Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home Event Radar Africa

Jessica Hope on How PR Shapes African Tech: Lessons from iROKO, Global Expansion, and the Stories That Matter

by Ifeanyi Abraham
February 12, 2025
in Event Radar Africa, Features/Spotlights
Reading Time: 5 mins read

At the Africa Tech Summit Founders’ Day, Jessica Hope, Founder of Wimbart PR, delivered a candid and insightful talk on the evolution of tech storytelling in Africa, the challenges of pushing African startup narratives to a global audience, and the importance of both positive and difficult stories in shaping a mature ecosystem.

As the Queen of African Tech PR, Jessica’s firm, Wimbart, has been instrumental in placing African tech startups on the global map, working with some of the most recognized names in the ecosystem, including iROKO in its early days. She reflected on the power of relationships in storytelling, the importance of second and third-time founders sharing their journeys, and how Wimbart remains selective about the companies they work with to ensure impactful, high-quality narratives that create opportunities for African entrepreneurs.

Techsoma Africa
Jessica Hope, CEO of Wimbart PR speaking at The Africa Tech Summit 2025 in Nairobi

The Early Days of iROKO & Building a Global Story

Jessica recalled the early struggles of taking iROKO’s story global, back when streaming African content internationally was an uncharted path.

“iROKO was the first company to digitize Nollywood and try to serve a global audience… This was in an era when a film could be made for $30,000, and now, those same movies are on Netflix for millions of dollars.”

She explained how founder Jason Njoku’s relentless push into global markets meant they had to knock on doors at companies like Netflix and payment processors in new markets that were not yet accustomed to dealing with Nigerian digital businesses.

“We were pitching Nigerian internet revolution 12 years ago, trying to explain why it mattered. It was a challenge—sometimes met with outright racism—but we kept going.”

Wimbart played a critical role in shaping these conversations, pushing narratives that ultimately opened doors for African startups. Today, the African tech ecosystem has evolved, with more exits, more capital, and more global investors paying attention—but that early groundwork was essential.

Why Bad Stories Matter Too

Jessica made an important argument about the need for not just success stories, but also the difficult ones.

“The bad stories aren’t nice to read, but they are part of an ecosystem that is maturing and growing.”

She acknowledged that the early hype around African tech led to large amounts of money flowing into startups, some of which failed, causing major losses for investors and a subsequent pullback of capital. However, she pointed out that these failures are part of the process, and the industry must not shy away from difficult conversations.

“We have to celebrate the successes, but also acknowledge the challenges. If we want to be taken seriously, we have to be honest about the roadblocks too.”

Techsoma Africa

The Power of Second & Third-Time Founders

Another key point Jessica emphasized was the importance of second and third-time founders sharing their experiences.

“We have incredible founders who are now on their second and third ventures. These stories matter because they show resilience, experience, and learning curves.”

In Silicon Valley, second-time founders who failed in their first venture often raise capital faster because they’ve gained valuable experience. In Africa, however, the perception is different—failure can be a career-ending stigma. Jessica argued that this mindset needs to change, and storytelling has a role to play in normalizing entrepreneurial challenges.

Wimbart’s Selectivity: Curating Impactful Narratives

One of the most striking takeaways from Jessica’s talk was Wimbart’s careful selection process when choosing which companies to represent.

“Hundreds of African tech startups reach out to Wimbart every year, but we are very selective. We don’t just take on anyone—we work with companies where we see a clear story and an opportunity to amplify impact.”

This curation of narratives is critical because African founders do not have the same access to capital and media opportunities as their American or European counterparts. Wimbart’s role isn’t just public relations, it’s storytelling with intent—curating the voices that will unlock doors for future African entrepreneurs.

Final Thoughts: The Responsibility of Storytelling

Jessica closed by reminding founders of their role in shaping the ecosystem—not just through their successes, but also through the honest, difficult parts of the journey.

