
A Nigerian student wants to watch the latest Nollywood series. She has 50MB of data left for the month. Does she stream the show—or save her data for WhatsApp and job searches?
For millions across Africa, this isn’t a hypothetical dilemma; it’s a daily calculation that determines whether streaming platforms succeed or fail. The proliferation of smartphones and improved broadband across Africa has opened the door for OTT and streaming platforms to take hold. However, two persistent hurdles remain:
1. The high cost of data for the consumer, and
2. The challenge of providing content that is compelling enough to justify that cost.
The question for industry stakeholders is no longer just about what content to show, but how to deliver it in a way that is both accessible and affordable. In this article, we review the critical intersection of content and data strategies and how a combined approach is essential for scaling streaming services across the continent.
Content: The Demand Driver
For many viewers or listeners, “access” is not just about having an internet connection; it is also about having access to stories that resonate. A “Good Content” strategy in the African context must prioritise cultural relevance and local language.
The Pro: High-quality, authentic local content acts as the primary hook. When a platform offers exclusive, must-see local dramas or live sports, it transitions from a “luxury” to a “necessity,” driving users to overcome connectivity barriers. Consider how Showmax’s investment in Kenyan originals like Crime and Justice created appointment viewing that justified the data spend for audiences who couldn’t find these stories anywhere else.
The Challenge: Producing high-end local content is expensive. For platforms to stay viable, they must move away from a “volume-heavy” approach and focus on “impact-heavy” content that ensures high retention rates. Every production must earn its keep.
Data: The Affordability Enabler
Even the best content will fail to reach its audience if the cost of the data required to stream it exceeds the user’s disposable income. In markets where 1GB of data can cost up to 10% of monthly income, a robust data strategy becomes the engine of affordability.
Telco Partnerships: The most successful platforms are those that move beyond “over-the-top” and work with the infrastructure. Data bundling and zero-rating agreements with mobile network operators (MNOs) are no longer optional—they are the bedrock of affordability.
Technical Efficiency: Implementing advanced codecs and low-bitrate streaming technology is a data strategy in itself. By reducing the data “weight” of a video—say, from 700MB to 250MB for a one-hour episode through optimised 480p mobile streaming—platforms effectively lower the price of a viewing session for the end user without changing their subscription fee, which isn’t just technical innovation; it’s economic inclusion.
Leveraging Data Analytics for Sustainability
Beyond the “pipe,” data strategies must include deep analytics. Understanding viewer behaviour allows platforms to optimise their content spend and create sustainable business models.
Precision Commissioning: By using data to see exactly what segments of a show are being watched and where users drop off, broadcasters can commission content with much higher precision, reducing the financial risk associated with “test” productions. Why invest £500,000 in a 10-episode series when your data shows audiences drop off after episode three? Better to commission six tightly-crafted episodes that maintain engagement throughout.
Monetisation Shifts: Data also enables the growth of AVOD (Advertising Video on Demand). In a market where credit card penetration remains below 5% in many countries, leveraging user data for targeted advertising allows platforms to offer “free-to-view” tiers, making content accessible to the broadest possible demographic whilst still generating revenue.
The Way Forward: A Value-Centric Model
Access and affordability cannot be solved in isolation. A great show without an innovative data partnership will remain unseen, and a cheap data plan with mediocre content will fail to keep an audience engaged.
The best strategy for OTT players in Africa is a “Value-Centric” model: use Good Content to create demand and Smart Data Strategies to lower the friction of consumption.
The key is finding the right balance between premium storytelling and technical cost-efficiency—and that balance looks different in Lagos than it does in London.
These intersecting challenges—and their solutions—will be at the heart of discussions at the OTT-Streaming Africa Summit 2026, where platforms, telcos, content creators, and investors will share what’s actually working on the ground. Because in a market like this, the real expertise isn’t in theory—it’s in execution.
[This article is written by Benjamin Pius (Publisher @ BMA) as part of the forthcoming OTT-Streaming Africa Summit. Learn more about the event here.












