Editorial
Diaspora vs. Domestic: Why African Tech Should Look Beyond the Continent First

In 2025, Africa stands at a pivotal crossroads in its digital evolution. From fintech startups in Lagos to agritech ventures in Nairobi, there’s an undeniable wave of innovation sweeping across the continent. Yet despite the excitement, funding, and headlines, many of these ventures are stalling or collapsing altogether.
The problem isn’t ambition. African founders are some of the most resilient and visionary leaders in the global tech ecosystem. The real issue lies in market dynamics that are too often misunderstood, romanticized, or outright ignored. The question is simple but essential: should African tech focus on serving domestic markets first—or should its sights be set on the diaspora?
This isn’t just a philosophical debate. It’s a matter of survival, profitability, and long-term impact. In this article, we break down why the smartest African startups should look outward before they look inward—and why the diaspora might be the true engine of scalable success.
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1. The Mirage of the African Middle Class
The idea of a rapidly growing African middle class has fueled VC funding decks and policy discussions for over a decade. But how real is it?
In most African countries, per capita income remains under $2,000. Even in economies like Nigeria, touted as Africa’s largest, the average disposable income remains a fraction of what’s needed to sustain subscription-based or premium digital services. The reality is harsh: many Africans are still focused on daily survival, not digital convenience.
Even when products are designed with affordability in mind, the ecosystem around them—data costs, electricity, infrastructure—adds a hidden tax that turns users off. Companies planning to generate revenue through volume rather than high ticket prices often find that the numbers just don’t add up.
Compare this with the diaspora market: Africans living abroad, particularly in the US, UK, Canada, and parts of Europe, typically earn 10 to 20 times more than their home country counterparts. They have smartphones, reliable internet, and most importantly, a strong appetite for culturally relevant services that keep them connected to home.
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2. Payment Systems Are Not Ready
Cash is still king in Africa. Despite the rise of mobile money, widespread adoption is fragmented. Payment gateways lack cohesion, interoperability is low, and cart abandonment remains high due to failed transactions or distrust in online payments.
Let’s take an example: an African edtech platform offering online tutoring. The founder might build a solid platform, hire quality teachers, and launch a slick mobile app. But if local users can’t easily pay, or if data is too expensive to access the platform regularly, usage drops and revenue never materializes.
Meanwhile, diaspora users can pay via Stripe, PayPal, or Apple Pay, often with a single click. They can afford subscriptions, donate to causes, support creators, and become financial lifelines for products serving African needs.
Ignoring the diaspora in your monetization strategy is like building a toll road and forgetting to put a booth where traffic already flows.
3. Infrastructure Realities
Even as mobile penetration surges across Africa, consistent access to quality internet and electricity remains a major challenge. The ‘digital divide’ is no longer a Western vs. African problem—it’s now an intra-African crisis.
Rural users are still miles away from stable 4G, and urban dwellers face data costs that eat into monthly income. Streaming platforms like IROKOtv learned this the hard way. Even with vast content libraries and a decade-long head start, they couldn’t escape the infrastructure trap. Paying $5/month for content remains a luxury for too many Nigerians, no matter how Nollywood-obsessed they are.
In contrast, diaspora users have 24/7 broadband access, unlimited data, and devices that support rich experiences. Targeting them first doesn’t just improve usage—it sharpens product-market fit and validates core business models before you engage the more complex and fragmented local market.
4. Currency Instability and FX Pressure
One of the most underrated killers of African tech startups is FX volatility. The Naira, Cedi, and other currencies regularly experience sharp devaluations. This affects everything from server hosting (often billed in USD) to advertising on international platforms like Google and Facebook.
Startups that raise funds in dollars but earn in local currency suffer a slow, quiet death as their runway erodes. The customer base may be growing, but the balance sheet is bleeding.
Selling to diaspora markets means earning in hard currencies. This shields you from local shocks and increases your ability to reinvest and grow sustainably. For startups aiming for long-term success, this is not optional—it’s essential.
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5. Local Loyalty Isn’t Guaranteed
There’s a widely held myth that African consumers will always choose African-made products if given the chance. But consumer behavior tells a different story.
