In Africa’s fast-evolving business landscape, where ambition often outpaces execution, Kelechi Ekeghe has built a company focused on one critical question, how do organisations turn effort into predictable revenue?
Ekeghe is the co-founder and Chief Executive of Laddar.Africa, a sales technology and distribution company positioning itself at the centre of how African businesses sell, scale and sustain growth. For him, sales is not just a commercial function but the heartbeat of every organisation. That belief has shaped both his career and the vision behind Laddar.Africa.
Founded as a full-stack sales management and distribution as a service company, Laddar.Africa was built specifically for African market realities.
The platform enables organisations to plan, manage, track and optimise their entire sales operations from a single interface, covering everything from salesperson management and collections to performance tracking, enablement and real-time insights.
Ekeghe explained that “our goal is simple but ambitious. We want to remove friction from sales execution and help businesses turn sales effort into predictable, scalable results.”
The idea for Laddar, he said emerged from years of observing a recurring problem across industries and company sizes. According to Ekeghe, many organisations struggle not because of a lack of ambition, but because their sales processes are fragmented, manual and poorly optimised.
Rather than applying generic solutions built for other markets, Laddar digitised and harmonised the critical levers that drive sales success in Africa. Its platform integrates bank-grade KYC, team and performance management, commission and incentive automation, geo tracking, real-time sales intelligence, sales learning management and no-code data collection tools.
Beyond technology, Laddar has invested heavily in human distribution. The company has built one of the largest on-ground sales networks on the continent, with more than 25,000 trained salespeople across Nigeria and expanding footprints in Ghana and Tanzania.
This hybrid of software and physical sales capacity allows Laddar to deploy both technology and execution power for organisations looking to scale quickly.
Laddar supports sales operations for streaming and subscription platforms, insurance providers, banks driving account acquisition, FMCGs, telecom operators managing SIM and airtime distribution, activation agencies and small and medium enterprises across multiple sectors.
Ekeghe noted that the breadth of adoption reinforces a core belief behind the business that while sales excellence is universal, execution must always be contextual.
Sales technology, he stated, remains one of the most resilient and lucrative sectors because selling is non-negotiable for any organisation. What differentiates Laddar in this space is its combination of deep local market understanding, technology and human distribution infrastructure, a mix Ekeghe believes is difficult to replicate.
Building an African first solution, however, has not been without challenges, according to him, one of the toughest has been resisting the temptation to adapt foreign models that do not fully account for local infrastructure gaps, regulatory demands and behavioural nuances.
“From day one, our focus has been relevance. Designing around local realities rather than forcing global assumptions.” He said.
Maintaining quality at scale has also tested the business as distribution requires trust, discipline and systems. Ekeghe said Laddar addresses this through technology-driven transparency, training, incentives and performance tracking to ensure its sales force remains reliable for clients.
Ekeghe’s confidence is rooted in experience. His professional journey spans more than two decades, including over 10 years in Nigeria’s banking sector, CEO roles across multiple industries and VP-level positions leading sales initiatives across African markets.
He is equally candid about the entrepreneurial ventures that did not succeed, describing them as formative chapters that shaped his approach to leadership, resilience and execution.
For aspiring entrepreneurs, his advice is direct. Be clear about the customer problem you are solving and ensure it exists at scale. Build tolerance for uncertainty because rigidity rarely survives Africa’s business environment.
Above all, have courage. “Entrepreneurship in Africa demands intrepidity. Those who succeed are not always the most resourced, but the most resilient,” he said.
In a continent where growth potential is vast but execution gaps remain wide, Ekeghe is betting that better sales systems, grounded in African realities, can unlock the next wave of sustainable business success.
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