ADVERTISEMENT
  • Africa
  • World
  • Our Shows
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Destination Business
    • 101business TV Show
Business 360 News
  • Home
  • Africa
    • East Africa
    • West Africa
    • South Africa
  • News
    • Feature
  • Economy
    • Maritime
    • Agriculture
      • Agribusiness
    • Energy
      • Electricty
      • Oil
      • Petrol
      • Gas
  • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Tax
    • Real Estate
  • Capital Market
  • Tech
    • ICT
    • Solar Energy
    • Electric Vehicles
    • Blockchain
    • IoT
    • AI
    • EV
  • SMEs
    • Success Stories
    • Start-Ups
    • Entrepreneurship
  • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • Russia
    • CHINA
    • Japan
  • Business 360 Weekly
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Africa
    • East Africa
    • West Africa
    • South Africa
  • News
    • Feature
  • Economy
    • Maritime
    • Agriculture
      • Agribusiness
    • Energy
      • Electricty
      • Oil
      • Petrol
      • Gas
  • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Tax
    • Real Estate
  • Capital Market
  • Tech
    • ICT
    • Solar Energy
    • Electric Vehicles
    • Blockchain
    • IoT
    • AI
    • EV
  • SMEs
    • Success Stories
    • Start-Ups
    • Entrepreneurship
  • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • Russia
    • CHINA
    • Japan
  • Business 360 Weekly
No Result
View All Result
Business 360 News
No Result
View All Result
Home Success Stories

How Adenike Ogunlesi turned ‘Ruff and Tumble’ into an International children’s clothing brand.

Business 360 by Business 360
February 8, 2019
in Success Stories
0
How Adenike Ogunlesi turned ‘Ruff and Tumble’ into an International children’s clothing brand.

Ruff ‘n’ Tumble was founded in 1996 by Adenike Ogunlesi when she needed pyjamas for her children. She was already making clothes for women then, thanks to her mother who mentored her into the Fashion designing Industry as she grew up in Ibadan.

Ruff ‘n’ Tumble, was conceived when her children ran out of pyjamas, not wanting to go out of her way to shop for items she herself could make being a creative person, she decided to dare to make her own pyjamas design for her children.

However, she soon realized that pyjamas could not be the only thing her children needed, with encouragement from her husband, she decided to take some of her children’s clothing apart to see how they were made and started making clothes for children.

At the long run, she advertised to a friend and her sister in law that she could make pyjamas for their children. They showed interest and from there the journey to the creation of Ruff n’ Tumble started.

She later moved on to making play group wears like jeans, t-shirts and skirts for her children. With time, her business started gaining ground as she started selling the clothes to mothers with kids at the play group.

She initially used local materials including Ankara and Adire improvising where necessary. The ideas kept coming and soon production grew as demand and services later expanded to other Nigerian families with children.

The clothing production (for children from the ages of 0 to 16), gradually progressed from her house (selling from the boot of her car) to a location in Victoria Island, Lagos. Ruff ‘n’ Tumble operates a ware house, factory, distribution and has more than 50 employees.

It has also extended branches to Surulere in Lagos, and Ikeja, as well as, other Nigerian cities, including, Ibadan, Kano and Port Harcourt. The Company has about 15 branch locations across the country.

Ruff ‘n’ Tumble also owns the brands “Trendsetters” and “NaijaBoysz” (a clothing range for young boys aged 8–16). Ruff ‘n’ Tumble partnered with Nigerian Employers Consultative Association (NECA) and Industrial Training Fund (ITF) to help reduce unemployment in the country.

Moving on, she enlarged her business coast by taking her clothes to bazaars and reasonable places where she could make reasonable sales.

Discovering that the venture of making and selling children clothes was actually a lucrative business, Adenike conducted a market research on consumer preference on children clothing. She did this to know and understand the gap she would be able to fill in the children clothing business.

Market Research

Her market research did not entail hiring a professional to do the work for her as she could not afford it at that time, rather, she drove through the city to observe what other children businesses were selling and what they weren’t. Her findings revealed that none of them were selling children’s clothing as individual items.

So she came up with the idea of selling producing and selling ‘separates’ for children. From that point she began hiring tailors to meet the increasing demands of her designs. She also rented a small shop to create a permanent location and a retail outlet for her business.

