
From institutional reform and public service digitisation to digital inclusion, youth opportunity platforms, procurement systems, and tech talent development, Governor Umo Eno has steadily built a governance model that places technology at the centre of state administration, Destiny Young writes
By | Destiny Young
When Governor Umo Eno took office on May 29, 2023, Akwa Ibom did not need another round of ceremonial language about technology. It needed structure. It needed policy direction. It needed digital systems that could move governance beyond paper-heavy processes, informal access channels, and weak service integration. What has emerged since then is a steady and strategic attempt to reposition the state for digital governance.
I see this journey as one of the most important but sometimes underappreciated aspects of the current administration. It is easy to notice roads, buildings, and physical infrastructure because they are visible. Digital governance often works differently. Its impact is felt in how government records are managed, how citizens access opportunities, how payroll becomes cleaner, how applications are verified, how procurement becomes more traceable, and how state institutions begin to function with greater order and efficiency. That is where Governor Umo Eno’s intervention deserves closer attention.
The first major signal was institutional. The administration restructured the hitherto Ministry of Science and Technology into Ministry of Science and Digital Economy. That decision was more than an administrative rearrangement. It was a statement of intent. It showed that digital transformation would not be buried inside a minor unit or treated as an afterthought. It gave the state a policy centre for technology, innovation, e-governance, and digital development.
That move matters because digital governance begins with structure. Many governments speak about technology, but without a dedicated institutional backbone, efforts become scattered. Under Governor Umo Eno, Akwa Ibom chose a more deliberate path. It created a focal point for digital policy and then began to build out the wider ecosystem around it.
That ecosystem approach became clearer when the administration opened engagement with the local tech community. Government digital officials interacted with innovation hubs, ecosystem players, and tech stakeholders in discussions around collaboration, data, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and local digital solutions. This was an important step. A state does not build a digital future by keeping government in isolation from innovators. It builds that future by creating a working relationship between public institutions and the people who can help solve practical problems with technology.
Soon after, the state’s digital direction began to attract national attention. Akwa Ibom earned recognition as one of Nigeria’s most digitally compliant states. Recognition alone is not reform, but it does signal that the state’s digital posture had become visible beyond its borders. It suggested that the early moves of the administration were not merely symbolic. They were already shaping how Akwa Ibom was perceived in the broader national conversation on digital governance.
The real strength of Governor Umo Eno’s intervention, however, lies in the application of digital tools to governance functions that directly affect citizens. This is where the administration’s record becomes more compelling.
One of the clearest examples is the use of digital platforms to manage public opportunity. Through the ARISE Youth Employment Portal, the state created an official pathway for unemployed youths to register and present themselves for opportunities. This is not just about digitising a form. It is about changing the culture of access. When public opportunities move through a documented digital system, the process becomes more structured. It becomes easier to track, easier to verify, and potentially fairer. In practical terms, that is one of the strongest expressions of digital governance.
The same logic has shaped the administration’s intervention programmes. By deploying digital portals for the management of support to farmers, traders, and entrepreneurs, the government has shown that technology can be used to strengthen transparency in empowerment schemes. This matters greatly in a public environment where intervention funds often raise questions around duplication, bias, and accountability. A portal-based process creates room for verification, audit trails, cleaner beneficiary management, and more credible distribution systems.
This use of technology for governance rather than publicity is one of the defining features of the Eno administration’s digital approach. The state has not confined digital ambition to speeches or conferences. It has started to tie digital systems to the actual mechanics of government.
That approach is also visible in inclusion-focused interventions. The digital handling of support for students with disabilities points to a wider principle. A meaningful digital governance agenda must not be limited to elite administrative convenience. It must also improve access for vulnerable groups. When technology is used to streamline social support and make public interventions easier to access, it strengthens the legitimacy of digital reform.
Inside the public service, the administration has also pushed digital management more intentionally. Personnel records, payroll processes, and staff-related systems have increasingly been drawn into a more structured digital environment. This may not attract dramatic headlines, but it is one of the most significant areas of reform. Government cannot claim to be digitally transforming if its internal systems remain weak, fragmented, or open to manipulation. Clean payroll systems, reliable staff records, and technology-enabled administrative processes are part of the foundation of modern governance.
