In a recent interview with The School of Hard Knocks, Aliko Dangote discusses backward integration, negotiation tactics, and why he wants to be remembered for industrialising Africa rather than just amassing wealth.
At 67, Dangote manages an empire spanning cement, sugar, fertiliser, and oil refining. He remains one of the continent’s most candid billionaires, speaking openly about money, faith, and ambition. On a platform known for engaging with global entrepreneurs, he spoke plainly about numbers most people will never see in a lifetime, and the legacy he says matters more than all of them.
On Legacy Over Wealth
Dangote says he’s moved past chasing money. “I’ve actually passed the stage of just doing business to make money. It is to leave a legacy. I want to be remembered as someone who has industrialised Africa.” He added that, growing up, he had no idea he would build a company of this scale. Staying humble, for him, stems from that shift in purpose.
On His Net Worth

Forbes estimates him at $38 billion, but Dangote believes that’s just the beginning.
Dangote was asked about the most money he had ever made in a single year. He replied plainly: “Well, in the first quarter of the year I made about $10 billion.”
“Most of our businesses aren’t listed yet. They will come out soon.” He’s also hinted that the refinery alone holds significant value, implying his actual net worth could be higher than public estimates.
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Why He Went Into “Boring” Businesses

Sugar, cement, oil: Dangote calls them essentials, not boring. “These are things that we need, and these were things I was also trading in, so I tried to do what we call Backward Integration. This is to produce what we import. Now we’re moving into oil and gas, where the scale is even larger.”
This strategy has defined his career. Dangote Cement started as an import business before he established local plants and became sub-Saharan Africa’s largest producer. He replicated the model with Dangote Sugar, and now the Dangote Petroleum Refinery, which is the world’s largest single-train refinery at 650,000 barrels per day.
On Faith
Does he believe in God? “Of course. If I look at myself, I know that God is real.”
SEE ALSO: The Many Businesses of Aliko Dangote
His Advice on Sales and Negotiation
For anyone in business, he recommends two rules:
1. Treat the customer as a king.
2. Learn to be like the Chinese: “The Chinese know how to wear people out in negotiations.”
Why America Should Be Investing in Africa
His argument is based on demographics. “Today in Africa, 70 per cent of the population is below 30 years old, and by 2050, it will be 2.5 billion people. The real future is Africa.”
For Dangote, industrialising the continent isn’t charity or politics, but a matter of timing. The scale, the youth, and the needs are all here. If you build what Africa needs now, the legacy will follow naturally.