In 2018 I wrote: “The easiest way to waste money and destroy value in Nigeria is to start an ecommerce business with B2C model. As I have noted many years ago in a seminal piece in Harvard Business Review, making money on ecommerce in Africa would happen but would take a really long time. I do not expect any to work till after 2023 (2022). But before then, it is putting good money in a value-destroying venture that would bleed cash until the owners give up. Ecommerce today in Africa at B2C is simply a loss-making online endeavor only people with deep pockets can do. You can be in it if you do not care for profitability.”
The news now is that MallforAfrica is shutting down: “MallforAfrica is temporarily closed, that is true, but we pray and trust in God to have it back up and running in the very near future, better than ever. No date as of yet to announce. But we will keep everyone posted,” Chris Folayan, CEO of MallforAfrica said to Techpoint.
The company joins Kalahari, Mocality, Efritin, OLX, old Konga, etc as B2C ecomemrce companies which have struggled or collapsed. Please note that I am big on B2B ecommerce since they do not have the marginal cost issues I noted in the B2C ones (watch the video below).
The biggest challenge in ecommerce is the marginal cost paralysis. And unfortunately, no ecommerce company can fix it since none can price without consideration of losing buyers to supermarkets and open markets. So, any ecommerce operator that wants to keep its products low must discount it and that means absorbing the marginal cost. That is what they do. And they keep doing so until they run out of more money.
As I explained in the HBR, buyers have options, from local open markets to hustlers on traffic lights. Any ecommerce must beat the alternative ecosystems on price to win new customers and keep present ones. To do that, they would need volume, only possible with a nationwide or regional operation. But without logistics like postal systems, that will not happen. Do not waste your money starting an ecommerce business in Nigeria until
2023(2022). It is the most unfortunate way of wasting capital in Nigeria. Only the post office can make our ecommerce take off and without that infrastructure, ecommerce is a waste of efforts, in Nigeria.
Comment on LinkedIn Feed
Comment: Hmmnn…What I have always been baffled about this is how Jumia is managing to run their business for these number of years in Africa. But I quickly noted that Jumia has managed to create a business model to diversify into different businesses but fronting the e-commerce side more. Prof Ndubuisi Ekekwe, is there something different about Jumia that we are not seeing yet on the e-commerce business is being run there? Thanks in anticipation of your response!
My Response: Jumia is using the double play strategy on the one oasis of ecommerce. Flipkart/PhonePe for India, Alibaba/Alipay for China, etc. No ecommerce company has been successful on B2C in any part of the developing world. But you use the data from ecommerce and make money via something else. JumiaPay is capturing value for Jumia even though its ecommerce is not doing great, but for that JumiaPay to rise, Jumia ecommerce has to exist!
Do Not Waste Time Starting B2C Ecommerce Business in Nigeria














