5 Red Flags When Hiring a Mobile App Developer in Nigeria
Hiring a mobile app developer in Nigeria can go well or go very wrong. The difference is knowing which warning signs to catch before you commit money and time. Here are 5 red flags that tell you to walk away from a developer and look for someone better.
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| A developer with a big social media following must be good | Social media popularity does not correlate with coding ability. Check their actual apps, not their follower count. |
| All developers have the same approach to timelines | Experienced developers give detailed timeline breakdowns. Vague promises hide inexperience or outsourcing. |
| Refusing an NDA is normal because ideas are not valuable | Professional developers sign NDAs routinely. Refusal indicates they may reuse your concept with other clients. |
| Testing happens naturally during development | Without a formal testing process, your app will launch with bugs that frustrate users and destroy your reputation. |
| Outsourcing is fine as long as the work gets done | Hidden outsourcing means you lose quality control, time zone alignment, and accountability for the final product. |
Red Flag 1: No Portfolio or Weak Portfolio
A developer who cannot show you past work is a developer with something to hide. Every experienced developer has apps on Google Play, the App Store, or both. They should be able to share links, describe their role on each project, and explain the technical challenges they solved. Screenshots of a few screens are not proof that the developer built a working product.
Ask for case studies that show the developer's specific contribution. Did they build the entire app or only a small part? Did they work alone or as part of a team? What problems did they solve during development? A developer who gives vague answers about past projects will be equally vague about your project. Look for detailed, honest descriptions of what they built and what they learned.
Red Flag 2: Vague Timeline Estimates
You ask how long your app will take, and the developer says something like, "It depends on the features" without giving you any specifics. Or they promise your complex app in two weeks. Both responses are red flags. An experienced developer gives you a timeline breakdown by phase: discovery, design, development, testing, and deployment. Each phase has a clear duration and defined deliverables.
A developer who cannot estimate timelines accurately does not understand the work involved. They may be inexperienced, or they may be planning to build something much simpler than what you asked for. Get detailed timelines in writing. If the developer resists breaking down the timeline, find someone else who takes planning seriously.
Red Flag 3: Refuses to Sign an NDA
Some developers in Nigeria tell clients that NDAs are unnecessary because ideas are not valuable. This is not true. Your business concept, target market, and unique approach are valuable intellectual property. A professional developer signs NDAs regularly and has no problem protecting your confidential information.
A developer who refuses an NDA may want to build a similar product for your competitors. Or they may want to launch their own version later. Even if they have good intentions, their refusal shows a lack of professionalism. Work with developers who respect your IP from the first conversation. A simple NDA costs nothing and protects both parties.
Red Flag 4: No Testing Process
You ask how they test their apps, and they say something like, "I test as I go" or "My apps rarely have bugs." Every app has bugs. The difference between a good developer and a bad one is how they find and fix those bugs before launch. A good developer has a formal testing process that includes unit tests, integration tests, and user acceptance testing.
Ask about the testing tools they use. Ask how they test on real devices, especially low-end Android phones that are common in Nigeria. Ask what their process is for fixing bugs found during testing. A developer without a testing process will ship an app that crashes on your users' phones, and you will pay the price in bad reviews and lost customers.
Red Flag 5: Outsources Without Disclosure
You think you hired a specific developer, but they secretly send your work to cheaper developers in another country or to junior developers you never met. This happens more often than you think. The red flags are: the developer is vague about who is doing the work, communication happens at odd hours, and the code quality varies wildly between deliveries.
Ask directly: who will write the code for my project? Ask to speak with the actual developers. Ask about their location and working hours. A legitimate team will be transparent about their composition. If they hide who is working on your project, they are almost certainly outsourcing without your knowledge. You paid for their expertise, not a middleman service.
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