To get more people informed about her product; Adenike did not rely only on direct marketing, she also devised a plan by using her children as models for her clothes. She would dress them in outfits she has made for sales and take pictures of them which will serve as a catalogue for potential customers .

According to her, this was the most powerful and effective advertising campaign ever. People were quick to identify with a Nigerian face, wearing ‘Made in Nigeria’ outfits. Till date, this has been her advertising line.

In the third year, the business has grown as many people started showing preference for made in Nigeria product. She then moved to a shop opposite her business site at the cost of 500, 000 naira ($3, 171) per year. Nike moved into the building all self-financed through profits from the business. She situated the workshop on the first floor and a showroom on the ground floor.

For a company that started out of need, Adenike’s Ruff ‘n’ Tumble is today one of the most successful and innovative children apparel companies in Nigeria with outlets carrying its own brands as well as other brands. She has built a reputation as one of the best manufacturers of children’s clothing in Nigeria.

Ruff ‘n’ Tumble is also a strong children clothing line in West Africa. With more than 50 employees and 7 branches nationwide, the business has grown from her home as a creative children clothing line to a lifestyle brand that has transformed into a multi-million naira business with recognition beyond the borders of Nigeria.

Apart from this, Ruff ‘n’ Tumble has transcend beyond making pyjamas and T-shirts to producing socks, jackets, swim wear, shorts, trousers, suits, shirts and other accessories.

While targeting young adults, Adenike’s have also expanded her business from the Ruff ‘n’ Tumble clothing line with the introduction of two new brands – NaijaBoysZ and Trendsetters brands. This brand was introduced to cater for the unique fashion sense of today’s young adults while celebrating the colourful iconoclastic fashion sense of Nigeria’s emerging youth.

One amazing lesson from this trailblazer is that she grew her business at a time when there was no business support system or matured infrastructure necessary to support small to medium businesses in her home country, Nigeria. It has indeed not been a bed of roses so far as she encounters blockage in access to finance at the early stages of the business when she wanted to move the business to a bigger premises despite the fact that the business had been consistently profitable.

Her business, however, continues to strive amidst the challenge of unreliable electricity supply, ban on importation of fabric, increasing cost and overheads and human resource challenge, where the people who are coming out of school do not have the real education and what they bring into the business is very little.

Through diligence and hard work and creative license which she says has always worked for her, she was able to build a successful venture. Adenike’s story proves that it takes passion, strong will and patience to own and run a business in Nigeria.
According to her, “one of the things that had helped our brand is the fact that we always move with the global trends.”

Adenike really believes in the African dream , as she is quick to say that investment opportunities abound in Africa.”We don’t export now. Export to the West African coast, yes, all along the West African coast, yes, but to say, America or to England, I’m not interested in it at all. If 40 percent of the 120 million people in Nigeria are children, I have the potential of a huge market here.”

She posits that “most of the solutions that black communities in places like Nigeria are looking to the west for especially in the area of business can be more effectively proffered and implemented by the people living in the communities because they understand the culture and how the community works.”

Over the years, Adenike has been featured in the BBC World Documentary of the Year winning entrepreneurial documentary, Africa Open for Business Documentary and was honored as FATE Foundation Model Entrepreneur in 2005.

She is currently a mentor of the Fate Foundation and Junior Achievement of Nigeria organisation. She also featured on the CNBC program Dangers and Dollars: Africa the final investing frontier anchored by Erin Burnett who went all the way to Nigeria to interview Adenike for the programme.

Previous Post

Investors’ gain soar by N258b in four days of bulls’ run

Next Post

Air France targets new routes as PH operations wind down

Business 360

Business 360

Next Post
Air France targets new routes as PH operations wind down

Air France targets new routes as PH operations wind down

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
FMDQ Exchange Admits Flour Mills of Nigeria’s ₦30.00bn Commercial Paper Notes

FMDQ Admits TSL SPV PLC ₦12.00 billion Series 1 Guaranteed Fixed Rate Infrastructure Bond to its Platform

March 11, 2021
NCAC inaugurates Creative Industry Sub-Committees

NCAC inaugurates Creative Industry Sub-Committees

September 20, 2020
#EndSARS: Protesters receive heavy gun fire at Lekki toll gate

#EndSARS: Protesters receive heavy gun fire at Lekki toll gate

October 21, 2020
SMEs in Nigeria must be ready to grow with or without Government …Evans Edozie, C.E.O., Cospharma Nig. Ltd.

