The End of the
Digital Tenant.
We are not just building an app. We are building the infrastructure for the Nigerian Digital Economy.
The Broken Contract
For the last decade, the deal was simple: You create the content, they own the platform. You bring the audience, they control the data. You do the work, and they decide if and when you get paid.
We call this Digital Tenancy. You are living in a house you built, but the landlord holds the keys. They can change the locks (algorithms), raise the rent (lower reach), or evict you (bans) without notice.
The "Eligibility" Trap
For Nigerian creators, it’s worse. We are told to "wait for eligibility." We are told to use VPNs to access features that should be standard. We are treated as second-class citizens in a global digital economy that runs on our culture.
Enough.
The Creator as a Brand
We believe in a simple truth: Nigerian creators are not just content machines—they are Brands.
The current economy treats you like a gig worker chasing views. We are building an economy that treats you like a business owner building an empire.
This isn't about removing ads; it's about making ads work for you. It’s about building a robust digital economy where marketing empowers the creator, not just the platform. We are creating a space where your influence is a measurable, tradable asset, not a lottery ticket.
- No Ad Thresholds: You don't need 10k followers to matter. You need one true fan.
- No Location Bans: Built in Nigeria, for the world.
- Sovereignty: You own the relationship with your audience.
What We Are Building
We are building the middle class of the creator economy. We don't care about making one person a billionaire superstar. We care about making 10,000 creators financially free.
This is an experiment in trust. It requires creators to invest in their craft and members to invest in their community.