Every year, as March arrives, something predictable happens across African brand accounts.
Profile pictures gain a purple tint. Carousels feature headlines such as ‘Celebrating the Women Who Inspire Us.’ Some brands go further with campaigns, hashtags, panels, etc. By March 9th, it’s done. Back to business as usual.
There is nothing dishonest about it. But here is the problem: almost none of the brands running those campaigns have a marketing strategy that actually reflects who African women are as economic actors.
That gap between the annual celebration and the year-round strategy is costing African brands real money.
Almost none of the brands running IWD campaigns have a strategy that reflects who African women actually are as economic actors.
African Women Are Not a Niche Audience
Let’s start with the data, because it changes the conversation.
According to a study, women account for 58% of Africa’s self-employed population and contribute $250–$ 300 billion to the continent’s GDP annually. Sub-Saharan Africa has the highest female entrepreneurship rate in the world at 26%. And across Africa, one in three women intends to start a business, compared to one in six globally.
These are not the numbers that come to mind when most brands plan their gender strategy. They think audience. They think representation. They think cause. What they should be thinking about are customers, decision-makers, and business owners.
The assumption that men are the primary earners (and therefore the primary targets) in African households is simply not supported by the data.
And it’s not just income. The UN estimates that 70% of informal cross-border trade in Africa is conducted by women traders. A report suggests that women reinvest up to 90% of their income into education, health, and nutrition for their families, compared to around 40% by men. These are not passive consumers. They are the economic connective tissue of the continent.
Brands Are Running a Western Playbook on an African Reality
So why does the marketing still look the way it does?
A large part of the answer is that African brands, particularly those in fast-moving consumer goods, fintech, and retail, build their brand strategies on templates designed for Western markets. And in those templates, ‘marketing to women’ tends to mean one of two things: pink packaging or purpose campaigns.
Neither of these is a strategy. They’re aesthetics.
The Western framing treats women primarily as a demographic to be represented, rather than an economic segment to be served. And when African brands copy that framing, they end up with International Women’s Day content that celebrates women as inspiration while their actual product, pricing, and channel strategy ignore the realities of how African women shop, what they buy, and what they’re building.
‘Marketing to women’ in Africa is still largely treated as a brand value exercise. It should be a commercial strategy.
The IFC’s 2021 report on women and e-commerce in Africa estimated that closing gender gaps on digital platforms alone could add over $14.5 billion to Africa’s e-commerce market between 2025 and 2030. That’s not a social impact figure; that’s market value being left on the table every year the gap goes unaddressed.
‘African Women’ Is Not a Segment
Even brands that take women seriously as an audience often make a second mistake: they treat the segment as monolithic.
A 32-year-old marketing director in Johannesburg, a 26-year-old fashion entrepreneur in Nairobi, and a 45-year-old trader running cross-border routes through Cotonou are all ‘African women.’ They have almost nothing else in common.
Their income levels differ. Their relationship with digital payments differs. Their media consumption differs. Their motivations differ. One may be brand-loyal and aspirational; another price-sensitive and hyperlocal; while the third is primarily driven by business utility.
This matters because it means there is no single campaign, no single channel, and no single message that reaches ‘African women’ as an audience. The brands winning in this segment are those that have done the work to build real sub-segments by city, life stage, income tier, and digital behaviour.

Three Things Brands That Get This Right Do Differently
There’s no universal formula, but across brands and categories that have made genuine inroads with African women as a commercial segment, three patterns stand out.
1. They build for the business owner, not just the buyer.
In markets like Lagos and Accra, a significant share of female consumers are also running micro or small businesses. This means they’re making purchasing decisions with two hats on: personal and commercial. Brands that acknowledge this dual role (in their product design, in their communication, in their loyalty programmes) earn disproportionate trust and repeat purchase.
2. They invest in trust infrastructure.
Across West Africa in particular, word-of-mouth and peer recommendation remain the highest-value acquisition channels for female consumers, especially in financial services, health, and beauty. Brands that understand this allocate budget to community-level activations, market associations, and peer referral mechanics rather than simply scaling paid media.
3. They don’t use March as a substitute for a year-round strategy.
The brands that have built genuine loyalty among African women consumers don’t disappear on March 9th. Their product assortment, customer service, digital experience, and pricing all reflect an understanding of the segment. For them, IWD content is just one visible signal of a strategy that runs year-round.
The Audit Every Brand Should Run This March
Before you post the purple graphic, ask your team a few questions: What percentage of your active customer base is female? What is their average transaction value compared to your male customers? What channels are they using to find you? What’s the gender split of your social media community versus your actual paying customers?
If you don’t have the answers to those questions, what you have is a vibe, not a strategy. And vibes don’t compound.
International Women’s Day is a useful moment to make a public statement about your brand values. But the more important work is the quiet, analytical work of building audience intelligence that reflects how African women actually move through your category.
That’s what separates a brand that celebrates women in March from a brand that serves them all year.
Want to understand your female audience better?
Marketing Analytics Africa helps African brands build audience intelligence that reflects the real economic landscape instead of a borrowed playbook. Get in touch to discuss how we can help you close the strategy gap.
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