Global platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and Netflix dominate screen time, even among low-income users. Why? Because they offer a seamless experience, rich content, and social validation. Local alternatives often come across as clunky or second-rate in comparison.
Meanwhile, diaspora Africans often crave homegrown content and are willing to pay for it—especially when it’s positioned with pride, relevance, and emotional resonance. Whether it’s language-specific content, African fashion brands, or culturally attuned fintech, diaspora loyalty often beats local sentimentality.
6. Diaspora as Strategic Early Adopters
The diaspora isn’t just a market; it’s a testbed, a focus group, and a global amplifier. Early adopters living in stable economies can give immediate, high-quality feedback without the friction of poor infrastructure or unreliable payments.
Startups that win diaspora hearts often find themselves organically pulled into local relevance—rather than the other way around. Success stories like Flutterwave, which embedded itself into cross-border payments early on, show how smart African startups use diaspora needs as their launchpad.
Building for the diaspora first is like launching in a more forgiving, better-resourced version of your home market. It lets you sharpen your offering before you engage with the tough terrain of Africa’s domestic consumer economy.
7. Cultural Currency Still Travels
One major reason diaspora markets are ripe for targeting is the cultural currency that African products and experiences carry abroad. From Afrobeats to Ankara fashion to Nollywood films, Africa’s creative economy has immense export value.
But local monetization models often fail because infrastructure and affordability block true value realization.
Diaspora audiences, on the other hand, view African culture through the lens of nostalgia, pride, and identity. This makes them ideal early backers—not just for tech platforms but for lifestyle brands, events, learning platforms, and digital communities.
Where a $10 monthly subscription may be too steep for a domestic Nigerian user, it’s an afterthought for a Nigerian in Atlanta, Toronto, or London. And with the right story, many diaspora users feel a moral pull to support “homegrown” products.
8. Diaspora Brings Capital, Credibility, and Community
Aside from being paying users, the diaspora often serves as a bridge to investors, partners, and global platforms. African founders who understand and activate their diaspora networks tend to raise more, expand faster, and scale smarter.
Why? Because diaspora ecosystems already exist—in churches, alumni networks, cultural organizations, and online communities. Tapping into them turns every diaspora user into a brand evangelist and funding source.
That’s how products move from being side projects to scale-ready ventures. And unlike domestic users who may churn due to price sensitivity or unreliable service, diaspora users are more likely to stay, pay, and share.
9. Domestic Markets Still Matter—But Timing is Everything
This is not a call to abandon Africa’s domestic markets. Instead, it’s a caution against going local too early. The infrastructure is improving, regulatory climates are becoming more supportive, and mobile adoption is still growing.
But timing matters. If you enter too early, you’ll bleed cash and lose morale. If you wait too long, you’ll miss your first-mover advantage. Startups that use diaspora traction as a springboard tend to find more durable product-market fit locally.
Think of it as a two-stage rocket: the diaspora gets you off the ground; local adoption takes you to orbit.
10. The Future is Glocal
In a hyperconnected world, the line between local and global has blurred. For African tech, the best strategies embrace a “glocal” mindset—global scalability with local soul.
Start with the diaspora. Earn their trust, learn from their feedback, build with their resources. Then, when the infrastructure, regulation, and income levels catch up back home, you’ll already be a recognized, trusted brand.
The story of African tech is just beginning. But to write a successful next chapter, founders must rethink their audience. Africa’s future might very well be built at home—but it will be bankrolled, tested, and validated by those who’ve already left.
Conclusion: Looking Beyond Borders is Not Betrayal
Focusing on diaspora markets isn’t a betrayal of the continent. It’s a strategic pivot rooted in pragmatism. The dream of African tech doesn’t die because you monetize in London before Lagos, or Toronto before Tamale. It survives because you build where there’s less friction and more fuel.
If Africa is to rise, its tech sector must play smarter—not just harder. That starts with looking beyond its borders for the early support, sustainable revenue, and scalable impact that can help build tomorrow’s continental giants.
The future of African tech is not either/or. It’s diaspora and domestic—but in that exact order.
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