In the race to define the future of artificial intelligence, the spotlight often falls on the engineers designing powerful models and the researchers pushing the limits of machine learning.
Less visible are the strategists who determine how those breakthroughs become products that millions of people can actually use.
Taslim Okunola is one of those strategists.
At Google, where the competition to lead the next phase of artificial intelligence has intensified, Okunola works as a Global Strategy and Operations Manager, helping design the operational systems behind some of the company’s most ambitious AI offerings.
From the San Francisco Bay Area, he works on the frameworks that support subscription-based services connected to Google’s Gemini ecosystem, helping shape how advanced AI capabilities are packaged, priced and delivered to global users.
“The real challenge in technology isn’t only building powerful tools. It’s figuring out how those tools become sustainable products that people can rely on every day,” Okunola said.
His journey to Silicon Valley began at the Federal University of Technology, Akure, known widely as FUTA, where he studied Agricultural Technology.
The degree focused heavily on agricultural and resource economics, a field centred on efficiency, incentives and large-scale systems.
Those principles, he says, turned out to be unexpectedly relevant in the technology industry.
“Economics trains you to think about concepts like scale of preference and opportunity costs. When you’re working on global technology platforms, you’re constantly making trade-offs about resources, priorities and scale,” he said.
Okunola entered the technology sector through digital marketing, beginning his career as an intern in Nigeria during a period when Africa’s digital economy was expanding rapidly. Smartphones were spreading quickly, internet access was improving, and global technology companies were beginning to tailor their products to emerging markets.
When he joined Google, he found himself working on exactly that challenge.
As Product Marketing Manager for Consumer Apps in Sub-Saharan Africa, Okunola helped shape how millions of people across the region interacted with Google’s products.
His work included helping introduce Nigerian English voice recognition for Google Assistant and supporting localisation efforts across tools like Google Maps.
For Okunola, those projects were about more than technology.
“If a product doesn’t feel familiar, people don’t trust it,” he said. “Localisation is not just translation. It’s understanding how people actually live and making the technology they use in their everyday routines relatable.”
The experience gave him an unusual vantage point within the company, balancing global technology strategy with the realities of emerging markets. It also sharpened his ability to operate in environments where uncertainty is common and systems must be built quickly.
Today, those skills are being applied to one of the most consequential shifts in the modern technology industry: the rise of artificial intelligence.
Across Silicon Valley, companies are racing to embed AI into everything from search engines and productivity software to mobile operating systems. Yet building sophisticated models is only part of the challenge. Transforming those models into reliable businesses requires operational structure, including pricing strategies, marketing coordination, resource planning and global distribution.
That is where Okunola’s work comes in.
He helps design the operational architecture behind Google’s AI subscriptions, including bundled services such as Gemini and NotebookLM.
These frameworks guide how AI features are introduced to users, how marketing teams coordinate across regions and how resources are allocated across enormous global portfolios.
“In large organisations, innovation can slow down if the structure isn’t clear,” Okunola said. “Our job is to create systems that allow teams to move quickly without losing alignment,” he added.
Much of that work happens behind the scenes. Okunola helps coordinate business planning for portfolios tied to billions of dollars in spending and contributes to marketing structures involving hundreds of employees.
The role is essentially strategy execution at scale, making sure product ambition translates into real user growth and sustainable revenue.
Earlier in his career, Okunola demonstrated a similar focus on efficiency and structure. He has led annual planning processes for Google’s Platforms and Ecosystems Marketing group, which includes major products such as Android, Chrome, Google Photos and Google TV, helping determine where investments would have the greatest impact.
His career also reflects a broader trend shaping the global technology workforce. Increasingly, professionals from emerging markets are influencing how the world’s largest digital platforms operate.
Over the past decade, Okunola’s work has spanned Africa, North America and Europe, giving him insight into how technology products evolve across different economic environments and cultural contexts.
That perspective may become even more important as artificial intelligence becomes embedded in everyday digital life.
AI may be developed in specialised research labs, but its success ultimately depends on how effectively it reaches people across languages, cultures and markets.
From the lecture halls of FUTA to strategy meetings in Silicon Valley, Okunola has built a career around that challenge by designing the operational blueprints that turn powerful technologies into tools used by millions.


