
News
Thought Leadership
Our latest work

Megan du Toit
AdTech Lead & Solutions Design
ABOUT
This piece explores why WhatsApp has become Africa’s most powerful digital ecosystem—and why brands must rethink how they show up within it. No longer just a messaging app, WhatsApp functions as a central hub for communication, commerce, content, and community across the continent, with deeply embedded, everyday usage in markets like South Africa, Kenya, and Nigeria. It challenges the outdated approach many brands still take—treating WhatsApp as a rigid, transactional channel—and instead advocates for an Africa-first mindset rooted in real user behaviour. Rather than copying global playbooks, the focus shifts to building experiences that reflect how African audiences naturally connect, share, and buy. At the core of this evolution is the transformation of WhatsApp into an intelligent, AI-powered engagement platform. By moving beyond static bots to dynamic, personalised conversations, brands can become part of culture—acting as guides, curators, and connectors between content and commerce. Ultimately, the piece positions WhatsApp as more than a touchpoint; it is a living, social marketplace where conversation drives influence and purchasing decisions. For brands willing to adapt, it offers an opportunity to create meaningful, culturally relevant engagement at scale—shaping the future of digital interaction across Africa.
If you work in marketing anywhere on the continent, you already know the truth WhatsApp is not just a channel in Africa, it is a lifestyle.
It is the group chat. It is the newsfeed. It is the marketplace. It is the customer-care desk and on some days, it is the entire internet.
With South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria all sitting comfortably at 95%+ penetration, WhatsApp is not where people go it is where people live. So, when brands ask me, “Should we be on WhatsApp?” I usually ask a better question:
“Why on earth aren’t you already?”
The Missed Opportunity: Brands Are Still Stuck in 2017
For years, brands treated WhatsApp like a digital switchboard. Press-1-for-this. Press-2-for-that. A sterile call centre with emojis tacked on for ‘flair.’ Africa has evolved. Our audiences have evolved. But brand behaviour has not kept up.
We do not build for African behaviour. We copy global templates and paste them onto markets that deserve better. And that is exactly the mindset I am here to challenge.
We design Africa-first. We innovate Africa-first.
If the solution does not exist, we build it.
Turning WhatsApp into an Intelligent Cultural Engine
At dentsu, we have reimagined WhatsApp from a static bot into something far more dynamic, an AI-powered cultural guide, a personal curator, a hype agent, and most importantly, a connector between conversation and commerce.
This is not a bot pressing buttons. It is an assistant with genuine personality; one that listens, learns, adjusts, and suggests. No funnels. No rigid menus. No copy-paste journeys. Just natural, personalised conversations that feel like they are specifically for the individual on the other end of the chat.
Why WhatsApp Is Africa’s Most Powerful Brand Touchpoint
Data-light, impact-heavy: Low consumption. High adoption. Perfect for markets where every megabyte matters.
Community is the heartbeat: Football tribes. Beauty collectives. Hustlers. Music fans. WhatsApp is where communities argue, unite, influence, and buy.
It is the continent’s customer-care HQ: If someone needs to talk to a brand, they are doing it here not on email.
Commerce already lives here: People negotiate via voice note, share payment links, and close deals mid-chat. Brands do not need to create behaviour just shape it intelligently.
Conversation, Culture, Commerce: The African Model
Our approach mirrors how people really navigate digital spaces here.
We start with culture: a music moment, a creator collab, a football highlight, a drop.
We read the signals: what you like, what you ignore, what you react to.
We guide with meaning: content, recommendations, community.
And we bridge to commerce naturally, no pushy sales taps.
This is Africa’s first WhatsApp model built around actual African digital behaviour, not a Western playbook that has been awkwardly localised.
Why Brands Should Act Now
Your consumer is already:
Talking about you
Sharing your products
Reviewing your service
Influencing their groups
All inside WhatsApp. You can let those conversations happen without you or you can show up with an experience that elevates them. And here is the truth: Africa rewards brands that show up right.
The Future of WhatsApp for Business in Africa
It is cultural. It is conversational. It is intelligent. It is playful. It is personal. And in this future, the one we are building, no market gets left behind.
RELATED ARTICLES

Carat South Africa named Media Agency of the Decade by SCOPEN
Carat SA most balanced mediag agency
News
Awards

Future-proof your measurement with Google Tag Gateway
Googe Tag Gateway protects data
Thought Leadership
News
Our latest work

Africa’s Creative Future Is Now: Maxwell Ngari Named CCO East Africa at Dentsu Creative
Max Ngari name CCO East Africa
News
Our latest work

Dentsu Performance Driving Smarter, Faster, Future-Fit Marketing
Dentsu drives future-fit marketing
News
Our latest work
Thought Leadership
Ready to grow?
LET'S TALK

