▪ Participants agreed that good governance and ethical leadership remain essential
drivers of economic growth, institutional resilience, and national development. They
emphasized that integrity, accountability, and corporate transparency form the
critical foundations for achieving sustainable prosperity.
▪ Participants resolved that inclusive growth must be prioritized and intentional by
providing MSMEs with the necessary policy and institutional support to scale and
enhance productivity. They also called for expanded access to finance, energy, and
infrastructure to unlock productivity and foster balanced economic development
across the country.
▪ One of the major constraints to inclusive growth and development in Nigeria is the
fragmentation of economic policies and planning, coupled with weak institutional
alignment between the central and state governments. Participants observed that
many initiatives and interventions are often designed without adequate input or
consultation with the local communities they are meant to benefit, resulting in
ineffective implementation and outcomes that fall short of their intended purpose.
▪ Participants noted that inadequate managerial capacity among public sector
leaders continues to hinder national progress and development. They emphasized
the need for a paradigm shift in the management of public assets and institutions
to unlock their potential for productivity gains, innovation, and breakthroughs in
research and development.
▪ Participants identified risk as competitive advantage factors. The top three global
risks — cyber-attacks, business interruption, and economic slowdown, require
boards to move from reactive risk management to anticipatory stewardship rooted
in scenario planning and preparedness.
▪ It was observed that there is a pervasive succession planning gap in Nigeria, with
only 22.8% of Nigerian firms having a formal succession plan, while 77.2% either lack
one or are still in the process of developing it. Cultural barriers, founder dominance,
fear of displacement, and weak talent pipelines were identified as major factors
limiting leadership renewal, particularly within family-owned and founder-led
enterprises.
▪ Participants agreed that transparency is the currency of trust, fostering cohesion
and alignment within organizations, while silence breeds misgivings and hinders
progress. They emphasized that open and consistent communication between
leaders and stakeholders reduces uncertainty and strengthens confidence. By
sharing progress, challenges, and lessons learned, organizations build credibility and
trust that no public relations effort can substitute.
▪ Participants emphasized that stakeholders must focus on co-creating value and
impact to ensure long-term profitability and sustainability. They noted that different
stakeholder groups have varying expectations — for businesses, financial
performance; for communities, inclusion; and for government, social impact. The
most resilient organizations are those that effectively blend profit with purpose and
policy with people, creating shared value across all sectors of society.