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    You are at:Home»African Development Bank»Beyond automation: Strategic imperatives for African businesses in the era of agent AI
    African Development Bank

    Beyond automation: Strategic imperatives for African businesses in the era of agent AI

    Xsum NewsBy Xsum NewsNovember 17, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
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    Africa’s past decade has been rightly celebrated for its digital leap forward.

    Mobile money platforms like M-Pesa have driven financial inclusion in sub-Saharan Africa from 23 percent in 2007 to more than 60 percent today, connecting millions of people to the formal economy.

    However, this revolution was primarily about efficiency, digitizing existing processes to make them faster and more accessible. As we enter the next decade, we are witnessing a more profound transformation that will redefine the enterprise landscape, moving from simple digitization to an era of agentic AI.

    These are not just automation tools, but systems capable of strategic reasoning, complex decision-making, and autonomous execution within defined parameters. This evolution requires a complete rethink of strategy, moving beyond static five-year plans to dynamic, adaptive models of governance and growth.

    Strategic disconnect: The high costs of “automation islands”

    Although many businesses in Africa have embraced digitalization, significant gaps in their strategies remain.

    According to a 2023 African Development Bank report, more than 70% of large enterprises use AI primarily for chatbots and analytics, while less than 15% apply AI to strategic decision-making.

    AI is often seen as a cost-cutting tool rather than a revolutionary capability, creating “islands of automation.” Logistics companies may be able to use AI to save 15% on fuel, but if they don’t correlate that with inventory and forecasting, they’re missing out on a bigger opportunity.

    The real value lies in the integration of AI across systems, which drives exponential growth, agility, and market resiliency.

    Quantifying the transition to active instruction

    The value of Agentic AI lies in its ability to move organizations from reactive problem solving to proactive coaching. For example, a McKinsey study estimates that AI-powered dynamic pricing and promotion models can increase revenue by 2-5% in retail and tourism, Africa’s key growth sectors.

    Agent AI systems do more than just suggest price changes. It runs autonomously in real time across thousands of products, responding to competitor movements, inventory levels, and demand signals, within gross margin guardrails set by management.

    This fundamentally redefines leadership. Executives are freed from operational firefighting and can focus on the higher-level strategy of defining AI objectives, interpreting its nuanced insights into market shifts, and managing the ethical boundaries of AI autonomy.

    The essential questions for CEOs start with, “How do we solve this bottleneck?” “What mission should we set for our AI capabilities to enter new markets or design more resilient supply chains?”

    This requires intentional organizational redesign, creating workflows where AI agents manage core functions and human capital improves its skills to collaborate, challenge, and oversee these systems.

    Building trust as an economic asset

    True change in this new era cannot be purely technological. It has to be human-centered. For African businesses, this is both a strategic and economic necessity.

    First, building trust starts in the boardroom. According to a PwC study, 85% of CEOs believe AI will significantly change their business over the next five years, but less than half feel prepared for the associated risks.

    This gap in strategic literacy is a direct threat to governance and competitiveness. Second, the benefits of AI need to be designed comprehensively from the beginning.

    With more than 60 percent of Africa’s population under the age of 25 and female entrepreneurship on the rise, AI strategies that do not take these demographics into account risk exacerbating inequalities and missing out on huge economic opportunities.

    The World Bank estimates that closing the gender gap in Africa could increase the continent’s GDP by $316 billion by 2025. AI-driven platforms that provide women entrepreneurs with personalized access to credit, market connections, and skills development are not only ethical, but also powerful drivers for growth and social stability.

    From recruitment to organizational adaptation

    The path forward requires more than just technology adoption. This requires transformation of the entire organization.

    This starts with a strategic audit.

    • Talent: Are you reskilling your leaders to take advantage of AI, or are you simply implementing new tools?

    • Strategy: Is our plan adaptive using real-time insights or locked into a static model?

    • Governance: Are you ensuring ethical AI use, data privacy, and stakeholder trust?

    African companies that grow are those that combine human intelligence, cultural insight, and ethical leadership with the power of AI.

    Their advantage is not just speed, but resilience, foresight and relevance, creating lasting value across the continent’s evolving markets.

    The author is a strategic visionary advisor specializing in artificial intelligence and CEO of Otic Group.

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