Practice 02 · Africa Market Entry

Market Entry & Growth Advisory.

Enter with structure. Grow with discipline.

Advisory for international operators entering or scaling in African markets — from strategy through execution on the ground.

The problem

Sound on paper. Defeated on the ground.

African markets carry real growth and real complexity in equal measure. The demographics are well understood at board level — a billion-plus consumers, the world's youngest workforce, rising urbanization — and they are not the variables that decide whether an entry succeeds.

Most entry strategies are sound on paper and drift in execution. They are defeated by the gap between what is decided in the boardroom and what holds on the ground: partner selection that does not survive eighteen months, regulatory and licensing realities priced as line items rather than gating risks, distribution economics that look different in Lagos or Nairobi than in the entry model, and a local operating environment whose informal rules outweigh its formal ones.

The continent is routinely treated as a single market. It is not.

Anglophone West Africa, Francophone West Africa, East Africa, and Southern Africa are four distinct commercial systems with different regulators, different competitive structures, and different partner ecosystems. A strategy that works in Kenya does not translate to Nigeria, and one calibrated to South Africa rarely survives Ghana.

For the executive sponsoring entry, three pressures converge: pressure from the board to deliver on the demographic thesis, scarcity of advisors with genuine on-the-ground experience rather than desk research, and a sector track record of capital deployed and quietly withdrawn three years later. The cost of getting this wrong is not only the write-down — it is the years lost before the next attempt becomes credible.

Our approach

A strategy that cannot be executed is not a strategy.

We do not produce market reports. We bring the operator's discipline to the decisions that determine whether entry holds: where, with whom, under what governance, and on what timeline. Everything operationalizes that principle through four moves.
01

Calibrate the entry thesis to the actual market, not the continental narrative.

We test the underlying assumptions — market size, addressable demand, competitive structure, regulatory pathway — country by country and segment by segment, replacing continental aggregates with the specifics that determine whether the model works.

02

Structure partner selection as governance, not procurement.

Local partners are the single most common point of failure. We bring discipline to how candidates are identified, evaluated against operating and compliance criteria, and engaged under terms that protect the principal's position over time — not only at signing.

03

Map the regulatory and operating reality before commitment.

Licensing, registration, compliance, taxation, repatriation, employment — these are not back-office details to be resolved after entry. We surface them as gating risks before capital is committed, and design the entry vehicle and timeline around them.

04

Close the strategy-to-site gap.

We work alongside the internal team through the first phase of execution — partner onboarding, regulatory milestones, first commercial deployments — to ensure boardroom decisions hold under ground conditions. The objective is an operation that survives the founder's departure from it.

What it delivers

Five outcomes that survive the cycle.

The output is not a deck — it is an entry that holds. Concretely, engagements produce five durable results.
01

An entry thesis that holds under scrutiny

Calibrated to the specific market, not the continental story — and defensible to a board that will revisit it in eighteen months.

02

Partner structures that survive the cycle

Selected, contracted, and governed against criteria that matter three years in, not three months in.

03

Regulatory and compliance risks priced honestly

Surfaced as gating items before commitment, not discovered after.

04

A coherent path from approval to first milestone

From board approval to first commercial milestone — without the drift that defeats most entries between the two.

05

De-risked expansion

The difference between capital that compounds and capital that quietly leaves the continent.

How we engage

Modular engagements. Fixed scope, fixed fee.

Entry decisions are not made in one motion, and the work is structured the same way. Each phase is a defined piece with its own deliverable, priced as a fixed fee rather than billed hours — so the commitment is proportionate to the decision in front of you, and you can stop, hold, or continue at each boundary.
01

Market & Feasibility Review

2–3 weeks

Market potential, regulatory landscape, and a structured assessment of where the entry thesis holds and where it is exposed. A decision basis before larger commitments — and, on its own, often enough to confirm or kill a direction.

02

Entry Strategy

4–6 weeks

The full entry strategy: entry mode, partner approach, and an action plan with milestones and clear lines of accountability. The deliverable a board can approve and an internal team can execute against.

03

Entry Programme

2–3 months

Strategy through the first phase of execution — partner selection, regulatory milestones, and project steering — to close the gap between board approval and ground conditions.

04

Board & Retainer Advisory

Ongoing

Sustained, independent counsel at board and executive-committee level on market exposure and growth strategy. For operators who want a senior advisor on call through the cycle, not only at the decision point.

Delivery is on site and remote, and every engagement is confidential. The phases are sequential by design but not obligatory in sequence — most clients begin with a feasibility review or a strategy phase, depending on how far the internal thinking has already run.

Why DJC

Where strategy meets the ground.

Most advisors on Africa market entry frame the problem as opportunity sizing; we frame it as governance — because the demographics are not the constraint, and execution is where capital is lost.

That framing comes from having operated, not only advised.

DJC is led by a principal who founded and ran a major German multinational's operating company in Nigeria, led marketing and sales for West and Central Africa from Accra, and steered cross-border country projects across the Greater Middle East & Africa region. The work draws on direct experience with the partner ecosystems, regulators, and operating conditions that desk-research strategies routinely underprice.

The result is an advisory firm that has carried the duty of execution on the continent, not only observed it.

Led by Dr. Mohammed Jimoh — see leadership
Proof

Representative engagements.

The work spans founding operating leadership, regional coordination, and the build of commercial organizations across multiple country markets.
Founding Leadership
Global chemical & life-sciences group, West Africa
Founding leadership of the operating company in Nigeria: market entry, local supply-chain build, regulatory and compliance posture, and the agency business across West and Central Africa.
Regional Coordination
Greater Middle East & Africa
Steering of complex cross-border country projects including a buy/sell transaction in Nigeria, Functional Excellence across West and Central Africa, and Operational Compliance in Nigeria.
Commercial Build
Industrial & consumer health businesses, West Africa
Build and leadership of the regional sales organization from Accra, covering market analysis, distribution structure, and commercial reporting across multiple country markets.
Engagements reflect career experience in prior senior operator roles. Full credentials and qualifications on the leadership page →
Our thinking on this

The frameworks, in full.

Two essays set out the thinking behind this practice — why the demographics that excite boards are not the variables that decide entry, and how sound strategies lose coherence between approval and ground.
Contact

Weighing an entry or expansion in African markets?

A direct conversation is the fastest way to test whether your thesis holds against the specifics of the market you are targeting. We can begin with a structured review of entry assumptions against on-the-ground realities.