When Ebola hit Nigeria in 2014, Oluranta Oladepo's father, a professor of public health, told her the government wasn't doing enough to keep people informed about the disease.
So the MBA student at Lagos Business School teamed up with Joel Ogunsola, a Microsoft employee, to create "Stop Ebola," a website that had more than a million hits by the time the disease had ended up in West Africa.
"We eventually got someone, but the website development timeline took way longer than expected," Oladepo tells Ijeoma Thomas of Fast Company.
"Surmounting that hurdle and getting the solution live was the eye-opener that marked the beginning of Tech4Dev.
So, in 2019, we decided to fully focus on digital education, which involved digital skills training, job matching, and advocacy."
Now, Oladepo is the executive director and co-founder of Tech4Dev, a non-profit that offers digital skills training, entrepreneurship opportunities, and more in 30 African countries.
"We realized that technology was the future and that Africans needed to have access to the right skill set to become contributors and not only consumers," she says.
"At the same time, technology provides access to opportunities for decent work."
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