 The Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, has underscored the need to catch the population young if Nigeria wants to be a hub in the world of information communication technology. LCCI's chairman of Trade Promotion Board, Le'e Kupu Luye, dropped this hint while fielding questions from newsmen on the sidelines of LCCI's Information Communication Technology and Telecommunications Expo. He underscored the need for the country to be intentional about knowledge by using it, by looking at its educational system in order to develop ICT. And why do Nigeria find themselves where we are today? In terms of penetration, in terms of what our guys are doing in the ICT world? Because of the level level education, the growth of Nigeria University, but we think at this time those growths have to be real, how to be developed, how to be supported. And that is the only thing. If I look at one of the most popular Asian countries, two of them, you can see that why are they way there? Today, there is no major ICT company around the world, that you don't see an Indian. In most cases, they would cover about 30 to 50 percent of the employee and developer. In a related development, Director General of National Information Technology, the Development Agency, Inua Abdulayee says, as a regulator, they will continue with policies and programs to enable the ICT ecosystem and talents in the sector. Other speakers underscore the competence of the country in tackling cyber security and crime. So, we have the talent and cyber security is not only a Nigerian issue, it's a global issue. As we digitize, everything will be online and people will go there, the criminals. Because today, cyber crime is one of the most lucrative business in the world. It's worth more than 7 trillion US dollars as we speak. And it is projected to reach 10 trillion US dollars by 2025. So, the criminals are investing hugely in it. Therefore, we also need to build the awareness for our own cyber hygiene and help curate our own cyber landscape in the country. You see, Nigeria, to some extent, is already there. The need now is to coordinate properly and ultimately drive the transformation across everyone. As you know, Nigeria now has a population above 200 million. And the population, 60 percent of the population is the youthful age population. That is between 18 to 25 years. So, that is it. But you are also aware of the fact that out of the seven unicorns that we have in Africa, five of them have their roots in Nigeria here. LCCI won businesses, business entities to brace up for disruption as technology continues to shape the way businesses are praised across the globe. The theme of the export was to detect disrupts transforming industries with innovation.