nation lies not only in its natural resources but in the creativity and resilience of its people.
Stella Ayika demonstrates that survival and growth are achievable even in difficult times, whether by helping entrepreneurs in agriculture embrace sustainable practices or supporting small businesses in managing financial risks.
This message resonates powerfully in our context where more than 60 percent of the population is under 25 according to the United Nations 2020 data.
A model for academia
One of the setbacks of Nigerian higher education is its failure to produce and turnover graduates ready for the real world of work. Too often, students graduate with degrees but without rounded practical skills and mindsets. Stella challenges this status quo.
She insists that employability must be at the heart of tertiary education. Her courses are structured to bridge theory with practice, ensuring that graduates get continuous mentorship.
Moreover, her interdisciplinary background demonstrates that Nigerian academia must embrace flexibility. By drawing on agriculture, labour relations, business administration, and education, she embodies the kind of cross-disciplinary approach that the 21st century demands.
What matters
In a society often dominated by insecurity and economic anxieties, it is easy to overlook the quiet but powerful contributions of individuals like Stella Ayika. Yet, her work in nurturing young entrepreneurs, shaping policy, and advocating sustainability is precisely what Nigeria needs.
Her story is also a reminder that impact does not always come from a political position or controlling corporate empires. It comes from every honest work done very well. Sometimes, it comes from teaching in a classroom, mentoring one student at a time, or designing a course that changes how people think about work and life.
Stella Ayika embodies a rare mix of educator, mentor, policy analyst, and entrepreneur. Her career demonstrates that entrepreneurship is not just about profit-making but about equipping individuals with the tools to create value, solve problems, and sustain livelihoods.
As Nigeria seeks to diversify its economy and empower its youth, we must celebrate and support educators like Stella Ayika. They remind us that, beyond the headlines of success, crisis and failure, quiet achievers are building the foundation for a future more resilient, innovative, and prosperous country.
Jerrywright Ukwu, a journalist, wrote from Abuja.





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