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Seeing Mo Abudu’s Rise As A Spark For Young Women’s Ambitions -By Isaac Asabor

Young woman, you are not too early. You are not too late. You are right on time. Now go, write that script, start that NGO, launch that brand, produce that podcast, tell your truth.

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Mo Abudu

There are women who break ceilings, and then there are women like Mo Abudu, who build entirely new mansions in the sky, with staircases for others to follow. Her journey is more than a personal triumph, it is a clarion call to young Nigerian women: Your voice matters, your ideas matter, and your dreams are not too big.

Mo recently shared a powerful message on LinkedIn, not to boast, but to remind us of the power of boldness. It was not just a timeline of achievements. It was a masterclass in vision, grit, and the God-factor, the kind of post that, if you read between the lines, should make every young woman sit up and say, “If she did it, so can I.”

Let us put this in perspective: Mo Abudu began her hospitality and media journey at 40, with no formal experience. What she had was purpose, passion, and unshakable faith. Twenty years later, the milestones are nothing short of astonishing.

For instance, at 40, she launched Moments with Mo, Africa’s first syndicated daily talk show, at 49, she founded EbonyLife TV, a platform that brought a bold, global Black identity to screens, and at 50, she broke into filmmaking with FIFTY, The Wedding Party, Chief Daddy, and more.

On a sustaining trajectory of success, at 53, she created EbonyLife Place, Nigeria’s first luxury entertainment resort, at 56  Established EbonyLife Creative Academy to train future filmmakers, at 58,  she directed her Perfect Life and Iyawo Mi, with global recognition and at 60, she launched EbonyLife Place London, the UK’s first African cinema and creative hub.

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But more than these achievements, what sets Mo apart is when she did them. She did not start at 20. She was not handed opportunities on a silver platter. She did not wait for permission. And she did not let age, or the fear of starting late, cage her ambitions.

The message to young women in this context is “You Are Not Too Young, or Too Late” The foregoing motivational capsule can be understood from the perspective of the fact that there is a dangerous narrative floating around, that greatness is only valid when it happens young. That your 20s are for hustling nonstop and “making it” before 30. That if you have not become a CEO, bought a house, or amassed thousands of followers on social media by 27, you have somehow failed. Stop it. Right now.

Mo Abudu’s life is evidence that every phase of life holds power, and that purpose is not bound by age, background, or timing. She was bold enough to launch global enterprises when others were preparing to slow down.

So, if you are in your 20s or 30s feeling anxious because you have not “arrived,” let this be your reality check: You are not behind. You are in process. You are just getting started.

Your beginning might be humble, but your destiny is global. It is easy to look at Mo now and forget the foundation: She began with just faith, vision, and a deep resolve to change the African narrative.

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She did not inherit a media empire, she built it. She did not wait for the West to validate her stories, she produced content that celebrated us, for us, by us.

And guess what? She never stopped being a woman of grace, faith, and elegance while doing it. She remained relatable, grounded, and fearless. In an industry that often demands women sacrifice authenticity for power, she stayed true.

This is a crucial message for young women: You do not have to lose your femininity to be formidable. You do not have to compromise your values to succeed. And you certainly do not need to dull your light to make others comfortable.

In a world obsessed with superficial success and influencer fame, Mo offers a richer model, one built on substance, service, and strategic vision. She is not just a media mogul; she is a movement. Her legacy is not in skyscrapers or red carpets, it is in the minds she has inspired, the careers she has launched, and the culture she has helped shape.

Young woman, let this sink in: You have that same potential. You may not start with a platform. But you can start with a dream. A phone camera. A blog. A sewing machine. A laptop. An idea. The first step is all it takes. Do not wait until you feel ready, start while you are scared.

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Do not wait until everything is perfect, build as you go. Do not shrink because society says you are “too ambitious”, expand anyway.

Build like Mo, but be authentically you, as you rise, take some notes from the Mo Abudu Playbook: Be bold, because if your dreams do not intimidate you, they are too small. Be relentless, and consistency wins when talent and luck fail. Be faith-driven, and let God guide what the world cannot define. Be team-minded, Mo did not do it alone. Build your tribe wisely, and be obsessed with your vision, even when no one else sees it yet.

Mo always says, “God is my X-Factor.” And indeed, that spiritual anchor is what has carried her through every chapter. So, as you dream, hustle, and build, never forget this: You don’t walk alone.

In conclusion, the revolution has a face. It is one thing to hear motivational quotes, it is another to see the living embodiment of one.

Mo Abudu is proof that it is never too late to start, and you are never too young to try. Her journey obliterates the false timelines and redefines success as a path paved by purpose, not pressure.

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Young woman, you are not too early. You are not too late. You are right on time. Now go, write that script, start that NGO, launch that brand, produce that podcast, tell your truth.

Be bold. Be brilliant. Be beautifully, unapologetically you.

And when the world asks where your fire came from, tell them: “I saw Mo Abudu do it. And now, it is my turn.”

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