OPINION, April 4, 2026 (NPA) —Nigeria is undeniably a mobile-first market, but that does not mean every company should rush to build its own app. Too often, strategies confuse access with appetite, or downloads with loyalty.
Users will only keep an app if it delivers consistent, practical value. In Nigeria, where data costs are high, storage space is limited, and attention is fiercely contested, an app that fails to solve a recurring problem quickly becomes disposable.
This is the real challenge for corporates considering streaming platforms. The issue is not whether an app looks modern or impressive, but whether it offers enough ongoing value to justify a permanent place on someone’s phone. For most companies, the honest answer is still “not yet.” Without strong, regular, exclusive content, branded streaming apps risk becoming expensive digital monuments—ambitious in appearance but rarely part of everyday life.
Social media, by contrast, is already woven into the daily rhythm of Nigerian society. It is where people discover, discuss, learn, watch, argue, laugh, compare, and share. For many brands, social handles are not a weakness but the most realistic starting point.
Still, social platforms are borrowed ground. They provide reach, visibility, and conversation, but they do not give brands full control over their audience, data, or long-term distribution. The smarter approach is layered: use social media for discovery and relevance; YouTube and video platforms for depth and repeat viewing; WhatsApp for direct connection, community, and service; then link all of these back to an owned destination—whether a website, content hub, membership platform, or lighter digital environment under the brand’s control. In this model, content works harder and audience relationships last longer.
Ultimately, content matters more than the platform. Corporates should focus less on polished self-promotion and more on useful, human, repeatable value. Audiences respond to content that helps them do something, understand something, avoid something, or feel part of something. That means practical explainers, behind-the-scenes access, customer stories, live conversations, thought leadership, short how-to videos, and programming built around real interests and real problems.
The lesson is clear: build the audience before you build the app. And when the time comes, ensure the app delivers a service—not just a screen.
