Africa-Press – Botswana. It wasn’t Bitcoin hype or a bull market that drew Ernest Nnamdi into blockchain. It was a bank queue.
In 2018, under the unforgiving Enugu sun, a young Ernest stood outside a local bank in Nsukka, waiting to withdraw his own money. The network was down again. The line barely moved. Tempers flared. People fanned themselves with withdrawal slips. Hours passed. Nothing changed.
“I remember thinking, this system isn’t sustainable,” he says. “People shouldn’t have to lose an entire day just to move their own money.”
Frustration became fuel
At the time, Ernest was studying Banking and Finance at the University of Nigeria. He expected a future in corporate finance and wealth management. But that day in the sun became a pivot point. If banking was supposed to make money movement easier, why did it feel like a punishment?
“I realised I didn’t just want to work in finance,” he says. “I wanted to fix it.”
After graduation, while searching for a traditional finance role, he joined the HNG Internship software development track, just to stay productive. The plan was to write code for a few weeks, then return to banking.
That did not happen.
Ernest excelled. His grounding in statistics and logic made software engineering feel familiar. Problem-solving became addictive.
“I started to see coding as a way of solving the same financial problems,” he says. “Only this time, I could build the tools myself.”
The pivot to fintech
If finance was the industry, technology would be the leverage. Blockchain sat directly in the overlap he cared most about: trust, speed, transparency and access.
It was not just a career shift. It was a mission.
“Blockchain showed me what finance could look like if people did not have to depend on broken infrastructure,” he says.
His first professional role came at Munchkin Labs, where he worked as a Frontend Engineer, helping build blockchain-powered financial tools built for African users. It was the moment theory became reality.
“I was not just writing code,” Ernest says. “I was building systems that could empower millions of people to move money without barriers.”
But as the tech improved, a new problem emerged. People did not know how to use it.
“Technology only changes lives when people can access it,” he says. “And that was the missing link.”
From engineer to evangelist
To fix adoption, Ernest pivoted again. This time into Developer Relations. It was a strategic move. Build the infrastructure, then teach the world how to use it.
That shift led him to the Celo Foundation, a global blockchain ecosystem focused on financial inclusion. There, Ernest became one of the most active Web3 educators on the continent, driving developer engagement through technical documentation, workshops, hackathons and hands-on training.
He helped thousands of developers turn confusing Web3 jargon into working applications.
Now building for global scale
Today, Ernest continues that mission as a Developer Relations Engineer at Morph, a next-generation blockchain infrastructure platform that is building scalable Layer-2 solutions in partnership with Bitget and Bitget Wallet.
He runs hackathons, trains developers and builds educational programs that onboard users into Web3 across multiple continents.
Through this work, Ernest has become one of the most recognisable African voices in global blockchain advocacy.
“When I speak at conferences,” he says, “I am not just representing myself. I am representing a continent that is ready to build, innovate and lead.”
Still connected to the grassroots
Behind the global stages, Ernest is still on the ground.
Through Hasheed Emergent, GOMYCODE and other ecosystem programs, he mentors young blockchain engineers, teaches financial inclusion and helps communities understand how blockchain can solve real-world problems, not just speculation.
He has delivered talks at the Stellar Blockchain Conference, Lagos Blockchain Week, the API Conference, and other global industry events, breaking down complex concepts for thousands of developers from Africa to Singapore.
And it all started in a bank queue, under a scorching Enugu sun.
Ernest’s journey is the story of a new wave of African technologists, people who are not just consuming technology but building its future.
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