By Ibrahim Pelumi Lasisi
The debate around web-first product development in Africa is gaining urgency as more digital solutions struggle to achieve meaningful adoption. While web and app-based platforms remain the global standard, their effectiveness in African markets is increasingly constrained by infrastructure realities and user behavior patterns.
Web-first models are built on assumptions that do not consistently hold in this environment. They expect users to download applications, create accounts, and maintain repeated engagement across platforms. This approach prioritizes feature depth and platform control, yet often overlooks persistent challenges such as unstable internet access, high data costs, and device limitations.
A shift toward accessibility-first design is therefore not optional; it is structural. This approach focuses on delivering services through low-friction, adaptive experiences that align with existing user habits. Instead of forcing behavioral change, accessibility-first systems meet users where they already are, reducing resistance and increasing continuity of use.
This is not just a theoretical position. Building products for real users across Africa, systems where people need to get something done quickly, on whatever device they have, often on a slow connection, teaches you things that no framework or best practice document can. What I have seen consistently is that the simpler the interaction, the more people actually use it. Automating the heavy lifting, reducing the steps a user has to take, and meeting them on a platform they already trust makes the difference between a product that gets traction and one that does not. That thinking shapes how I approach every system I build.
The distinction between web-first and accessibility-first models reflects a deeper divide in digital strategy. Web-first systems offer scalability and technical breadth but often encounter adoption friction. Accessibility-first systems, by contrast, prioritize reach, efficiency, and continuity, even if it requires reducing technical complexity.
WhatsApp makes this concrete. Most people across Africa already use it every day. Building on top of that existing habit, rather than asking users to download something new, create an account, and learn a different interface, removes the biggest barrier before it even appears. In practice, this approach drives organic growth across multiple countries without the acquisition costs that traditional app models require to reach the same scale.
As Africa’s digital economy evolves, the most effective products will not be those that rigidly follow global standards, but those that adapt them. The advantage will belong to systems that combine technical capability with contextual awareness, products that are not only functional, but usable under everyday constraints.
Technology impact in Africa will not be determined by innovation alone, but by alignment. Systems that fail to integrate with the realities of their users will remain underutilized. Those that do will define the next phase of digital growth.