SMEs in Nigeria must be ready to grow with or without Government …Evans Edozie, C.E.O., Cospharma Nig. Ltd.

September 21, 2020
‘The existence of a production hub in Nigeria will go a long way for the Fashion Industry’. FUNMI RUFAI LADIPO, President Fashion Designers Association of Nigeria.(FADAN)

‘The existence of a production hub in Nigeria will go a long way for the Fashion Industry’. FUNMI RUFAI LADIPO, President Fashion Designers Association of Nigeria.(FADAN)

25
Goldlink’s restructures board

Goldlink’s restructures board

10
Airtel Africa Plc gets admitted to the NSE Main Board

Airtel Africa Plc gets admitted to the NSE Main Board

6
Stallion Tank Farm resumes operations

Stallion Tank Farm resumes operations

3
SEC Launches Comprehensive Technology Adoption Survey for Capital Market Operators

SEC Launches Comprehensive Technology Adoption Survey for Capital Market Operators

May 7, 2025
Gencos Urge President Tinubu to Expedite Meeting Over N4.7tn Power Sector Debt

Gencos Urge President Tinubu to Expedite Meeting Over N4.7tn Power Sector Debt

May 7, 2025
Nigeria’s Data Privacy Sector Generates $10 Million and 23,000 Jobs in Three Years

Nigeria’s Data Privacy Sector Generates $10 Million and 23,000 Jobs in Three Years

May 7, 2025
PETROAN Warns Against Blanket Ban on Imported Goods, Cites Economic Risks

PETROAN Warns Against Blanket Ban on Imported Goods, Cites Economic Risks

May 7, 2025
Business 360 News

Business 360 News is a Business and Financial News Platform with an SMEs drive. Published by 360 Network Limited, and created with the aim of disseminating unbiased business stories to readers within and outside Nigeria, providing in-depth analysis of our stories from a critical perspective against the backdrop of realities, actualities, objectivity and balance.

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Agribusiness
  • Agriculture
  • AI
  • Art
  • Arts
  • Aviation
  • Banking
  • Blockchain
  • Business 360 Weekly
  • Business news
  • Business Travels
  • Capital Market
  • CHINA
  • Corporate
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Destination Business
  • East Africa
  • Economy
  • Education
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Electricty
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Entertainment
  • Entrepreneurship
  • EV
  • Fashion
  • Fashion
  • Feature
  • Finance
  • Gas
  • Global Economy
  • Health
  • Hospitality
  • ICT
  • Insurance
  • IoT
  • Lifestyle
  • Luxury
  • Maritime
  • Meetings
  • Mortgage
  • News
  • NGOs
  • Oil
  • Petrol
  • Political Economy
  • politics
  • Real Estate
  • Real Estate
  • SMEs
  • Society
  • Solar Energy
  • South Africa
  • Sports
  • Start-Ups
  • Stocks
  • Success Stories
  • Tax
  • Tech
  • Tourism
  • Transportation
  • UK
  • Uncategorized
  • US
  • World

Recent News

SEC Launches Comprehensive Technology Adoption Survey for Capital Market Operators

SEC Launches Comprehensive Technology Adoption Survey for Capital Market Operators

May 7, 2025
Gencos Urge President Tinubu to Expedite Meeting Over N4.7tn Power Sector Debt

Gencos Urge President Tinubu to Expedite Meeting Over N4.7tn Power Sector Debt

May 7, 2025
  • Africa
  • World
  • Our Shows

© Business 360 News - Business, Finance And SMEs News | Design by Manifest!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Africa
    • East Africa
    • West Africa
    • South Africa
  • News
    • Feature
  • Economy
    • Maritime
    • Agriculture
      • Agribusiness
    • Energy
      • Electricty
      • Oil
      • Petrol
      • Gas
  • Finance
    • Insurance
    • Tax
    • Real Estate
  • Capital Market
  • Tech
    • ICT
    • Solar Energy
    • Electric Vehicles
    • Blockchain
    • IoT
    • AI
    • EV
  • SMEs
    • Success Stories
    • Start-Ups
    • Entrepreneurship
  • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • Russia
    • CHINA
    • Japan
  • Business 360 Weekly

© Business 360 News - Business, Finance And SMEs News | Design by Manifest!