Telecommunications major, Globacom (Glo), has launched a trio of initiatives aimed at delivering more value to its customers and empowering young girls, especially in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM). The new offerings include the Talkmasta Tariff Plan, an enhanced Welcome Bonus, and the “Glo Innov8” National STEM Competition for Girls.
Talkmasta Tariff Plan & Enhanced Welcome Bonus
In its latest push to retain customers and attract new ones, Glo has introduced the Talkmasta tariff alongside a significantly improved Welcome Bonus. These moves are designed to offer more talk time, more data, and better onboarding rewards.

Key features of the Talkmasta Tariff:
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For every 6 minutes of local calls to any network, subscribers get 6 extra minutes plus 50MB data. There’s no cap on how many times you can earn this bonus.
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Call rate under Talkmasta is 30 kobo per second.
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SMS cost is ₦6 per message.
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New users are auto‑enrolled; existing Glo users can migrate to the plan by dialing *606#.

Details of the Enhanced Welcome Bonus:
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New subscribers who register a Glo SIM, reload with at least ₦100, and make their first call get a one‑time welcome package worth ₦2,000 total value.
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That includes ₦1,000 airtime (25 mins to all networks) and ₦1,000 data (1GB browsing).
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The welcome bonus is valid for 7 days from the point it is granted.
These offers are clearly targeted at making Glo more competitive by improving user value, reducing barriers to first use, and rewarding loyalty or usage. They also reflect growing pressure in the telecoms sector to give more than just baseline connectivity.

Glo Innov8: STEM Competition for Girls
Parallel to its commercial promotions, Glo is also investing in social impact. Through the Glo Foundation, the operator has launched “Glo Innov8”, a national STEM competition for girls in senior secondary schools.
Main details:
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The competition is part of Glo’s observance of the International Day of the Girl Child in 2025.
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Prize pool: ₦5 million in total for schools, students, and their mentors.
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The top school with the best STEM innovation idea receives ₦2,000,000. The two students representing that school each get a laptop, and the mentor or STEM coordinator gets ₦200,000.
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Second and third‑place schools will receive consolation prizes.
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The registration window opened on 15 September 2025 and closes on 5 October 2025. Schools are to visit the Glo Foundation website to apply.
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This competition underscores Glo’s effort to support gender equity in STEM education and to motivate girls in secondary schools to see STEM subjects as viable pathways to future opportunities. It also serves as part of Glo’s CSR work, linking education, innovation, and societal development.
Implications
The combination of commercial and CSR moves shows Glo attempting a two‑pronged strategy:
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Boosting user engagement & growth — The Talkmasta tariff and the enhanced Welcome Bonus make it more cost‑efficient for consumers to talk, browse, and generally use mobile services. Such benefits are likely to help retain customers and possibly win over those from competitor networks.
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Brand strengthening through social investment — By launching the Glo Innov8 competition, Glo is positioning itself as not just a telecom provider, but a stakeholder in Nigeria’s educational development, especially for girls. This can enhance public goodwill, regulatory favour, and customer loyalty.
There may be challenges:
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Ensuring awareness: Many telecom offers are under‑utilized because customers don’t know about them. Effective marketing will be crucial. Fishe is your best driver for effective reach
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Fairness and access: STEM competitions need to reach schools in rural or underserved areas, not just big cities, to ensure true inclusivity.
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Execution risk: Delivery of services (data, connection quality) must meet expectations; otherwise, customers may feel short‑changed even if offers are good on paper.
Conclusion
Glo’s new Talkmasta Tariff Plan plus the enhanced Welcome Bonus signal a strong move to give more value to both new and existing customers. At the same time, the Glo Innov8 STEM Competition for Girls aims to foster future innovators, especially among young women, in one of the fastest‑growing fields globally.
Together, these efforts suggest that Globacom is not only competing on price and features, but also seeking to shape its brand around customer value and social impact. If well‑executed, these initiatives could pay off both in subscriber growth and in long‑term reputational gains, and of course, we look forward to an offer for the Boy child, too.