This is why the state’s attention to unified payroll management and internal digital tools deserves recognition. It speaks to a deeper understanding of reform. Digital governance is not only what the citizen sees on the front end. It is also the invisible architecture that helps government work better on the inside.
Procurement is another area where Governor Umo Eno’s intervention stands out. The move toward digital contractor and vendor registration is a serious governance step. Procurement sits at the heart of public accountability. It is one of the areas where opacity can do the most damage. Once registration, documentation, and access begin to move through digital channels, the process becomes more traceable. It becomes easier to document participation, reduce arbitrary gatekeeping, and improve administrative order. In any government system, that is a meaningful reform.
The administration’s digital journey also includes an important data dimension. Governance in the digital age depends on the quality of data available for planning and decision-making. Efforts to strengthen data collection and support economic measurement show that Akwa Ibom is beginning to understand this connection. A state that wants to govern better must be able to count, measure, compare, and plan with reliable information. That is how digital transformation moves from surface-level digitisation into real governance intelligence.
Governor Umo Eno’s public comments on justice sector modernisation also reveal the breadth of his digital thinking. His support for technology-driven justice delivery, including digital filing processes, virtual systems, evidence management, and stronger forensic capability, suggests that the administration sees digital governance in a wider institutional sense. It is not being defined only by websites and portals. It is being understood as a method for making public institutions more responsive, more efficient, and more credible.
That broader understanding is one of the strengths of the administration’s approach. It shows that digital governance in Akwa Ibom is not being boxed into one ministry or one programme. It is gradually being linked to employment, empowerment, procurement, education support, civil service management, economic planning, security, and justice.
Another important layer is digital capacity building. No state can sustain a digital future if it does not invest in digital talent. This is why the push around tech ecosystem engagement, innovation platforms, and talent-focused programmes is significant. Akwa Ibom’s digital journey will not be secured by government systems alone. It will also depend on whether the state produces a generation of young people who can build, manage, secure, and improve digital solutions.
This is where programmes designed to expose young people to areas such as software development, data analytics, cybersecurity, cloud infrastructure, and digital marketing become relevant. They connect the government’s digital ambition to the state’s human capital future. That connection is essential. One side builds digital government. The other builds digital citizens and digital professionals. When both are pursued together, the reform has a better chance of lasting.
What emerges from all of this is a clear pattern. Governor Umo Eno’s intervention in Akwa Ibom’s digital journey has not been random. It has followed a strategic logic.
First, he created institutional backing for digital policy.
Second, he encouraged engagement with the technology ecosystem.
Third, he linked digital systems to public opportunity, intervention delivery, and citizen access.
Fourth, he pushed internal administrative digitisation in the civil service.
Fifth, he expanded digital thinking into procurement, data systems, justice, and inclusion.
Sixth, he aligned the state’s digital future with talent development and innovation growth.
This layered approach is what gives the story its weight. Akwa Ibom is not simply launching isolated portals. It is gradually building a governance culture around technology. The goal appears to be a state that is more organised, more transparent, more inclusive, and more efficient in the way it serves its people.
There is still work to do. Digital reform is never complete because technology itself keeps evolving. Platforms must remain functional. User experience must improve. Agencies must integrate more effectively. Cybersecurity must stay ahead of new threats. Data governance must become stronger. Public awareness must increase so that citizens fully understand and use the systems made available to them. These are the next tests of seriousness.
Even so, the direction is already clear. Governor Umo Eno has moved digital governance in Akwa Ibom from aspiration to implementation. He has provided structure, backed it with official systems, extended it into practical governance functions, and created a policy environment in which technology is increasingly seen as an instrument of administration.
That is why I believe the digital governance story of the current administration deserves to be documented as one of Governor Umo Eno’s strategic interventions in Akwa Ibom. It reflects deliberate statecraft. It reflects an appreciation of how modern government should function. Most importantly, it reflects an understanding that in this era, development is no longer measured only by physical infrastructure. It is also measured by the quality of systems that connect citizens to government and enable government to perform with greater discipline, speed, and accountability.
Akwa Ibom’s digital journey is still unfolding. But it is no longer in doubt that Governor Umo Eno has placed a strategic hand on the wheel.
Destiny Young serves as the Special Assistant (New Media and Digital Communication) to the Governor
