In a corner of the room, facing the rest of the operation and separated by a glass partition, sits Jason Njoku, the company's founder.
Born and brought up in London, Mr Njoku is now Lagos-based and building what is proving to be a revolutionary tool, as Nollywood - Nigeria's Hollywood - moves on from DVD to digital platforms.
Since 2011, iRokoTV has racked up millions of views, its founder says, "connecting African films with fans globally" with its huge online catalogue.
The company pays filmmakers about $10,000 (£5,900) to $25,000 for the digital rights to stream their content for a period of time.
In fact, Jason Njoku says the group spends $3m-$4m a year on licensing and producing content, hoping to make back the money in two to three years.
Subscribers pay a monthly fee of $8 with unlimited access to movies from around Africa on the iRoko TV platform, although most productions come from Nigeria and Ghana.
"There's always that star power thing…similar to Hollywood, similar to Bollywood, similar to any content industry around the world," says Mr Njoku.
"You look at the stars, you look at the director…super important you also look at the quality of the actual movies themselves, and we try to sync that with the audience, so, every ten movies we view, we only buy one or two of them."
It is a model that not many would have thought about a few years ago, but today iRoko's success has seen the emergence of other competitors.
One, Pana TV, secured the rights to the acclaimed film Half Of A Yellow Sun, which stars Hollywood's Chiwetel Ejiofor and Thandie Newton.
The industry is growing, and is said to be a major employer in Nigeria, contributing to 1.4% of the country's GDP.
Acknowledgement: BBC, Tun Telev
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-28528396
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