The conversation around small and medium enterprise development in Nigeria is shifting from basic formalisation to stronger corporate governance.
At the recent SMEs Financial Reporting Awareness Campaign in Awka, Anambra State, the Financial Reporting Council of Nigeria made a clear case: micro, small, and medium enterprises should stop treating financial reporting as administrative compliance and start seeing it as a strategic asset for growth, funding, and long-term survival.
The campaign, themed “Benefits for Businesses, Cooperatives and the National Economy,” brought together regulators, state executives, and small business associations to strengthen financial literacy and standardise bookkeeping across the sub-national economy.
Beyond tax paperwork
For many emerging founders, financial record-keeping has long been seen as a burden meant mainly to satisfy tax authorities or corporate registrars. The current campaign is designed to challenge that mindset.
Speaking on behalf of the FRC Executive Secretary, Dr Rabiu Olowo, the Director of Accounting Standards, Kabiru Jemaku, said SMEs remain central to Nigeria’s economy through job creation, wealth generation, and local innovation. He also noted that weak financial visibility remains one of the biggest barriers preventing these businesses from scaling.
When done properly, transparent financial reporting becomes a strategic tool:
- Data-driven decisions: Clear financial statements help business owners track operating costs, monitor margins, and identify unprofitable products or services.
- Access to capital: Banks, venture funds, and development finance institutions usually require verifiable records. Proper reporting helps close the trust gap and unlocks credit.
- Operational longevity: Reliable ledgers reveal burn rate and runway early, helping founders spot liquidity pressure before it becomes a crisis.
To make this shift more practical, Jemaku said the FRC is introducing simplified reporting frameworks for smaller businesses, alongside capacity-building programmes to reduce the technical burden.
Why Awka matters
Choosing Anambra State as the launch point for the campaign highlights the importance of strong regional commercial clusters. Edwin Olorunfemi, Executive Director of the New Era for Sustainable Leadership and Accountability Initiative, said local entrepreneurs already show resilience and discipline, but strict reporting is now essential for participating in the modern digital economy.
That is the real transition many founders now face. Hustle may help a business survive early stages, but structured reporting is what makes it auditable, bankable, and ready for institutional scale.
This view was echoed by Engr. Mike Obiekwe, Permanent Secretary in the Anambra State Ministry of Commerce and Industry, who represented the Commissioner. He welcomed the FRC’s intervention and called for similar financial literacy programmes across other states. In his view, long-term business survival depends on transparency, professional governance, and strategic partnerships.
What founders should do
For independent entrepreneurs, startup founders, and cooperative administrators, the message from Awka is simple: your books are not just for compliance. They are part of your growth infrastructure. Source Guardian News
Informal tracking and manual cash systems may work in the early days, but they create serious weaknesses once a business starts to scale. If founders want to attract capital, build credibility, and survive scrutiny, they need clean financial data, consistent reporting, and a stronger culture of accountability.
True corporate maturity begins when financial reporting stops feeling like a chore for the tax office and starts functioning as the engine that powers capital, credibility, and growth.
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