Layer3 Says Africa’s Enterprise Ecosystem Has an Infrastructure Problem

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Layer3

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This Brand Press post is for informational purpose only and should not be interpreted as financial or investment guidance. Always ensure to carry out due diligence. Read all…

About Brand Press: Brand Press enables brands to directly engage with our technology-focused audience. The content is created independently of Techpoint Africa’s editorial team.

Interested in reaching our dynamic readership? Connect with us at business@techpoint.africa

This Brand Press post is for informational purpose only and should not be interpreted as financial or investment guidance. Always ensure to carry out due diligence. Read all…

About Brand Press: Brand Press enables brands to directly engage with our technology-focused audience. The content is created independently of Techpoint Africa’s editorial team.

Interested in reaching our dynamic readership? Connect with us at business@techpoint.africa

Africa’s enterprise ecosystem has no shortage of innovation. What many struggle with is everything underneath the product.

Many digital businesses across the continent still operate with fragmented systems for cloud

hosting, networking, cybersecurity, and enterprise IT support, a gap that often becomes visible only when companies begin to scale.

Layer3 says this is one of the most overlooked constraints in Africa’s digital economy.

The company, which provides cloud services, fibre connectivity, cybersecurity, managed

services, and enterprise network solutions, argues that while attention has largely focused on funding, product development, and market expansion, the real challenge lies in the systems that keep businesses operational at scale.

For over two decades, Layer3 has worked with businesses across sectors including finance,

telecommunications, government, healthcare, and enterprise services, building what it describes as the backbone of Nigeria’s digital infrastructure ecosystem.

Now, as it marks 21 years of operations at Africa Technology Expo (ATE) 2026, the company is placing renewed focus on its role as an enabler of business continuity and digital scale. “Layer3 is the trusted infrastructure partner behind Nigeria’s digital growth, delivering secure, locally hosted cloud, networking, cybersecurity, and managed IT solutions that power businesses at scale, ” said Oyaje Idoko, CEO of Layer3.

He added that many of the challenges facing startups and enterprises are not necessarily product-related, but infrastructure-related.

“Many businesses underestimate how much infrastructure determines their ability to grow. If

your systems are unstable, everything else becomes harder to scale, ” he said.

The company’s positioning comes at a time when African businesses are increasingly

prioritising operational efficiency, data security, and system reliability over rapid but unstable expansion.

In many cases, startups and enterprises are now seeking infrastructure partners rather than

multiple vendors, in a bid to reduce fragmentation and improve accountability across their technology stack.

This shift is also influencing how companies scale.Cloud hosting decisions, cybersecurity frameworks, and network reliability are no longer back-office considerations. They are becoming core business decisions that directly impact growth, customer trust, and regulatory compliance.

Layer3’s participation in ATE 2026 reflects this broader industry shift. The company will also

spotlight its cloud credit programme for African builders and enterprise teams, designed to

support eligible companies with access to infrastructure resources needed to build and scale digital products more efficiently.

The Expo, scheduled for June 26–27 at the National Theatre in Lagos, is expected to host more than 7,000 participants including C-suite executives, enterprise leaders, and policymakers.

Organisers say the 2026 edition is targeting up to $890 million in ecosystem deal activity.

For Layer3, the platform provides an opportunity to highlight the infrastructure layer behind Africa’s growing digital economy.

As Africa’s digital economy continues to expand, the conversation is gradually shifting from product creation to operational resilience.

For many African businesses, growth is no longer just about building better products. It is about building on stronger systems. And increasingly, infrastructure is becoming the real