In a world driven by noise, trends, and fleeting fame, true leadership rooted in vision and authenticity is rare. Yet, Prince Nnamdi Ekeh, Group Chief Executive Officer of Konga Group, continues to stand out as one of Africa’s most compelling digital trailblazers.
At just 30, the Oxford-trained entrepreneur has not only redefined the face of e-commerce in Africa but also become a global symbol of innovation, resilience, and transformative leadership.
His latest recognition at the iconic House of Lords, London, underscores this impact. In a historic moment, Prince Ekeh emerged as the youngest African ever to receive two prestigious global honours on the same day — the Forbes Best of Africa E-Commerce Leadership Award 2025 and the Distinguished EuroKnowledge Award for Emerging Leadership in Digital Transformation.
Before an audience of world leaders, innovators, and policymakers, the young Nigerian business executive didn’t just collect awards, he represented a continent’s digital awakening. His achievement is a resounding statement that Africa’s new generation of leaders is not waiting for the future; they are already shaping it.
Forbes and EuroKnowledge described his recognition as “a celebration of visionary courage and transformative impact,” honouring a leader who, at a remarkably young age, has built enduring institutions that power Africa’s digital economy. Prince Ekeh’s journey, as remarkable as it is inspiring, began long before the bright lights of global acclaim.

Born into a family steeped in innovation and enterprise, Nnamdi is the first son ofLeo Stan Ekeh, Africa’s foremost disruptive digital entrepreneur and founder of Zinox Group, and Lady Chioma Ekeh, a Mathematics whiz, Chartered Accountant and CEO of TD Africa, the continent’s largest tech distribution company in partnership with many Fortune 100 companies.
From an early age, he imbibed the family’s values of humility, discipline, innovation, and social responsibility, qualities that would later define his leadership style. His lineage reflects a deep-rooted entrepreneurial heritage: his great-grandfather, Mazi Ihentuge Ekeh, was one of the most prominent merchants in Onitsha, while his grandmother, a British-trained entrepreneur, designed the first galvanized waste bins used in Nigeria under the “Operation Clean and Green” initiative.
But it is Nnamdi’s personal story that truly sets him apart. At just 19, while studying at the University of Lancaster, he conceived Yudala, Africa’s first composite e-commerce platform. It was a bold, technology-driven venture that would employ hundreds of young Nigerians.
After years of learning the ropes within the Zinox Group, he led the strategic acquisition of Konga from global investors Naspers, Africa’s most valuable company and Kinnevik, a Swedish investment Company in 2018. The merger of Konga and Yudala under his leadership birthed Africa’s first true omnichannel e-commerce powerhouse, combining the convenience of digital retail with the trust of physical stores.
Today, Konga stands as a pillar of innovation, spanning fintech (KongaPay), logistics (Konga Logistics), healthcare (Konga Health), and travel (Konga Travel and Tours). The company serves over four million customers and about two hundred and fifty thousand merchants; an ecosystem that reflects Ekeh’s belief in what he calls “commercial scale with social soul.”
It was this belief that echoed through his electrifying Firestart speech at the House of Lords. Speaking before an audience that included international business magnates, ministers, and diplomats, he reflected on Africa’s entrepreneurial journey, urging leaders to build institutions that solve real problems and create lasting social impact.
“When we acquired Konga from Naspers and Kinnevik,” he said, “we chose the harder path, which was to build the rails of digital commerce for Nigeria and, ultimately, for Africa. Because entrepreneurship that truly changes lives must solve real problems, not just build pretty apps.”
He continued, “Every package delivered isn’t just commerce; it’s connection. A small business in Enugu selling to a customer in Kano for the first time. That’s what scalable social impact looks like; technology turning potential into prosperity.”
The powerful delivery earned him a standing ovation. His words were eloquent, purposeful, and filled with conviction, and they painted a portrait of a leader not driven by profit alone, but by impact. It was a reminder that Africa’s next growth story lies in young innovators who blend intellect with empathy, courage with humility, and technology with humanity.
Among the dignitaries present at the high-profile event were Nigeria’s Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Mohammed Idris; NAFDAC Director-General, Professor Mojisola Adeyeye; Professor Olufolake Abdulrazaq, wife of the Kwara State Governor; as well as many international icons such as Reebok Co-founder Joe Foster and Dragons’ Den star Richard Faileigh, both of whom were also honoured with Euroknowledge Awards
With this latest global recognition, Prince Nnamdi Ekeh has once again affirmed that Africa’s future is not a faraway dream, it is already unfolding. A product of legacy, discipline, and vision, he embodies the promise of a continent ready to shape its destiny.
In the grand halls of the House of Lords, history was not just made — it was redefined. And at its centre stood a young Nigerian whose story proves that greatness is not a matter of age, but of purpose.