“People need to share their struggles, not just their wins. It’s not my job to tell every story, but it is my job to amplify the ones that will move the ecosystem forward.”

With African tech maturing, the industry must embrace authentic narratives, balancing success, failure, and resilience. PR isn’t just about hype—it’s about creating long-term trust, credibility, and opportunity for the next wave of African innovators.

Jessica Hope and Wimbart PR remain at the forefront of this effort, ensuring that the right stories reach the right global audience—paving the way for Africa’s most promising founders.

 

ADVERTISEMENT
Ifeanyi Abraham

Ifeanyi Abraham

Ifeanyi Abraham is a communications strategist, AI product specialist, and award-winning journalist shaping narratives at the intersection of technology, media,...

Recommended For You

A Clear Win for Diaspora Angel Investing in 2026 as RealCorp Capital Brings a Practical Workshop to London
African Startup Ecosystem

A Clear Win for Diaspora Angel Investing in 2026 as RealCorp Capital Brings a Practical Workshop to London

by Faith Amonimo
February 26, 2026

Diaspora professionals want to back African and diaspora-led startups. That need now feels urgent because startup funding still moves more slowly than it did in the peak years, and investors...

Read moreDetails
Africa’s Major Tech Events Happening in March 2026 (Don’t Miss Out!)

Africa’s Major Tech Events Happening in March 2026 (Don’t Miss Out!)

February 25, 2026
AI sovereignty Africa

Africa’s AI Choice: Why We Must Code, Not Just Consume

February 20, 2026
Mainstack Moment 2026: Join 4,000+ Attendees for Africa’s Largest Convergence of Creators

Mainstack Moment 2026: Join 4,000+ Attendees for Africa’s Largest Convergence of Creators

February 19, 2026
Lagride Captains Celebrate Brand New Vehicles Deployment Under Drive To Own, Backed by UBA’s $100m Facility, With 3,500 Vehicles Set as Expansion Goal

Lagride Captains Celebrate Brand New Vehicles Deployment Under Drive To Own, Backed by UBA’s $100m Facility, With 3,500 Vehicles Set as Expansion Goal

February 17, 2026
Next Post
Google CEO Sundar Pichai Meets President Tinubu on AI Skills Expansion and Digital Transformation in Nigeria

Google CEO Sundar Pichai Meets President Tinubu on AI Skills Expansion and Digital Transformation in Nigeria

Meet the Africa Tech Summit 2025 Award Winners Driving Africa’s Tech Future: Zuri Health, Ikusasa, Mazao Hub, MiniPay, Cassava Technologies, Sabi, Flutterwave, OmniRetail, Smile ID, My Pregnancy Journey, & HUB2

Meet the Africa Tech Summit 2025 Award Winners Driving Africa’s Tech Future: Zuri Health, Ikusasa, Mazao Hub, MiniPay, Cassava Technologies, Sabi, Flutterwave, OmniRetail, Smile ID, My Pregnancy Journey, & HUB2

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

America Just Arrived at Its Oppenheimer Moment with AI as Trump Bans Anthropic’s Claude

America Just Arrived at Its Oppenheimer Moment with AI as Trump Bans Anthropic’s Claude

February 28, 2026
Chiamaka Aniweta-Nezianya, Video Editor

From Engineering to Short-Form Storytelling: How Chiamaka Turned Creativity into a Career

February 27, 2026
MTN Nigeria makes 1.1 trillion profit

MTN Nigeria Made ₦1.1 Trillion Profit Last Year – Will Data Get Cheaper in 2026?

February 27, 2026
Paramount Skydance wins Warners Bros. Studios

Paramount Skydance Wins $111 Billion Warner Bros. Discovery Deal After Netflix Walks Away

February 27, 2026
South Africa National Cleantech Innovation Challenge 2026 now Open for Applications

South Africa National Cleantech Innovation Challenge 2026 now Open for Applications

February 26, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.