In African markets, growth is often romanticised. Funding announcements dominate headlines. Expansion into new countries signals ambition. User acquisition numbers climb rapidly.
But beneath the excitement lies a harder question that separates durable companies from temporary hype: can a startup grow without becoming unaffordable to the very customers it was built to serve?
Across the continent, affordability is not a marketing strategy. It is survival economics. Disposable income remains constrained. Inflation erodes purchasing power. Currency volatility complicates imports and pricing. In this environment, startups that misprice themselves out of reach quickly discover that scale without accessibility is a hollow victory.
Yet some companies have managed to expand while keeping costs within reach. The stories of PiggyVest, Gozem, and Wasoko reveal a pattern. Growth and affordability are not opposites. They are engineered together.
The common thread is disciplined design.
PiggyVest, one of Nigeria’s leading savings and investment platforms, did not grow by charging high subscription fees or complex account maintenance costs. It is built around behavioural insight. Automatic savings, goal-based products, and interest incentives made disciplined saving simple. Revenue came from structured partnerships and controlled asset deployment, not from squeezing users with arbitrary charges.
Affordability, in this case, was not charity. It was strategic. By keeping entry barriers low, PiggyVest widened its funnel. More users meant more aggregated deposits. More deposits meant stronger negotiating power with financial partners. Scale reduced per-unit servicing costs. The model compounds.
The lesson is clear: when pricing aligns with volume strategy, affordability becomes an engine, not a constraint.
In mobility, the challenge intensifies. Transport costs are visible, immediate and emotionally charged. Gozem operates in West and Central African cities where income levels vary dramatically and infrastructure can be inconsistent. Pricing too high limits adoption. Pricing too low erodes margins.
The solution lies in ecosystem layering. Rather than depend solely on ride commissions, Gozem diversified into delivery, digital payments and vehicle financing. This multi-service model spreads risk and unlocks cross-subsidisation. A customer acquired for mobility can be retained through payments. A driver supported with asset financing becomes a long-term partner rather than a transactional contractor.
Growth is therefore distributed across services. Affordability in one vertical can be offset by margin efficiency in another.
This approach mirrors global super-app playbooks but is adapted to African realities. The density of informal economies demands flexibility. Payments must accommodate cash-heavy contexts. Driver onboarding must reflect local documentation gaps. Operational design, not ambition alone, determines sustainability.
Then there is Wasoko, operating in the less glamorous but deeply strategic world of B2B e-commerce. Informal retailers across East and West Africa often pay higher prices for goods due to fragmented supply chains. Wasoko attacked this inefficiency directly.
By aggregating demand from thousands of small retailers and optimising warehousing and last-mile delivery, Wasoko reduced procurement costs. The savings could then be passed down. Affordability here was not a discount tactic. It was a structural outcome of supply chain integration.
The insight is profound: affordability is often a by-product of operational intelligence.
Many startups chase growth by spending heavily on customer acquisition while ignoring backend inefficiencies. The result is unsustainable burn. PiggyVest, Gozem and Wasoko demonstrate the opposite discipline. They invest early in systems that reduce marginal cost per user or transaction.
Unit economics becomes the quiet hero.
In emerging markets, margins are thin by default. The companies that endure are those that understand their cost per acquisition, cost per delivery, and lifetime customer value with precision. They do not rely solely on venture capital to mask losses. They engineer pathways to self-sustaining revenue.
There is also a psychological dimension to affordability. Trust.
African consumers are cautious. Years of economic volatility have created scepticism around hidden fees, unstable pricing and unreliable service. Transparent pricing builds loyalty. Loyalty reduces churn. Reduced churn lowers marketing costs. Again, affordability feeds growth.
Global parallels reinforce this logic. Amazon scaled through relentless cost optimisation and reinvestment into logistics. Walmart built dominance on price leadership supported by supply chain mastery. The principle travels well, even if the context differs.
But the African layer adds complexity. Infrastructure gaps mean startups must often build elements of their own ecosystems. Payment rails, warehousing, agent networks, even customer education become internal projects. This raises upfront costs. The temptation is to pass those costs directly to users.
The smarter move is sequencing.
Companies that win tend to subsidise adoption initially while building backend efficiency in parallel. Once operational scale kicks in, costs stabilise. Pricing remains competitive because structural efficiencies replace temporary discounts.
It is also worth noting that affordability does not mean underpricing. It means pricing in alignment with value and context. A platform that improves income stability for users can command reasonable margins without being exploitative. The difference lies in perceived fairness.
African growth narratives are maturing. Investors are asking tougher questions about profitability timelines. Customers are more informed. Regulators are more attentive. In this climate, sustainable affordability becomes a strategic moat.
The startups that will define the next decade are not merely those that expand into multiple countries. They are those that embed cost discipline into their DNA.
Growth that excludes the mass market is fragile. Growth that empowers it is durable.
PiggyVest, Gozem and Wasoko illustrate a broader truth about African enterprise. The continent does not need expensive disruption. It needs intelligent scaling.
Affordability, when engineered correctly, is not a sacrifice. It is leverage.
