Jumia has named Temidayo Ojo as the new Chief Executive Officer for its Nigerian operations. The appointment signals a return to local-led strategy and sharper operational control within Africa’s most competitive e-commerce market. Ojo replaces Sunil Natraj, who led the company through a cost optimization phase that reduced adjusted EBITDA losses by more than thirty percent over two years.
Performance Track Record from Ghana to Nigeria
Since joining Jumia in 2020 as Head of Planning and Performance, Ojo has held several strategic roles including Chief Commercial Officer and CEO of Jumia Ghana. During his time in Ghana, repeat orders grew by thirty-two percent while new vendor activation outpaced regional averages. According to internal performance metrics reviewed by Techsoma, Ghana became one of Jumia’s most efficient operations under his leadership.
Ojo holds a degree in Electrical and Electronics Engineering from the University of Lagos and an MBA in Finance and Strategy from IESE Business School, as confirmed by multiple media outlets. Before joining Jumia, he worked in route-to-market design and performance optimisation for a major consumer goods company.
Group Endorsement and Executive Continuity
Jumia Group CEO Francis Dufay said Ojo is “a proven operator with a deep understanding of both our platform and the local market.” He added that this appointment is part of the company’s strategy to empower regional leaders who can balance growth with efficiency. Ojo’s previous position in Ghana will now be occupied by Seleem Musibau, maintaining executive continuity across West Africa.
Outgoing CEO Sunil Natraj is expected to take on an advisory role focused on group-wide logistics and cost reform.
Operational Priorities under New Leadership
Ojo assumes leadership at a time when Jumia Nigeria is shifting from broad expansion to focused, tech-led efficiency. Recent internal changes include the closure of underutilised logistics hubs and the introduction of basket-size thresholds for free delivery in major cities such as Lagos and Abuja.
According to sources familiar with Jumia’s Nigeria roadmap, the company plans to roll out a vendor scoring tool developed under Ojo’s leadership in Ghana. This tool ranks merchants based on fulfilment accuracy, return rates, and customer satisfaction. Implementation in Nigeria is expected in Q4 2025, with direct implications for platform visibility and vendor incentives.
Strategic Implications for Nigeria’s E-Commerce Sector
The promotion reflects a wider pattern in African tech where companies are placing greater responsibility in the hands of operators with local fluency and analytical strength. Rather than prioritising pure user acquisition, Ojo is expected to focus on revenue per order, regional warehouse consolidation, and vendor self-service capabilities.
Key developments to watch under Ojo’s leadership include:
- Adoption of machine learning for inventory restocking in Lagos and Port Harcourt
- Tiered tools for high-performing vendors linked to real-time performance metrics
- Potential return of incentives tied to customer lifetime value, not just order volume
Why This Move Matters
Jumia’s decision to elevate a market-native leader with engineering and finance credentials shows growing alignment between operational control and strategic direction. As the firm adjusts to investor pressure for profitability, Ojo will be tasked with executing a data-led growth model that serves both customers and shareholders.
Temidayo Ojo’s performance in the next twelve months will serve as a benchmark for whether regional e-commerce firms can scale intelligently without sacrificing user trust or financial discipline.
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