Talent alone is not enough in 2025. You can be the most talented artist, designer, writer, or content creator in Nigeria but if nobody knows you exist, your talents will remain hidden.
I have seen so many Naija creatives miss out on opportunities, not because they are not good, but because they haven’t learned the most important skill of all: self selling. And not fake a life you don’t live or pretending to be someone you are not. I mean creating your own personal brand so unique and valuable that people can’t ignore you.
Why Personal Branding Matters in Nigeria
In a noisy online world, people don’t just buy products or services—they buy people. Your brand is the story they tell themselves about you when you’re not in the room.
When someone hears your name, do they think “that’s the guy who creates powerful album covers” or “that’s the lady who writes stories that make you cry”? If the answer is “I don’t know”, then you have work to do.
Think about it:
Davido isn’t just selling music—he’s selling OBO, the lifestyle.
Denrele isn’t just hosting shows—he’s selling shock value, the wild fashion, the energy that makes him unforgettable.
Tems isn’t just selling her voice—she’s selling that calm, soulful aura that makes you stop and listen.
This is personal branding in action. It’s the ability to package yourself in a way that sticks in people’s minds long after they’ve scrolled past you. And as a Naija creative in 2025, you can’t afford to blend into the noise.
Step 1: Define Your Creative Identity
Before you start posting on Instagram, Hive, or TikTok, sit down and answer:
Who am I as a creative?
Who are you really?
If someone had to describe you in three words, what would they be? This isn’t just about your work—it’s about your vibe, your style, your energy. Are you the bold, edgy fashion stylist? The minimalist, classy web designer? The storyteller who can make even the most boring topic sound like magic?
🔹 Action Tip: Create a short personal brand statement. For example:
"I help small brands tell their story visually through bold, vibrant designs that make customers stop scrolling.”
Step 2: Do Not Tell, Show
There is no need in saying that you are a good person at what you are doing when there is no evidence. Your Instagram, portfolio, your reaction to DMs, and other things people learn about you.
In 2025, Naija creatives who are successful do not wait to be invited to large events to reveal their talent, they make it themselves. You are a photographer? Put that street shoot up you did coming home. You a writer? Tell me that micro-story you made up on the way to work as you sat in traffic.
Action Tip: All you post must be able to respond to this question: Does this help my brand identity?
Step 3: Learn to live in the online world
Come on, in 2025 you need to be online or you go unnoticed.
Your stage is platforms such as Instagram, TikTok, X (Twitter), YouTube, and even Hive/Ecency. However, the thing is that you cannot be everywhere half-way. Choose one to three platforms on which you can easily dominate.
On both of them, ensure that your bio is crisp, your profile picture clean and identifiable and your posts feel the same. That is how people begin to identify your work even before the name is seen.
Action Tip: Take a course in some simple skills of content creation: editing, captions, hooks, and storytelling. Your posts ought to sound and appear like you.
Step 4: Build Networks as though Your Next Big Break Depends on It (Because It Does)
Who you know precedes what you can do in the creative industry in Naija. However, networking is not a process of begging to have opportunities, it is a process of establishing real connections.
Attend parties. Comment on other creatives. Work on assignments. Give value first then seek favors. Before people remember what you are pitching to them, they will remember how you made them feel.
Action Tip: Start a “Creative Circle” on WhatsApp, Telegram, or Hive for people in your niche. Share tips, opportunities, and feedback. It builds loyalty and authority.
Don’t try to be everything to everyone. If you’re a photographer, are you about wedding shoots, street photography, or commercial branding? If you’re a writer, are you about deep storytelling, sales copy, or inspirational content?
Clarity is power.****
Step 5: Own Your Story
Stories are more powerful than products. Tell your experience the ups, the downs and even the downright humiliating ones.
Tell us how you began to draw on scrap pieces of paper when NEPA had a blackout or how you edited your first video on a borrowed phone. These tales make you familiar. They cause your audience to cheer you up.
People don’t connect with talent, they connect with stories.
Why do you do what you do? How did you start? What challenges have you faced? Naija audiences especially love an underdog story that shows them the real you.
The more relatable your journey is, the more people will root for you, share your work, and keep you top of mind.
🔹 Action Tip: Once a week, post something personal about your creative journey your struggles, wins, or lessons.
Step 6: Be consistent cross platforms
Whether a user discovers you on Hive, Instagram, LinkedIn or Twitter (X), you should sound, look and be the same.
Use a similar profile picture or a similar appearance.
Make your bio simple, clear and result oriented.
Post things that support your authority.
When you have professional and inspiring Hive post, and your Instagram is all random memes and nothing creative, you are giving mixed messages.
Step 7: Show, Don’t Just Tell
You say you’re a writer? Post snippets of your work.
You say you’re a designer? Share before-and-after projects.
You say you’re a musician? Post raw behind-the-scenes clips.
In Naija, we say “evidence dey kill argument.” Don’t just claim, prove.
Step 8: Establish Relationships, not just Followers
There are too many creatives who care about followers rather than connections. Respond to remarks. Promote the work of other people. Collaborate.
It is even more essential on Hive, as your activity towards others can either make a post go unnoticed or receive numerous upvotes by the community.
Step 9: Position Yourself to Opportunity
A personal brand is the magnet, it brings opportunities even when you are asleep.
Maintain your portfolio.
Make people aware that you are available to take commissions, gigs, or collaborations.
Ensure that people can easily reach you.
When your dream client visits your Hive profile today, will he/she have a sufficient reason to hire you?
Step 10: Continue to Learn and Change
In 2025, things are evolving quickly: algorithms, tendencies, and platforms. Continue to hone your skills. Get to know about SEO of your Hive posts. Read about Instagram reel storytelling. Discover Artificial intelligence tools in design, video and writing.
A personal brand that ceases to evolve is unnoticed.
Selling yourself isn’t about arrogance—it’s about making sure your talent gets the visibility it deserves. As a Naija creative, your personal brand is your currency. Build it with authenticity, consistency, and value, and watch how doors start opening for you.
If you found this post helpful, follow me here on Hive for more tips on personal branding, creative growth, and making your work stand out in a crowded world.