At the inaugural Digital Creator Africa Summit, media entrepreneur and #WithChude
host Chude Jideonwo unveiled new data positioning the Nigerian creator economy as
one of the most commercially powerful industries on the continent.
Highlighting explosive growth and overlooked business models, Jideonwo revealed that:

- Tunde Ednut, the former musician turned Instagram media mogul, is estimated to
earn over $5,000 a day through his platform — with a business model based on affiliate
promotion, Instagram advertising, and music amplification. - The hit podcast “I Said What I Said” (ISWIS) reportedly made approximately $200,000
in gross revenue from live events alone in a single month, drawing thousands of fans
across there US, the UK and Canada. - “What these numbers show,” Jideonwo said, “is that creators are no longer just
influencers — they are media companies, and increasingly, nation-builders.”
The summit, held in Lagos and attended by creators, investors, and media leaders, was
designed to shift the conversation from virality to value — reframing content creation as
infrastructure, not just entertainment.
As part of his address, Jideonwo announced his $500,000 personal commitment to the
FourthMainland Creator Fund — a catalytic investment vehicle to back high-potential
African creators with funding, IP support, and platform distribution.

live events in one month” — Chude Jideonwo unveils. Image Supplied By Agency
The summit, held in Lagos and attended by creators, investors, and media leaders, was
designed to shift the conversation from virality to value — reframing content creation as
infrastructure, not just entertainment.
As part of his address, Jideonwo announced his $500,000 personal commitment to the
FourthMainland Creator Fund — a catalytic investment vehicle to back high-potential
African creators with funding, IP support, and platform distribution.
“We’re building the Mavin Records of storytelling,” he said. “Not just with fame, but with
financial tools, ownership, and a full studio system that lets creators scale across the
continent and diaspora.”
The Creator Fund is part of the broader FourthMainland ecosystem, a creator
commerce platform set to launch in 2026. The platform will offer monetization tools,
subscription infrastructure, and joint-IP models built around African content —
positioning it as the first at-scale infrastructure for the continent’s growing $100B creator
economy.

live events in one month” — Chude Jideonwo unveils. Image Supplied By Agency
Jideonwo, whose ventures include Joy, Inc., #WithChude, and YNaija, closed with a call
to funders and policymakers: “If music had Mavin Records and tech had CcHub, then creators now have their studio
systems — their Mavins — and they’re building billion-dollar value chains without
waiting for permission.”
The keynote, titled “Overtaking is Allowed,” argued that Africa’s most important civic and
cultural shifts today are being led by independent creators, and that media-tech
infrastructure for creators is now one of the biggest opportunities for economic growth
across the continent.









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