“When you empower small businesses, you don’t just grow the economy, you transform lives.” — Charles O. Odii
At just over a year into his tenure as Director General and Chief Executive Officer of the Small and Medium Enterprises Development Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN), Charles O. Odii is already reshaping how Africa’s largest economy thinks about entrepreneurship. Young, visionary, and unapologetically bold, Odii has become the fresh face of a new SME revolution, one built on access, inclusion, and innovation.
Born into the royal family of Delta North but raised with a sharp sense of purpose, Odii carved his path early. With degrees from Covenant University and Pan-Atlantic University, and a career that spanned technology, communications, and enterprise development, he blended business acumen with social impact before stepping into government service. His track record of empowering young entrepreneurs and women through training programs and incubators prepared him for the national stage. By the time President Bola Tinubu appointed him Director General of SMEDAN in late 2023, Odii was not just another technocrat. He was a movement waiting to happen.
He wasted no time outlining a seven point prosperity agenda anchored on finance, markets, skills, partnerships, and digital transformation. In his first 100 days, he mobilized more than seven billion naira in SME funding, created fifteen thousand jobs, and launched a five billion naira single digit loan scheme in partnership with Sterling Bank. What distinguishes his approach is the grassroots sensitivity. From state level matching funds with Anambra and Enugu to conditional grants for nano businesses, Odii ensures the smallest entrepreneurs, those in tailoring shops, roadside kiosks, and rural farms, are not left behind. “We can’t keep building policies for boardrooms alone,” he says. “The woman in the market, the young graduate with a laptop, the artisan in Kebbi, they all need to feel the impact.”
One of Odii’s flagship innovations is the solar powered garment making hub, designed to solve the chronic power challenge that cripples Nigeria’s creative entrepreneurs. By building centers where artisans can work without worrying about energy costs, he is showing how structural problems can be solved with practical, scalable models. His partnerships with logistics giants such as NIPOST and God Is Good Logistics are also reshaping market access, helping small producers reach wider audiences affordably. At the same time, SMEDAN under his leadership is becoming more digital, transparent, and agile, words rarely associated with government agencies in Nigeria.
Odii is not shy about making inclusivity central to his agenda. Dedicated desks for youth and women entrepreneurs now exist at SMEDAN, backed by targeted programs and financing. His insistence on transparency, ensuring funds reach intended beneficiaries, has won him credibility in a space long criticized for bureaucracy and waste. “Policy without people is paper,” he says. “We are here to ensure the smallest players feel seen, supported, and celebrated.”
In an economy struggling with inflation, unemployment, and underinvestment, Odii’s leadership is more than policy. It is a lifeline. SMEs make up over 96 percent of Nigerian businesses and contribute nearly half of GDP. By giving them structure, finance, and visibility, Odii is not just building companies. He is building stability, dignity, and hope. His bold reforms, fresh energy, and people-centered vision are charting a new path for small and medium enterprises, and with every hub opened and every business supported, he is proving that the future of Nigeria’s economy rests firmly in the hands of its entrepreneurs.