Some companies do everything right — and still fail. Why?
In this episode of the Frankly Business Podcast, Africa’s foremost leadership strategist Niyi Adesanya explains why vision, talent, and execution are not enough without strong systems, culture, and leadership design.
Drawing from real-world examples like Nokia and Kodak, Niyi breaks down the hidden factors that cause organizations — and even nations — to collapse despite having smart people and big ideas.
In this conversation, we explore:
• Why “doing everything right” can still lead to failure
• How systems defeat vision without structure
• Culture vs strategy: what truly drives performance
• The ambidextrous organization: how to explore and exploit effectively
• Why fixing infrastructure without fixing mindset doesn’t work
• How AI is reshaping consulting, leadership, and the knowledge industry
This is not a motivational conversation.
It’s a thinking conversation for founders, CEOs, executives, consultants, and leaders building for long-term relevance.
00:00 – Intro: Why Great Companies Still Fail
02:18 – Who Is Niyi Adesanya?
08:06 – How Sam Adeyemi Mentored Me (Mentorship, Relationships & Early Formation)
09:15 – How I Organize The Largest Leadership BootCamp in Nigeria
13:10 – Why Vision Without Systems Always Breaks
16:05 – Culture vs Infrastructure: What Really Drives Performance
20:48 – The Nigeria Case Study: Leadership, Governance & Mindset
26:14 – Maintenance Culture & Why Systems Collapse Over Time
33:00 – The Ambidextrous Strategy in Organization: Explore vs Exploit
34:10 – Nokia & Kodak: Doing Everything Right — and Still Failing
38:25 – AI, Consulting & the Death of Motivation Without Results
46:45 – The Business of Speaking & Consulting 50:15 - The Highest Paid Speaker in Nigeria
52:02 – Motivational Speaking is Dead
53:40 – Final Thoughts: Question for Femi Otedola
55:00 – Closing & Outro
Credits:
Music: No Limits by ArcticFoxMusic
Link to Video: https://youtu.be/ypGySPBoOIg?si=s9RZ377Btl4rWPkF
️ This is the Frankly Business Podcast — where Africa’s sharpest minds break it down.