The podcast is free. The room is on Patreon → https://www.patreon.com/cw/Afropolitanpodcast

Mai Atafo told me something I can't unhear: "95% of luxury goods are made in China. They just put an Italian label on it."
Made in Guangzhou. Blessed in Florence. Priced like a miracle.
Mai could have played the same game. Source cheap. Label expensive. Collect the margin.
He refused.
Sixteen years ago, he walked away from a senior brand manager role at Guinness to build one of Nigeria's most recognized fashion houses. His mother called his wife: "Are you sure about this man?"
She believed before the evidence existed.
Today, Mai has dressed grooms across the continent, built a brand synonymous with Nigerian luxury, and learned every brutal lesson the fashion industry has to teach. He chose to manufacture in Nigeria when everyone told him he was crazy. He chose time over a house in Banana Island.
This conversation goes far beyond fashion. It's about what it really costs to build something authentic in a country that fights you at every turn.

AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTION
A limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only.
Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTr

WHERE TO FIND MAI ATAFO
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/maiatafo
Atafo Brand: https://www.instagram.com/atafo__

EPISODE SPONSORS
Vban: Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.com

CONVO BY AFROPOLITAN
Book 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/

AFROPOLITAN
Twitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitan
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcast
Newsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletter
Patreon: Patreon.com/AfropolitanPodcast


TIMESTAMPS

0:00 The runway is only 1% of the fashion industry
3:32 A common myth about building a business in Nigeria
5:50 What people don't see about the fashion industry
7:46 Kaftan tailors in Abuja outearning runway designers
10:14 Why fabric quality collapsed when the dollar misbehaved
17:07 The Guinness marketing framework that transformed his business
19:50 The consumer disposition funnel: loyal, regular, occasional, repertoire
21:38 Why he locked in on weddings as his niche
23:05 The playbook: "When you walked into my office as a groom, I knew exactly what to tell you"
23:21 Why creatives keep chasing newness over profit
27:48 Why ready to wear is nearly impossible in Nigeria
28:49 What he saw inside Chinese factories
31:09 The machines and systems that make Chinese manufacturing impossible to compete with
40:17 The buttonhole machine that costs ₦6.6 million and is currently broken
32:40 Nigerian customers vs corporations: the pressure on small businesses
35:27 The TikTok bride drama and designer accountability
45:18 The 95/5 rule: make it in China, add a zipper, call it Made in Italy
47:09 Building manufacturing capacity in Nigeria: a 5-10 year journey
51:19 Why Nigerian fashion needs a council like the CFDA
1:03:00 "Made in China is actually the highest quality available"
1:05:02 Why Chinese vendors freely share competitors with customers
1:12:23 The real cost of a Lagos fashion show: ₦50 million minimum
1:20:05 The December closing debate: why designers shut down when diaspora money arrives
1:27:41 Following his driver to catch him stealing fuel
1:33:13 "Money is a tool to buy your time back"
1:35:04 Why he chose time with his daughter over Banana Island
1:39:23 AI measuring and supplier ratings: tech that could change Nigerian fashion
1:47:14 Lagos Fashion Week: "Give them credit before you hit them"
1:53:03 The funding gap for medium-sized designers
1:58:00 Nigerian artist he'd love to collaborate with: Rema
2:00:46 Savile Row vs Italian tailoring
2:01:40 Why he supports Manchester United (and the story of his dad)
2:08:23 His favorite Nigerian designers and why they deserve more recognition
2:40:04 The Wedding Party partnership: how he got written into the script
2:51:01 How he maintains his values despite Nigeria's pressures
2:58:46 The World Bank rejection that became his new revenue benchmark
3:01:19 His wife as his "umbrella" who believed before the evidence existed

