For decades, the global narrative surrounding the African creative economy has been one of untapped potential and raw talent. However, as Afrobeats and African digital IP continue to dominate global charts and streaming platforms, a glaring technical deficit has emerged: the lack of scalable growth infrastructure. While the talent is borderless, the systems managing that talent remain localized, fragmented, and often manual. Hope Odabi, a PR and digital growth strategist, is pioneering a shift toward what she calls Structural Visibility, treating the creative economy not just as a cultural movement, but as a digital infrastructure challenge.
Standing at the intersection of media and technology, Odabi’s work with The Dabigal Media House (DGM) serves as a case study in digital reengineering. She argues that the era of accidental viral stardom is an unsustainable model for a continent that currently holds the world’s youngest demographic. Instead, she advocates for a Growth Stack approach, where emerging artists and creative businesses are viewed as digital products requiring optimized conversion funnels, data driven positioning, and integrated CRM systems.
In her foundational technical roadmap, Wetin Be The Plan?, Odabi moves the conversation away from creative vibes and toward Data Driven Architecture. The book functions less like a memoir and more like an operational manual for the digital age, demanding that creators answer the hard questions of positioning and partnership readiness before they hit the studio. By standardizing these workflows, Odabi is derisking the creative lifecycle, ensuring that when an artist hits a global stage, the digital plumbing from IP protection to automated fan engagement is already in place to handle the surge.
One of the core innovations Odabi introduces is the concept of Algorithmic Positioning. In a world where platforms like TikTok and Spotify act as the primary gatekeepers, she teaches creatives how to bypass traditional roadblocks by understanding and exploiting data clusters. Her systems analyze high affinity audience segments across borders, allowing a Lagos based creator to build a predictable, data backed fan base in London or New York before they ever set foot in those cities. This is the difference between getting lucky and scaling a system.
Beyond her firm, Odabi’s influence is institutionalized through The Clarity Network, a scalable initiative designed to train a new cadre of Creative Technologists. Through workshops and high level mentorship, she is bridging the gap between the UK’s sophisticated tech sector and Africa’s burgeoning creative output. For the UK market, which is increasingly becoming the primary hub for African talent export, Odabi’s frameworks offer a vital blueprint for cross border scalability and investment readiness.
As the African creative economy projects a valuation of $100 billion by 2030, the role of a Growth Architect like Odabi becomes indispensable. By professionalizing the backend of the industry, she is ensuring that the African creative boom isn’t just a fleeting trend, but a permanent, structured fixture of the global GDP. Her focus remains on the expansion of this digital infrastructure, proving that in the 21st century, the most important instrument an artist can play is the data.
