I have read your write up on business structure over and over, but I still need guidance. My question: Please, how do I get structure for my nursery and primary school business situated in a rural-rural settlement?
Sign Up to our social questions and Answers Engine to ask questions, answer people’s questions, and connect with other people.
Login to our social questions & Answers Engine to ask questions answer people’s questions & connect with other people.
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
Starting a nursery and primary school in a rural-rural settlement can actually be very profitable and impactful if you structure it properly. I'll give you a simple, practical business structure you can follow. 1. Start With the Right School Structure Your school should have 4 main structures: 1. AdRead more
Starting a nursery and primary school in a rural-rural settlement can actually be very profitable and impactful if you structure it properly. I’ll give you a simple, practical business structure you can follow.
See less1. Start With the Right School Structure
Your school should have 4 main structures:
1. Administrative Structure
This is who runs the school
Basic Structure (Start Small)
Proprietor (You)
Head Teacher
Secretary (optional at start)
Bursar (can be part-time initially)
Small rural schools usually start with:
You (Proprietor)
One Head Teacher
One Assistant
2. Academic Structure
Start small and expand gradually.
Phase 1 (Start Small — Recommended)
Nursery:
Creche (optional)
Nursery 1
Nursery 2
Primary:
Primary 1
Primary 2
Primary 3
Start with Nursery to Primary 3
Then grow to Primary 6 gradually.
This reduces cost and risk.
3. Staff Structure (Rural-Friendly Model)
Start with minimum staff:
1 Head Teacher
2 Teachers (handle multiple classes)
1 Caregiver (for nursery)
1 Security / Gatekeeper
1 Cleaner (optional)
Total: 4–5 staff to start
This keeps salary low.
4. Physical Structure (Simple Rural Setup)
You don’t need expensive buildings.
Start with:
3 Classrooms
1 Office
1 Toilet (Very important)
Playground space
You can start with:
Block classrooms
Or temporary structure (if funds limited)
Very common in rural schools.
5. Legal Requirements (Important)
You need approval from:
State Ministry of Education Nigeria
Universal Basic Education Commission (optional but helpful later)
Basic requirements usually:
Land or building
Qualified teachers (minimum NCE)
Basic learning materials
Safe environment
You can start small and register later (many rural schools do this).
6. Fee Structure (Rural Strategy)
Since it’s rural:
Keep fees affordable but sustainable.
Example:
Nursery:
₦5,000 — ₦10,000 per term
Primary:
₦7,000 — ₦12,000 per term
If you get:
50 pupils × ₦8,000 average
= ₦400,000 per term
3 terms: = ₦1.2 million yearly
This is how small schools grow.
7. How to Attract Pupils (Very Important)
In rural areas:
Do this:
Visit parents personally
Talk to community leaders
Offer first 10 pupils discount
Provide free books (optional)
Offer flexible payment
This works very well in rural communities.
8. Startup Budget (Low Budget Example)
Example small start:
Item
Cost
Chairs & Tables
₦150k
Whiteboard
₦30k
Books & Materials
₦50k
Signboard
₦25k
Staff Salary (1 month)
₦150k
Miscellaneous
₦45k
Estimated Start: ₦450k – ₦600k
You already mentioned earlier you’ve saved ₦400k, so you’re actually closer than you think.
9. Growth Plan (Best Strategy)
Year 1:
Nursery to Primary 3
Year 2:
Add Primary 4
Year 3:
Expand to Primary 6
Year 4:
Add Junior Secondary
This is how many successful rural schools started.
10. Why Rural Schools Actually Do Well
Advantages:
Low competition
Low rent
High demand
Easy growth
Many people underestimate rural schools — but they grow fast.
You’re thinking in the right direction. This is a solid long-term business.