06-28-2026, 10:43 PM
Many people delay starting a business because they believe they need a huge amount of capital.
In reality, many successful businesses started with very little. What they had was the willingness to begin, learn, reinvest their profits, and build relationships with customers.
Take the palm oil business as an example.
One person waits until they have ₦1 million before making their first sale.
Another starts with just ₦40,000, buys a few litres of palm oil, repackages them into smaller bottles, sells them, reinvests the profit, and repeats the process.
Two years later, the second person may have hundreds of regular customers, while the first person may still be waiting for the "right amount" to start.
The truth is that capital is important, but customers are the real foundation of a successful business.
If people trust you and keep buying from you, your profits can finance your expansion. Suppliers may extend credit, banks and investors become more willing to support you, and your business can grow because there is already demand for what you sell.
On the other hand, having millions of naira without customers can quickly lead to losses.
The ultimate goal of any business is not simply to have more money. It is to build a loyal customer base. Once demand becomes greater than your capacity, finding additional capital becomes much easier because the business has already proven itself.
Don't wait for perfect conditions.
Start with what you have, no matter how small.
Serve your customers well.
Reinvest your profits.
Stay consistent.
Over time, small beginnings can become great businesses.
In reality, many successful businesses started with very little. What they had was the willingness to begin, learn, reinvest their profits, and build relationships with customers.
Take the palm oil business as an example.
One person waits until they have ₦1 million before making their first sale.
Another starts with just ₦40,000, buys a few litres of palm oil, repackages them into smaller bottles, sells them, reinvests the profit, and repeats the process.
Two years later, the second person may have hundreds of regular customers, while the first person may still be waiting for the "right amount" to start.
The truth is that capital is important, but customers are the real foundation of a successful business.
If people trust you and keep buying from you, your profits can finance your expansion. Suppliers may extend credit, banks and investors become more willing to support you, and your business can grow because there is already demand for what you sell.
On the other hand, having millions of naira without customers can quickly lead to losses.
The ultimate goal of any business is not simply to have more money. It is to build a loyal customer base. Once demand becomes greater than your capacity, finding additional capital becomes much easier because the business has already proven itself.
Don't wait for perfect conditions.
Start with what you have, no matter how small.
Serve your customers well.
Reinvest your profits.
Stay consistent.
Over time, small beginnings can become great businesses.


