Design Thinking for Social Good: Building Inclusive Solutions That Truly Serve Us
I’ve always believed that meaningful change starts with proximity. When you live close to a problem, you don’t just see the symptoms, you see the systems. You understand the frustrations buried beneath the surface and the dreams that are often dismissed as unrealistic.
Here in Nigeria, where I live, the challenges confronting young people are not abstract. They are personal, daily, and deeply felt. From high youth unemployment to a broken education system and limited access to digital infrastructure, the barriers we face are systemic, and yet, many of us are still pushing through them, every single day.
But here’s the thing: we are not short on ideas. What we often lack are frameworks that allow those ideas to evolve into solutions that actually work. One of the most powerful frameworks I’ve encountered is design thinking.
Design Thinking: More Than a Method, It’s a Mindset
Design thinking is not just a process, it’s a posture. It invites us to lead with empathy, define problems from the inside out, and co-create with the very people who are affected by the issues.
Rather than rushing to fix things from a distance, it prompts a critical shift: From “How do we fix them?” to “How do we build them?” And this mindset matters. Because when solutions are built for people but not with them, they often miss the mark. But when communities are engaged as co-creators, not just beneficiaries, something powerful happens, solutions become more inclusive, more sustainable, and more effective.
Two Powerful Nigerian Examples: Paystack and uLesson
In Nigeria, two standout examples of design thinking in action are Paystack and uLesson, platforms built not only to solve problems but to serve real people, with real needs.
Paystack: Understanding the Hustle Economy
Paystack didn’t set out to simply “make payments easier.” It emerged from a nuanced understanding of what it means to run a business in Nigeria. Failed card transactions, unreliable gateways, and customer distrust were major hurdles for digital entrepreneurs.
By building a clean, intuitive interface and providing seamless APIs for developers and business owners, Paystack lowered the barrier to entry for thousands of youth-led businesses. From side hustlers to small and medium enterprises, many young Nigerians now have access to global customers and revenue streams, all because a payment system was built with them in mind. That’s design thinking in action: starting with empathy, identifying friction points, and iterating toward simplicity.
uLesson & Miva: Rethinking Education from the Ground Up
uLesson, on the other hand, has completely reimagined how young people learn, especially in underserved regions. With interactive video lessons, live classes, and curriculum-aligned quizzes, it delivers what the traditional system often fails to: engaging, accessible, quality education via mobile devices.
But the real game-changer is Miva Open University, a part of the uLesson group. Miva tackles Nigeria’s higher education crisis, characterized by constant strikes, limited university slots, and high dropout rates, by offering flexible, affordable, fully-online degree programs. It’s a bold step toward educational equity, built around the lifestyles, income levels, and learning habits of modern African students. Again, this isn’t about imposing a Western-style university model. It’s about designing education that fits our context, our limitations, and our potential.
Real Innovation Starts from the Margins
In my own work, designing digital content, co-leading youth programs, and engaging with grassroots communities, I’ve learned that the most transformative ideas often come from the people closest to the pain.
It’s not always the best-funded rooms that spark the brightest innovations. It’s the young woman tutoring kids from her home because schools are underfunded. It’s the tech-savvy graduate teaching himself to code because the job market has no room for him. It’s the small-town entrepreneur building a side hustle from their smartphone.
When we create systems that invite these voices into the room, and empower them to lead, innovation takes on new depth. It becomes real, rooted, and regenerative.
Co-Creation Over Charity
Despite all the progress, we still need to do better. Too many tools are still built without deep community insight. Too many young people remain excluded from the very conversations about the problems that define their futures.
That’s why I advocate for a mindset shift in innovation and social good: Solutions must be co-created, not donated.
Design thinking makes space for this. It demands curiosity, humility, and proximity. It encourages collaboration over command, discovery over assumptions, and people over processes.
Because ultimately, innovation isn’t innovation if it isn’t inclusive. It isn’t innovation if it isn’t relatable, usable, and grounded in the realities of those it claims to serve.
Don’t just build for us.
- Build with us.
- Empathy is innovation.
- Inclusion is strategy.
- And young people are not waiting for the future.
- We are designing it right now.
