CMU has spoken on stages across Africa and internationally, bringing a rare combination of operational depth and strategic clarity to conversations about agricultural transformation, food systems, and inclusive economic growth. Her keynotes are not drawn from theory alone; they are shaped by over two decades of building, failing, iterating, and scaling real ventures on the continent, from poultry value chains in Lagos to last-mile distribution models serving underserved markets.
Africa's food systems don't need more noise. They need people willing to build the infrastructure that turns potential into production.
Whether addressing heads of government, development partners, institutional investors, or young entrepreneurs, CMU’s message remains consistent: Africa’s agricultural economy is not lacking in activity; it lacks structure. Her keynotes challenge audiences to move beyond surface-level conversation and engage in the systemic work required to build food systems that are resilient, inclusive, and built to last. She has contributed to conversations at platforms connected to the World Economic Forum, The African Union, Stanford, Oxford’s Saïd Business School, and across leading African agricultural and enterprise development summits.









