There is a specific kind of embarrassment that comes with sitting at a restaurant with your friends and…There is a specific kind of embarrassment that comes with sitting at a restaurant with your friends and…

She couldn’t afford a ₦4,000 meal. Now Ronnie Adeoye is building Lenora, a global career platform for Africans

2026/05/17 12:00
5 min read
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There is a specific kind of embarrassment that comes with sitting at a restaurant with your friends and quietly calculating whether you can afford what is on the menu. Sharon Ariyo Adeoye, known to most as Ronnie, knows that feeling intimately. One night out with friends, she could not afford a ₦4,000 meal. A friend paid for her. She went home that night and decided something had to change.

What happened next is the kind of story that sounds almost too neat in the retelling, but it is hers. She opened TikTok, watched videos on LinkedIn optimisation through the night, woke up the next morning, designed a flyer on Canva, posted it on her LinkedIn page, and started helping people redesign their professional profiles. She was not charging much at first. But people were getting jobs. Recruiters were noticing them. And slowly, the messages started coming in, not asking her to redo a profile, but asking who she was and how she had built what she built.

That is how Lenora was born, not from a business plan or a funding round, but from a night of scarcity that Ronnie refused to accept as permanent.

Today, Lenora is a career development, storytelling, and personal branding agency working with professionals who, as Ronnie puts it, “do amazing work but struggle to articulate the amazing work that they do.” The results speak for themselves. One client had NASA tech recruiters in his DMs within two weeks of Lenora working on his positioning. Another secured a US-based role remotely and later relocated to Germany. A third renegotiated their entire career trajectory, all through the power of how they showed up online and how clearly they could communicate their value.

“Right positioning can literally accelerate your life, accelerate your career, and in tandem, your life,” Ronnie says.

Lenora is solving a problem bigger than job applications

On the surface, what Lenora does looks like LinkedIn consulting. But Ronnie is quick to reframe that. The deeper issue she is trying to address is the relationship that millions of African professionals have with their work, one built on desperation rather than alignment.

“People are not really optimising for what they are skilled at anymore,” she says.“They are optimising for what is available for them to get food on their table.”

The economy forces people’s hands. You take the job that is there, not the one that fits. You study what your parents wanted, not what called to you. You build a career on a foundation that was never yours to begin with.

Ronnie herself lived this. She wanted to study arts in secondary school. Her parents and teachers pushed her into science. She ended up in a university programme she did not choose and spent nearly eight years navigating an educational path that was built for someone else’s vision of her life. She eventually studied agricultural economics, not because she loved it, but because the system handed it to her after she fought for something else.

Career Development

It is a story that resonates deeply across Nigeria and much of Africa. The young person who wanted to study mass communication but ended up in engineering. The graduate who studied medicine but is now trying to build a tech career, not because they love code, but because the job market sent them there.

Ronnie is not against reinvention, but she wants the reinvention to come from clarity, not desperation.

“Desperation as a foundation for your source of livelihood is very shaky,” she says. “When push comes to shove, when results are slow, when the manager is difficult, there’s nothing underneath.”

What Lenora is trying to build in people is a sense of purpose. The belief that your career can be something you build toward, not something that happens to you.

A global platform advancing African professional visibility

Beyond the individual client work, Ronnie is thinking bigger. Lenora’s long-term vision is to become a global platform for African career storytelling and professional visibility, an ecosystem, not just an agency. The plan includes career storytelling and personal branding support, visibility tools, mentorship access, strategic networks, workshops, learning resources, and a community of ambitious African professionals across industries and geographies.

There is also a cultural thread running through everything Lenora is building. Ronnie is concerned about what she calls the westernisation of the African professional identity, the way that optimising for global opportunities has quietly eroded the cultural distinctiveness that makes African professionals interesting in the first place. A current project is exploring how African professionals can preserve their heritage and identity even as they compete on a global stage.

She couldn't afford a ₦4,000 meal. Now Sharon "Ronnie" Adeoye is building Lenora, a global career platform for African professionalsSharon Adeoye

That question, how to be African and global at the same time, is one that a generation of professionals is grappling with in real time. On LinkedIn, on Substack, in remote job applications to companies in Amsterdam and San Francisco, Africans are showing up with enormous talent and often underselling themselves because they were never taught how to translate their experience into language that global employers recognise.

Lenora wants to fix that translation problem. Not by asking African professionals to sound less African, but by giving them the tools to sound more like themselves, clearly, confidently, and loudly enough for the world to hear.

It started with a ₦4,000 meal that Ronnie could not afford. What she is building now is the infrastructure to make sure that feeling becomes a rarity, not just for her, but for every African professional who has ever sat across from an opportunity and struggled to explain why they deserve it.

Similar read: Bad hostel toilets gave Adetokunbo Ogunnoiki an idea, now Lagos State wants in

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