How Membersstack is Digitising Nigeria’s Membership-Based Organisations

Yakub Abdulrasheed
By
Yakub Abdulrasheed
Senior Journalist and Analyst
Abdulrasheed is a Senior Tech Writer and Analyst at Techparley Africa, where he dissects technology’s successes, trends, challenges, and innovations with a sharp, solution-driven lens. He...
- Senior Journalist and Analyst
10 Min Read

Across Nigeria, thousands of institutions, from alumni associations and professional bodies to cooperatives, youth networks, and trade groups, depend on membership structures to operate. Collectively, these organisations manage millions of members and billions of naira in dues, donations, and contributions every year.

Yet despite their economic and social influence, many still rely on fragmented administrative systems such as spreadsheets, paper ledgers, and informal messaging platforms like WhatsApp to manage operations.

This longstanding gap in operational efficiency has created significant challenges around transparency, accountability, and coordination. Now, a Nigerian startup, Membersstack, is attempting to transform that landscape by digitising how membership-based institutions function.

Founded by Ibrahim Oredola and Malik Kolade, the platform provides organisations with a digital infrastructure that enables them to manage membership records, collect dues, organise events, and run governance processes through a unified system.

By consolidating these functions into a single platform, Membersstack aims to eliminate the inefficiencies associated with scattered administrative tools while enabling organisations to operate more transparently and effectively.

According to the founders, the vision behind the platform stems from a recognition that membership organisations are central to Nigeria’s institutional ecosystem but remain largely underserved by modern digital solutions.

As Oredola explains, “Across Africa, membership-based community institutions are extremely influential. But most of them still run on manual systems that make transparency, accountability, and efficiency difficult. We saw an opportunity to build infrastructure specifically for them.”

What You Should Know About Membersstack

Membersstack is a membership management platform designed to modernise how organisations administer their communities. At its core, the platform provides a centralised digital environment where organisations can manage member data, process payments, coordinate activities, and communicate with their networks.

The system allows institutions to move away from scattered administrative processes and instead adopt a unified digital infrastructure that brings operational efficiency to their daily activities. By providing tools tailored specifically for membership-based organisations, the startup addresses a niche that has historically received limited attention from enterprise software providers.

For the founders, the platform represents more than a productivity tool. As Kolade explains, the broader ambition is to strengthen the operational backbone of community institutions.

“We are not just building software,” he says. “We are building the digital infrastructure that helps membership-based communities organise better.”

How Membersstack Operates

The platform functions through a centralised dashboard that enables organisations to oversee their entire membership ecosystem from a single interface. Through this dashboard, administrators can register new members, maintain updated membership records, track dues and payments in real time, and coordinate organisational activities.

Membersstack also integrates communication tools that allow organisations to run email and SMS campaigns, ensuring members remain informed about announcements, events, or governance processes. In addition, organisations can organise digital polls or elections, providing structured mechanisms for decision-making and leadership selection.

This integrated system eliminates the need to switch between multiple applications. Instead of managing spreadsheets for membership records, payment systems for dues, messaging platforms for communication, and separate tools for event coordination, organisations can operate within a unified digital environment designed specifically for their needs.

Crucially, the platform has been designed with accessibility in mind. Unlike many enterprise solutions that require dedicated technical teams, Membersstack prioritises simplicity and affordability, enabling organisations with limited technical capacity to adopt digital systems without complex onboarding requirements.

Early Adoption and Growing Demand

Since its launch, Membersstack has begun gaining traction among grassroots and institutional communities. The platform has already onboarded approximately 100 organisations, including non-profit groups, community-based organisations, alumni networks, cooperatives, and professional associations.

Most of these early adopters are located in Lagos and Ibadan in Oyo State, regions known for their vibrant civic and professional networks. This early traction reflects a broader shift occurring within Nigeria’s digital economy.

As digital payments have become increasingly widespread, driven largely by the growth of fintech platforms, organisations are beginning to demand operational systems capable of integrating payment processing with membership management and community engagement.

Membersstack is positioning itself at the intersection of these needs by offering organisations a platform that connects payments, administration, and engagement within one system.

Strengthening Transparency and Accountability

Beyond improving administrative efficiency, the founders believe that digitising membership management can strengthen trust and accountability within organisations.

Traditional systems often rely on manual recordkeeping, which can make it difficult for members to verify payments, confirm participation in organisational processes, or track how leadership manages finances.

Digital systems, however, create transparent records that can be easily accessed and verified. With Membersstack, members can track contributions and participation digitally, while leadership teams gain access to structured records that improve reporting and financial oversight.

By replacing opaque manual processes with verifiable digital records, the platform has the potential to reduce disputes, strengthen trust among members, and improve governance across membership-based organisations.

Expanding the Platform’s Capabilities

The startup is currently focused on expanding its user base while refining the platform to accommodate larger organisations and more complex membership structures.

As adoption grows, the founders plan to enhance the system’s capabilities to support organisations with thousands of members, multiple administrative tiers, and advanced governance needs.

Scaling the platform will also require building features that accommodate diverse institutional structures, from professional bodies and trade associations to cooperatives and civic networks.

These improvements aim to ensure that the platform remains adaptable as membership organisations continue to evolve in scale and complexity.

Why This Matters

Membership-based organisations play a critical but often overlooked role in Nigeria’s economic and social systems. They facilitate professional development, provide financial support networks, mobilise communities, and serve as channels for civic engagement.

However, many of these institutions have struggled to modernise their internal operations, limiting their ability to scale and maintain transparency. By providing digital infrastructure tailored specifically to these organisations, Membersstack could help unlock new efficiencies and improve governance across the sector.

For Oredola, the potential impact extends far beyond the platform itself. “If you look closely,” he says, “membership organisations sit at the heart of many economic and social activities in Nigeria. When they have better systems, the impact goes far beyond the organisations themselves.”

As Africa’s digital ecosystem continues to mature, infrastructure platforms like Membersstack may become increasingly essential in modernising community institutions that have historically operated outside the formal technology stack.

For the startup, the mission is straightforward but ambitious, build the digital backbone that powers the next generation of community institutions across Nigeria and beyond.

Talking Points

The emergence of Membersstack reflects a timely attempt to address a long-standing structural gap in the digital transformation of community institutions in Nigeria. While fintech innovations have rapidly digitised payments across the country, many membership-based organisations, such as cooperatives, alumni bodies, and professional associations, still rely on informal systems that hinder transparency, efficiency, and institutional continuity.

By offering a unified platform for membership administration, payments, communication, and governance processes, Membersstack positions itself as an operational backbone for these organisations.

However, the startup’s long-term impact will depend on its ability to scale beyond early adopters, deepen integrations with Nigeria’s evolving digital payment ecosystem, and build trust among institutions that have historically been cautious about adopting new administrative technologies.

With effective and careful execution, the platform could significantly strengthen accountability and organisational efficiency across grassroots institutions, a development that may quietly but meaningfully modernise the infrastructure underpinning Nigeria’s civic and economic networks.

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Senior Journalist and Analyst
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Abdulrasheed is a Senior Tech Writer and Analyst at Techparley Africa, where he dissects technology’s successes, trends, challenges, and innovations with a sharp, solution-driven lens. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Criminology and Security Studies, a background that sharpens his analytical approach to technology’s intersection with society, economy, and governance. Passionate about highlighting Africa’s role in the global tech ecosystem, his work bridges global developments with Africa’s digital realities, offering deep insights into both opportunities and obstacles shaping the continent’s future.
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