- New cloud offering bolsters enterprise data security and scalability
- West Africa’s digital growth faces infrastructure and regulatory hurdles
MainOne launches managed cloud service
MainOne has unveiled a Managed Private Cloud solution aimed at enterprises seeking secure, scalable digital infrastructure across West Africa. The service is designed for businesses requiring guaranteed data residency, high availability, and compliance—critical needs as cloud adoption accelerates in sectors such as banking, health, and government. This managed offering delivers dedicated resources through virtualised infrastructure hosted in Tier III data centres, ensuring enhanced control and performance without the complexity of self-management.
With this move, MainOne continues to evolve from a connectivity provider into a digital infrastructure enabler. The company has stated that the private cloud is tailored for businesses looking to modernise their IT operations while maintaining strong data governance. It also complements MainOne’s existing colocation, connectivity, and disaster recovery services, making it an end-to-end solution for enterprises building their digital core in the region.
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MainOne’s role in regional infrastructure
As West Africa’s digital economy matures, infrastructure remains both a growth engine and a bottleneck. According to MainOne, gaps in broadband availability, data sovereignty, and power reliability still constrain digital transformation. The company operates over 1,200km of metropolitan fibre in Nigeria and has invested heavily in submarine cable systems, enabling faster and more stable connectivity across the region. These physical assets underpin services like cloud hosting and enterprise networks.
However, challenges persist. Limited regional internet exchange points and fragmented regulations hamper seamless data traffic flow. MainOne’s strategy addresses these limitations by localising data within its ecosystem, reducing latency and improving uptime. The introduction of a managed private cloud fits into broader trends of cloud regionalisation and hybrid IT, as African enterprises increasingly seek secure alternatives to hyperscale public clouds hosted offshore.