If you’ve been waiting for a real opportunity to step into tech or finally build that idea sitting in your head, this is one of those moments that shouldn’t pass you by.
A fresh push is happening in Osun State, and it’s tied to something much bigger than just a local program. It connects directly to Nigeria’s broader digital economy plan under the iDICE initiative.
According to the original report, Osun is actively calling on young people to apply for the iDICE Startup Bridge Founders Lab before the deadline. You can read the full details from the source hereWhat makes this interesting is not just the announcement, but what it actually means for everyday Nigerians trying to break into tech.
A real chance for young people to build something
This program is not built for already established startups alone. It is designed for people at different stages.
If you have just an idea
If you have started something small
If you are still figuring things out
You can still fit in.
The Founders Lab focuses on helping you turn raw ideas into something real. Think of it as a guided path where you don’t have to guess everything on your own.
Participants get access to mentorship, structured training, and even funding opportunities to move from idea to execution.
Why this matters more than it sounds
Let’s be honest. One of the biggest problems in Nigeria’s tech space is not talent. It’s access.
Access to guidance
Access to funding
Access to the right network
Most opportunities stay in places like Lagos or Abuja. This one is clearly trying to spread things wider.
The iDICE program itself was designed to reach founders across all states, not just the usual tech hubs.
That shift is important.
Because the next big startup might not come from Lagos. It could come from Osogbo, Kano, Enugu, or anywhere else.
The structure is actually solid
This isn’t just a random training.
There’s a proper system behind it.
The program is backed by major institutions like development banks and implemented through structured channels.
Inside the program, founders are guided through:
Understanding the problem they want to solve
Building a real product or prototype
Structuring a business model that can scale
And for those who progress, there’s potential funding to support the next stage.
The bigger picture most people ignore
What’s happening here is part of a long game.
Nigeria is trying to build a pipeline of founders, not just fund a few startups.
That’s why programs like this focus heavily on early-stage founders who are usually ignored by investors.
It’s about preparing people to become investable, not just handing out money.
Something to think about
Opportunities like this don’t usually shout loud.
They move quietly, and the people who pay attention early are the ones who benefit the most.
If you’re serious about tech, building something, or even just exploring what’s possible, this is worth looking into.
Not next week
Not someday
Now
Because once the deadline passes, it’s gone.

