“Maybe I’m just too Nigerian for this place.”
I heard this exact phrase twice last month. First from Chioma, who got another “cultural fit” rejection despite acing every technical interview at a Toronto consulting firm. The feedback? She’s “too intense” in meetings and needs to work on “executive presence.” Then from my former colleague Kemi, who was told she needs to “tone down her energy” during presentations right after delivering a project that saved her London tech company £2M.
Both brilliant. Both exhausted. Both wondering if something’s fundamentally wrong with them.
But here’s what I started noticing after watching this pattern repeat across different countries, different industries, different levels of seniority: It’s not that you’re too Nigerian. It’s that you’re burning yourself out trying to be someone else. And honestly? The “someone else” they want you to become isn’t even that impressive.
The real question isn’t whether you should change who you are. It’s whether you’re wasting precious mental energy on the wrong battles.
What “professional” actually means (spoiler: it’s not about competence)
When Western workplaces say “professional,” they’re often talking about cultural performance, not actual competence. It’s like an unspoken dress code, but for personality.
Research from Harvard Business Review shows that professionals from marginalized communities feel intense pressure to “suppress their cultural identity for career success.” What they’re really asking you to do is code-switch – constantly adjusting your language, mannerisms, and even personality to match whatever they consider “normal.”
Here’s how they disguise it in corporate speak:
- “Executive presence” = sound like them (less animated, more monotone)
- “Cultural fit” = act like them (downplay your background, avoid “foreign” references)
- “Communication style” = think like them (indirect instead of direct, process over results)
- “Team player” = don’t challenge the status quo (even when it’s obviously broken)
The exhausting part? Studies show that 34% of professionals regularly code-switch at work. But for international professionals, especially Nigerians, it’s not occasional – it’s practically non-stop.
You’re not imagining it. The standards really are different, and yes, it really is unfair.
The code-switching exhaustion cycle (and why it’s killing your potential)
You know that feeling when you’re completely drained after “just sitting in meetings all day”? That’s not laziness. That’s your brain running a full-time performance while trying to actually do your job.
Research from University of Michigan shows what’s really happening:
Your mental energy breakdown:
- 40% monitoring how you sound (“Am I being too direct? Should I soften this?”)
- 30% analysing if you’re being “too much” (“Should I speak up or stay quiet? Will they think I’m aggressive?”)
- 20% actually doing your job (the thing they’re paying you for)
- 10% wondering if you’re good enough (“Maybe they’re right about me not being leadership material”)
Think about it: While your colleague Jake speaks his mind freely and goes home energised, you’re mentally exhausted because you spent eight hours carefully calibrating every word, gesture, and reaction.
University of Michigan research reveals that this constant performance creates what they call “vigilance” and “workplace burnout.” Your brain literally never gets to rest because you’re always “on.”
Meanwhile, your authentic thoughts – the brilliant insights that could solve actual problems – get filtered out before they reach your mouth. No wonder innovation suffers when everyone’s trying to sound the same.
Industries where Nigerian culture is your competitive advantage
Before you start dimming your light, here’s something important: some industries are literally paying premium rates for exactly what you bring naturally.
Research on diversity shows that companies with higher cultural diversity significantly outperform competitors. They’re not being charitable – diverse perspectives drive measurable business results.
Where your “Nigerian-ness” becomes your superpower:
Consulting & Strategy: Your ability to cut through corporate BS and see patterns others miss? That’s what clients pay £2000/day for. Nigerian directness that gets labelled “too intense” in other contexts becomes “strategic clarity” here. Your experience navigating complex systems gives you insights that sheltered colleagues simply don’t have.
Sales & Business Development: Your natural relationship-building skills and storytelling ability make you incredibly effective with diverse clients. You understand that business is personal everywhere except Silicon Valley. Your cultural intelligence helps you connect with clients from different backgrounds in ways your colleagues can’t.
Creative Industries: The global creative economy is worth $1.4 trillion and desperately needs fresh perspectives. Your cultural fluency is a massive asset when companies try to reach global markets without stereotyping or tokenism.
Tech & Innovation: Companies building for global markets need people who instinctively understand that not everyone thinks like a 25-year-old from California. Your perspective isn’t “different” – it’s exactly what they need to avoid building useless products that work for nobody.
Entrepreneurship: Recent data shows that diverse founders are increasingly successful, partly because they’re solving problems others don’t even see. Your experience as an outsider gives you insight into market gaps.
How to be authentically professional (without losing yourself)
The secret isn’t becoming less Nigerian. It’s becoming strategically Nigerian.
Choose your authentic moments. You don’t need to perform 24/7. Pick the situations where your authentic voice adds the most value – strategic discussions, creative brainstorming, client relationship building, problem-solving sessions.
Master professional translation. Instead of changing your personality, learn to translate your insights into language they understand. Your direct communication style becomes “results-focused leadership.” Your big-picture thinking becomes “strategic vision.” Your ability to see what others miss becomes “innovative problem-solving.”
Find your authentic allies. Look for colleagues and leaders who light up when you bring your full self to work. These people exist in every organization – they’re just harder to spot because they’re not usually the loudest voices in meetings.
Understanding workplace cultural dynamics helps you navigate strategically rather than change fundamentally.
When to adapt vs when to stand firm (this is crucial)
Here’s the strategic framework that actually works: Adapt for systems, stand firm on values.
Learning their communication preferences isn’t selling out – it’s being smart. But changing your core insights and dimming your intellectual intensity? That’s where you draw the line.
Stand firm when they ask you to:
- Dim your intellectual intensity (“Maybe don’t challenge senior leadership so much”)
- Stop bringing diverse perspectives (“Let’s focus on solutions that feel familiar”)
- Become less confident or assertive (“You need to be more collaborative”)
- Pretend obvious problems don’t exist (“That’s just how we do things here”)
- Change your fundamental approach to problem-solving
Adapt when it’s about:
- Learning industry-specific vocabulary (call it “stakeholder engagement” instead of “talking to people”)
- Understanding their communication timing (they prefer context before conclusions)
- Mastering their decision-making rituals (apparently everything needs three meetings)
- Building relationships within their cultural framework (small talk about weekend plans, not family obligations)
- Adjusting presentation styles while keeping your content intact
Think of it like mastering academic systems – you learn the format without changing your thinking.
The goal isn’t to become someone else. It’s to package your authentic brilliance in ways their systems can recognise and reward.
The truth about success (and what nobody tells you)
The most successful Nigerian professionals I’ve come across? They stopped trying to fit in and started adding irreplaceable value.
They realised that playing someone else’s game perfectly still leaves you as a second-rate version of someone else. But bringing your authentic excellence to the table? That makes you irreplaceable.
They speak up because their insights matter. They build relationships because connection drives results. They think differently because that’s exactly what smart organisations need to stay competitive.
Your Nigerian background isn’t your professional obstacle. It’s your competitive edge.
The right workplace doesn’t just tolerate your authentic self. It actually needs your authentic self to get better results.
Look, I’m not saying it’s easy. The code-switching pressure is real, and some environments are genuinely toxic. But I am saying it’s possible to succeed without losing yourself. And it’s definitely less exhausting than the alternative.
The question isn’t whether you’re too Nigerian for professional success. The question is whether you’re brave enough to be authentically excellent instead of authentically invisible.
Ready to stop code-switching and start succeeding authentically? Book a consultation to develop a strategic approach that honours your cultural identity while achieving your professional goals.