Why telecom loyalty programmes in Africa keep failing
African telecoms collectively spend hundreds of millions of dollars annually on loyalty and retention programmes. Subscriber churn rates in most markets have barely moved in a decade. The programmes are not working — and the reasons are structural.
Prepaid subscriber churn is the defining commercial problem for African mobile operators. In Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and most Sub-Saharan markets, a significant proportion of the subscriber base uses multiple SIM cards simultaneously — switching between operators based on network quality, tariff promotions, and data bundle offers. True loyalty, in the sense of a subscriber who consistently chooses one operator over available alternatives, is rare.
Most telecom loyalty programmes have been designed to solve a different problem — retaining postpaid subscribers in mature Western markets, where switching carries real friction and loyalty points have tangible value. Applying the same model to prepaid-dominant African markets produces programmes that are structurally mismatched to the subscriber behaviour they are trying to change.
The points problem
The most common African telecom loyalty format is a points-based system: spend on airtime or data, accumulate points, redeem points for more airtime or discounts. The problem is that points systems require a subscriber to maintain primary operator status — consistently spending most of their telecom budget with one operator — before the rewards become meaningful.
A subscriber who splits spend across two or three SIM cards accumulates points too slowly to reach any meaningful reward threshold. The programme does not change their behaviour because the reward is too distant and too conditional. They continue multi-SIMing and the points languish unredeemed.
Unredeemed points are not a sign of programme success. They are a sign of programme irrelevance. A subscriber who does not redeem has not engaged with the loyalty proposition — they have simply not found it worth engaging with.
What actually drives retention in prepaid markets
The programmes that demonstrably improve prepaid subscriber retention in African markets share a common characteristic: they reward the specific behaviour they want to change, immediately, at the moment the behaviour occurs.
A subscriber who makes three consecutive monthly top-ups above a threshold receives a meaningful reward — not points, but a real value transfer — within 24 hours of the third top-up. A subscriber who has not recharged for seven days receives a targeted offer that makes recharging on the primary network more attractive than switching. A subscriber who hits a data usage milestone in a given month receives a bonus data bundle before their current bundle expires.
The mechanism in each case is the same: define the specific behaviour you want, set a trigger at the point that behaviour occurs, and deliver a reward immediately at that trigger point. The reward does not need to be large — a 20% top-up bonus or a 1GB data bundle is sufficient — but it needs to be instant and clearly connected to the behaviour it is rewarding.
Agent network incentives: the overlooked lever
Subscriber acquisition and reactivation in African prepaid markets happen almost entirely through agents — the thousands of airtime resellers, mobile money agents, and dealer outlets that form the last-mile distribution network for every mobile operator. The quality of those agents' advocacy for any given operator is a significant driver of which SIM a new subscriber activates or which operator a lapsed subscriber returns to.
Agent network incentive programmes — structured rewards for agents who hit SIM activation targets, recharge volume thresholds, or mobile money onboarding numbers — are consistently among the highest-ROI programmes available to telecoms in African markets. They are also consistently underfunded relative to above-the-line subscriber acquisition spend.
An agent who receives a meaningful reward for hitting a SIM activation target this week is significantly more likely to actively recommend that operator to walk-in customers next week. The behavioural mechanism is simple and the data to prove it exists — but most telecoms measure agent performance without measuring agent reward delivery effectiveness.
The delivery gap
Even well-designed telecom loyalty programmes fail at delivery. Rewards promised to subscribers or agents that arrive late, arrive in the wrong format, or do not arrive at all are worse than no reward at all — they generate active distrust of the programme and the operator. In African markets, word-of-mouth about a failed reward travels faster than any marketing message about the programme itself.
Digital reward delivery — airtime, data, mobile money, digital reward cards — eliminates the delivery gap when it is properly integrated. The reward issues at the trigger point, reaches the recipient's phone within seconds, and is confirmed with an SMS or WhatsApp notification. There is no manual processing, no batch reconciliation, no physical distribution. The subscriber or agent experiences the reward at the exact moment it is most motivationally effective.