Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home Creator Economy

Dear Adobe, Why Are African Creators Excluded from Your Global Creativity Awards?

by Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola
May 16, 2025
in Creator Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Dear Adobe, Why Are African Creators Excluded from Your Global Creativity Awards?

African creators are shaping global visual culture, but you wouldn’t know it from the eligibility criteria for Adobe’s prestigious Creativity Awards. Despite positioning itself as a champion of “creativity from around the world,” Adobe has made every single African country ineligible for entry. This isn’t just an oversight. It’s a systemic exclusion of an entire continent.

In 2025, this is not just disappointing, it’s indefensible.

The Heartbeat of African Creativity Is Loud and Global

From Nairobi to Lagos, Kigali to Cape Town, African creators are not just catching up; they are leading. Visionaries like Karabo Poppy have designed for Nike and Netflix, blending street art with heritage. Photographers like Adetona Omokanye are capturing Africa’s cultural evolution with finesse and cinematic brilliance.

Across TikTok, Behance, Dribbble, and Instagram, African digital artists are telling local stories with global resonance. The continent’s creative economy is worth over $58 billion and employs millions. And yet, Adobe the world’s leading creative software company, does not find these creators eligible to be celebrated.

Adobe’s Awards: Global in Name, Exclusionary by Policy

The Adobe MAX Creativity Awards are described as “honouring the world’s most exceptional creative talent.” Yet, buried in the fine print, residents of all African countries are excluded from participation. Yes, even if they are paying, long-time Adobe customers.

This isn’t new. In the 2019 Adobe Design Achievement Awards, only one African winner—a student from South Africa’s Stellenbosch Academy—was recognised.

The trend has continued. In 2025, as confirmed in the eligibility criteria, not a single African nation qualifies. Creators who have mastered Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, Premiere Pro, and After Effects, often in resource-constrained environments, can’t even submit their work.

The irony? African creators are visible, vibrant, and valuable but not valid, according to Adobe.

The Most Common Excuses

When tech platforms exclude African users, we often hear the same excuses:

  • “Regulatory limitations.”
  • “Compliance risks.”
  • “Currency complications.”

But if platforms like Netflix, TikTok, Spotify, Meta, and Canva can operate, monetise, and celebrate African creators, Adobe’s legal firewall argument feels lazy at best and discriminatory at worst.

Tech platforms are quick to sell to Africa. But when it comes to celebration, inclusion, and visibility suddenly, the continent becomes complicated.

As one X user, @hackSultan, sarcastically noted:

“Won’t be surprised when someone comes out to say ‘Ohhh no one in Africa has ever won that Adobe creativity award’. And everyone will just assume it’s because of skill level.”

Techsoma Africa

Why This Matters

Recognition is not a luxury. For creatives, visibility equals opportunity. Awards build credibility, open global doors, and lead to investment, employment, and partnerships. Exclusion from this ecosystem doesn’t just hurt morale, it blocks access to the pipelines of global creative capital.

When global brands shut the door on an entire continent, they’re reinforcing a narrative that says:

“We love your culture, but not your creators.”

And in today’s world, where cultural influence is monetised at scale, exclusion becomes economic disenfranchisement.

What’s Next?

It’s easy to use African culture in moodboards. It’s harder to back African creatives with real platforms, fair opportunities, and global stages. But that’s what true innovation demands.

Tech companies love to talk about equity. Now is the time to embed it in your policies, not just your PR.

To Adobe: If you truly believe creativity knows no borders, stop drawing the line at Africa.

ADVERTISEMENT
Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Oluwadunsin Aladenola

Covenant Aladenola is part of Techsoma’s senior editorial team, where he helps shape the publication’s storytelling direction and editorial strategy...

Recommended For You

Google Just Gave 20 African Creators the AI Tools to Dominate Global Storytelling
Artifical Intelligence

Google Just Gave 20 African Creators the AI Tools to Dominate Global Storytelling

by Faith Amonimo
March 13, 2026

Africa has always produced powerful stories. Nollywood films fill screens across continents. African YouTube creators rack up tens of millions of views. Afrobeats soundtracks global playlists. The creativity has never...

Read moreDetails
What IShowSpeed’s Africa Tour Teaches African Startups About Global Growth

What IShowSpeed’s Africa Tour Teaches African Startups About Global Growth

March 4, 2026
Youtube Logo

The Simple, Powerful Reasons YouTube Still Wins After 20 Years

February 24, 2026
African city skyline partially darkened to represent internet shutdowns impacting digital infrastructure.

You Cannot Build a $1.5 Trillion Digital Economy With an Off Switch

February 22, 2026
How 50 Viral LinkedIn Posts Reveal Content Rules for 2026

How 50 Viral LinkedIn Posts Reveal Content Rules for 2026

February 20, 2026
Next Post
A New Era for NIPOST: How Tola Odeyemi Is Rewiring Nigeria’s Postal and Logistics Future

A New Era for NIPOST: How Tola Odeyemi Is Rewiring Nigeria’s Postal and Logistics Future

Oluwatobi Oyinlola Sets Guinness World Record with Smallest GPS Tracker

Oluwatobi Oyinlola Sets Guinness World Record with Smallest GPS Tracker

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

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

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

AI features coming to your next car

5 AI Features Coming to Your Next Car

March 20, 2026
AirPods Max 2

Apple introduces AirPods Max 2 with advanced features

March 19, 2026
Dstv stream

MultiChoice Moves Showmax Content to DStv Stream as Standalone Service Shuts Down

March 19, 2026
Men of March

Men of March: The Architects of Africa’s Quiet Revolution

March 19, 2026
AI startups

One Person, One Laptop, Millions in Revenue: The Rise of Solo AI Startups

March 18, 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.