Afropolitan

Afropolitan

The Fashion Industry Crisis: Why Chasing the Runway Means Going Broke

APR 15, 2026185 MIN
Afropolitan

The Fashion Industry Crisis: Why Chasing the Runway Means Going Broke

APR 15, 2026185 MIN

Description

The podcast is free. The room is on Patreon → https://www.patreon.com/cw/AfropolitanpodcastMai Atafo told me something I can't unhear: "95% of luxury goods are made in China. They just put an Italian label on it."Made in Guangzhou. Blessed in Florence. Priced like a miracle.Mai could have played the same game. Source cheap. Label expensive. Collect the margin.He refused.Sixteen years ago, he walked away from a senior brand manager role at Guinness to build one of Nigeria's most recognized fashion houses. His mother called his wife: "Are you sure about this man?"She believed before the evidence existed.Today, Mai has dressed grooms across the continent, built a brand synonymous with Nigerian luxury, and learned every brutal lesson the fashion industry has to teach. He chose to manufacture in Nigeria when everyone told him he was crazy. He chose time over a house in Banana Island.This conversation goes far beyond fashion. It's about what it really costs to build something authentic in a country that fights you at every turn.AUNTY'S SCULPTURE COLLECTIONA limited collection by Anthony Azekwoh x Afropolitan. 100 pieces. Application only.Apply here: https://formless.ai/c/q1GB9jAzOWTrWHERE TO FIND MAI ATAFOInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maiatafoAtafo Brand: https://www.instagram.com/atafo__EPISODE SPONSORSVban: Open a free global account in minutes. Use code AFROPOLITAN: https://vban.comCONVO BY AFROPOLITANBook 1:1 calls with Africa's boldest thinkers: https://convo.vip/AFROPOLITANTwitter/X: https://x.com/afropolitanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/afropolitanpodcastNewsletter: https://www.afropolitan.io/newsletterPatreon: Patreon.com/AfropolitanPodcastTIMESTAMPS0:00 The runway is only 1% of the fashion industry3:32 A common myth about building a business in Nigeria5:50 What people don't see about the fashion industry7:46 Kaftan tailors in Abuja outearning runway designers10:14 Why fabric quality collapsed when the dollar misbehaved17:07 The Guinness marketing framework that transformed his business19:50 The consumer disposition funnel: loyal, regular, occasional, repertoire21:38 Why he locked in on weddings as his niche23:05 The playbook: "When you walked into my office as a groom, I knew exactly what to tell you"23:21 Why creatives keep chasing newness over profit27:48 Why ready to wear is nearly impossible in Nigeria28:49 What he saw inside Chinese factories31:09 The machines and systems that make Chinese manufacturing impossible to compete with40:17 The buttonhole machine that costs ₦6.6 million and is currently broken32:40 Nigerian customers vs corporations: the pressure on small businesses35:27 The TikTok bride drama and designer accountability45:18 The 95/5 rule: make it in China, add a zipper, call it Made in Italy47:09 Building manufacturing capacity in Nigeria: a 5-10 year journey51:19 Why Nigerian fashion needs a council like the CFDA1:03:00 "Made in China is actually the highest quality available"1:05:02 Why Chinese vendors freely share competitors with customers1:12:23 The real cost of a Lagos fashion show: ₦50 million minimum1:20:05 The December closing debate: why designers shut down when diaspora money arrives1:27:41 Following his driver to catch him stealing fuel1:33:13 "Money is a tool to buy your time back"1:35:04 Why he chose time with his daughter over Banana Island1:39:23 AI measuring and supplier ratings: tech that could change Nigerian fashion1:47:14 Lagos Fashion Week: "Give them credit before you hit them"1:53:03 The funding gap for medium-sized designers1:58:00 Nigerian artist he'd love to collaborate with: Rema2:00:46 Savile Row vs Italian tailoring2:01:40 Why he supports Manchester United (and the story of his dad)2:08:23 His favorite Nigerian designers and why they deserve more recognition2:40:04 The Wedding Party partnership: how he got written into the script2:51:01 How he maintains his values despite Nigeria's pressures2:58:46 The World Bank rejection that became his new revenue benchmark3:01:19 His wife as his "umbrella" who believed before the evidence existed