KPI – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Thu, 02 May 2024 07:46:58 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png KPI – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Digital Identity, Trust: NITDA and NIMC to Share PKI, DPI https://techeconomy.ng/digital-identity-trust-nitda-and-nimc-to-share-pki-dpi/ https://techeconomy.ng/digital-identity-trust-nitda-and-nimc-to-share-pki-dpi/#respond Thu, 02 May 2024 07:46:58 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=130383 The National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA) has expressed its readiness to collaborate with the National Identity Management Commission, (NIMC) on National Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) and Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) with the aim of enhancing digital identity, payment ecosystem and secure seamless exchange of data in the country.  

This move, Techeconomy gathered, is to further strengthen the Nigeria cyberspace and enhance the digital trust as enshrined in the NITDA Strategic Roadmap and Action Plan 2.0.

Kashifu Inuwa, NITDA director general, made this known during a working visit to his counterpart, Engr. Bisoye Coker-Odusote, the DG of NIMC, to discuss the various initiatives that centered around the building of DPI stacks for a secure and seamless data exchange and forming partnerships to transform the national identity system.

While emphasising that the collaboration will harness the potential of the technology innovation ecosystem, he maintained that the use of Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) will also help to drive the Nigeria’s digital transformation agenda.

He used the opportunity to provide insights into NITDA’s Strategic Roadmap and Action Plan stating that NITDA is evolving and that has informed the decision of the Agency to keep re-imagining itself. He noted that the Agency recently re-crafted its vision and mission to reflect the current realities in the industry.

Inuwa further explained that the NITDA’s Strategic Roadmap and Action Plan (SRAP 2024-2027) 2.0 is anchored on eight pillars which include; Fostering Digital Literacy and Cultivating Talents, Building a Robust Technology Research Ecosystem, Strengthening Policy Implementation and Legal Frameworks, Promoting Inclusive Access to Digital Infrastructure and Services, Enhancing Cybersecurity and Digital Trust, Nurturing an Innovative and Entrepreneurial Ecosystem, Forging Strategic Partnerships and Collaborations, and Cultivating a Vibrant Organisational Culture with an Agile Workforce.

NIMC Self Serve Solution
NIMC Self Serve Solution

In her remarks, the NIMC’s Director General, expressed the enthusiasm of the Commission to collaborate with NITDA in advancing the digital economy sector stating that:

“No institutions can implement all its policies and programs in isolation, we need each other to achieve the set targets.” 

Engr. Coker further informed the gathering that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has signed a circular on data integration and harmonisation of the Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs) and on PKI for growth and development of the country.

The highlight of the meeting was the inauguration of a 12-man committee that is saddled with the responsibility of kick-starting and harmonising the initiatives and the committee is expected to deliver a comprehensive implementation report in the coming weeks.

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Data Democratisation Done Right: Building Self-Service Systems That Empower Non-Analysts https://techeconomy.ng/data-democratisation-done-right-building-self-service-systems-that-empower-non-analysts/ https://techeconomy.ng/data-democratisation-done-right-building-self-service-systems-that-empower-non-analysts/#respond Sun, 14 May 2023 16:16:14 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=164658 By all accounts, data democratisation sounds like a noble ambition: remove barriers to information, reduce dependencies, and allow anyone in the business to make informed decisions. But few understand the depth and discipline it takes to implement it responsibly.

For Henry Oribe, a senior data analyst whose work sits at the intersection of technical rigour and business impact, democratisation isn’t a one-off project, it’s an evolving system of trust, design, and accountability.

Over the years, Henry has observed a pattern common to many organisations. Business teams want to move faster, access data on their own, and reduce their reliance on centralised analytics teams.

Meanwhile, analysts worry about misinterpretation, duplication, and flawed conclusions. Striking the balance between autonomy and governance has become Henry’s central focus, and he’s done so by building what he calls “trustworthy independence.”

At the heart of this approach lies a shift, from analysts as gatekeepers of information to enablers of intelligence. This mindset change begins with the structure of the data ecosystem itself.

Henry doesn’t believe in handing over raw datasets to untrained hands. Instead, he focuses on designing semantic layers, human-readable representations of data definitions that abstract complexity without oversimplifying.

Tools like Looker and Power BI, when configured correctly, allow business users to navigate dashboards and run reports based on pre-defined metrics and dimensions, rather than writing SQL queries from scratch.

But giving access to tools is the easy part. What makes Henry’s approach effective is the architectural foundation that supports this access. Data catalogues play a critical role.

By documenting datasets, data lineage, ownership, and usage patterns, catalogues reduce the cognitive load on end-users and act as a safeguard against misuse.

In Henry’s recent projects, introducing Metabase’s integrated catalogue helped business teams distinguish between authoritative data and exploratory datasets, reducing duplicated work and inconsistencies in reporting.

Governance remains essential. Henry has led initiatives that implemented robust role-based access control (RBAC) systems, mapping access not just to organisational roles but also to specific use cases. For instance, a product manager might have visibility into product usage metrics but no access to personally identifiable customer information.

Finance teams, on the other hand, require deeper visibility into revenue flows but have no need to touch behavioural datasets.

By aligning access with need, Henry ensures compliance without throttling curiosity.

Training also plays a critical part in this transition. Rather than offering one-time workshops, Henry promotes ongoing collaboration between analysts and business stakeholders.

In practice, this means building “data circles”, monthly forums where users can review how they’ve used data to make decisions, surface challenges, and identify gaps in understanding.

In these sessions, analysts like Henry model how to frame better questions, critique flawed assumptions, and iterate toward better insights.

Henry’s philosophy mirrors the evolution seen at companies like Shopify and Airbnb. At Shopify, the move from centralised BI to a decentralised model involved creating a common language around metrics, what constitutes an active user, a churned customer, or a successful transaction.

Similarly, Airbnb built Minerva, an internal semantic layer that ensured consistent metric definitions across dashboards. Both companies saw measurable outcomes: reduced backlog for analytics teams, faster decision-making cycles, and improved business responsiveness.

Henry has brought this spirit into the organisations he’s served. In one instance, a marketing team that previously waited two weeks for insights began generating campaign reports within hours of launch.

But success isn’t just anecdotal. Henry measures impact through adoption metrics, how many users interact with dashboards, how frequently they return, and whether they act on the insights provided.

He also tracks downstream effects: are product strategies evolving based on usage data? Are customer support teams resolving issues faster with access to sentiment dashboards?

Notably, Henry does not advocate for unbounded freedom. Guardrails matter. He’s built alert systems that flag when dashboards are misconfigured or when KPIs deviate from expected ranges.

He’s integrated audit trails that show who made changes, when, and why. These controls don’t limit access, they reinforce accountability.

To Henry Oribe, data democratisation isn’t about letting go of control. It’s about building enough confidence in your systems and in your people to share ownership of insights.

It’s about elevating the questions people ask, not just the tools they use to find answers. And above all, it’s about designing with integrity, because true empowerment doesn’t come from access alone, but from understanding what to do with it.

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