In the ever-evolving world of African technology, few figures have captured the continent’s imagination and global attention quite like Olugbenga “GB” Agboola. With an audacious vision and an engineer’s precision, Agboola is not just riding the fintech wave, he’s building the infrastructure that powers it.
As the CEO and co-founder of Flutterwave, he has reimagined the boundaries of what African businesses can achieve in a digitized world.
Born and raised in Lagos, Nigeria, Agboola’s journey to the pinnacle of African fintech is a story of relentless ambition, global education, and a deep understanding of both code and culture.
His educational path spans the University of Westminster, MIT Sloan School of Management, the Wharton School, and EC-Council University each milestone sharpening his technical and strategic acumen. Before Flutterwave, Agboola served in leadership roles at major corporations like PayPal, Standard Bank, and Google, where he cultivated a rare dual fluency in cybersecurity and financial systems.
In 2016, recognizing a massive market gap, Agboola and his co-founder set out to solve one of Africa’s most persistent business headaches: the fractured and unreliable payment systems across the continent. Flutterwave was born with the bold aim of simplifying payments for African merchants both locally and globally.
Today, the company operates in over 34 African countries and connects to major payment networks around the world. It powers the backend of digital commerce for more than 290,000 businesses, facilitating seamless transactions in multiple currencies.
Flutterwave has processed billions of dollars in transactions and reached unicorn status with a valuation exceeding $3 billion. But Agboola’s influence stretches beyond numbers.
He is actively redefining how Africa engages with global digital finance by ensuring African businesses can send and receive payments as easily as their counterparts in Silicon Valley or Shanghai.
His work has not gone unnoticed. Fortune Magazine named him to its prestigious “40 Under 40” list in 2020, and TIME included him in its “Next 100” in 2021. In 2022, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari conferred on him the national honour of Officer of the Order of Niger (OON), a recognition of his impact on national economic development.
Agboola also sits on key advisory councils such as the Wall Street Journal CEO Council and the Milken Institute’s Africa Business Leaders Council, where he lends his insight to high-level discussions shaping the global future of finance and innovation.
However, his rise has not been without turbulence. Flutterwave has faced regulatory challenges, most notably in Kenya, where operational licenses came under scrutiny.
Yet, under Agboola’s leadership, the company has consistently demonstrated resilience, working with local regulators, doubling down on compliance, and emerging stronger from each challenge.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Agboola’s human-centered leadership came to the fore. While much of the world was retreating, he launched the Flutterwave Store to help thousands of African small businesses transition to online commerce.
The initiative provided free digital storefronts, helping entrepreneurs survive lockdowns and setting the foundation for long-term digital transformation.
For Agboola, the vision goes beyond financial success. He envisions Flutterwave as a gateway, a digital bridge connecting Africa’s future to the global economy.
Whether it’s supporting young entrepreneurs, empowering women-led startups, or investing in local talent, Agboola is building more than a company; he’s constructing an ecosystem.
Olugbenga Agboola represents the finest of a new era: a technologist with global training and African roots, a CEO who codes, and a leader who listens.
In Flutterwave’s expanding reach and his unwavering commitment to inclusive innovation, one finds a clear signal: Africa’s digital destiny is not just emerging, it’s being engineered, and Agboola is at the helm.