By Marycynthia Chidiogo Odidika
I recently visited Anambra State, and what I discovered should concern every business leader and investor in the region. We’re sitting on a goldmine of creative talent, but we’re treating it like it doesn’t exist.
The Financial Reality We’re Ignoring
Nigeria’s creative economy contributed over ₦2.3 trillion to GDP in recent years, yet the East is barely participating in this boom. While we pride ourselves as industrious people, we’ve limited our definition of “business” to buying and selling physical goods. But here’s the thing. Creativity is business. Ideas, writing, digital services, content creation—these aren’t hobbies. They’re revenue streams.
Why Eastern Creatives Are Migrating (And Taking Their Money With Them)
Before my Lagos move, I didn’t understand the creative brain drain. Now I do. When copywriters, digital marketers, graphic designers, and content creators leave for Lagos, they’re not just chasing dreams, they’re chasing actual income opportunities that don’t exist back home.
Think about it financially: A skilled copywriter in Lagos can earn ₦200,000-₦500,000 monthly. That same talent in Awka or Onitsha? They’re probably unemployed or underpaid because businesses here don’t yet understand the value of professional creative services.
The Business Case for Creative Investment
Smart entrepreneurs should see this as opportunity, not obstacle. Every business needs marketing, branding, content creation, and digital presence. Instead of outsourcing these services to Lagos agencies, imagine if we had thriving creative hubs in Enugu, Awka, and Onitsha.
The first mover advantage is massive. Anyone willing to start a PR company or marketing agency in these areas would need to invest in education first—helping businesses understand why professional creative services matter. But once that foundation is laid, you’re looking at an underserved market with huge potential.
The Hidden Cost of Creative Neglect
When we tell young people to “be serious” and abandon creative pursuits for traditional business, we’re potentially killing the next big thing. That artist could collaborate an exhibit in museums. That writer could launch a content agency. That musician could build an entertainment business empire.
Investment Opportunities Eastern Nigeria is Missing
They are;
Creative co-working spaces
Digital marketing agencies
Content creation studios
Training institutes for creative skills
Creative talent management companies
The Path Forward
This isn’t about charity(if thought it would be appreciated especially from our government)it’s about smart business. The creative economy is growing globally, and regions that invest early will reap the benefits. Eastern Nigeria has the talent; we just need the infrastructure and mindset shift.
For business leaders and investors reading this: the creative economy isn’t coming—it’s here. The question is whether you’ll participate or watch other regions capture all the value our talents create.
This writer is in the marketing space as copywriter and content strategist who believes the East’s creative potential is an untapped goldmine waiting for the right investors.