In the humid farmlands of Natitingou, northern Benin, 28-year-old soy farmer Diane Tchoroue once struggled to sell her produce before it spoiled. Transport costs were high, market prices fluctuated wildly, and buyers were unpredictable. But everything changed when she began using WhatsApp and Facebook.
“Our women’s collective grows and transforms soy into products like soy cheese,” she tells Impact Newswire. “At first, we sold only in the local market. Transport costs and fluctuating prices often left us with losses. WhatsApp and Facebook gave us a way to advertise products beyond our town without needing a storefront.”
Across Côte d’Ivoire and Benin, young farmers like Diane are quietly reinventing agriculture using the tools of everyday digital life. In a region where government extension services reach fewer than one in five farmers, and where 86 percent of adults lack bank accounts, social media has become a kind of invisible infrastructure, one built not by policymakers or billion-dollar AgTech firms, but by farmers themselves.
A new report by Caribou, in partnership with the Mastercard Foundation, documents how farmers across rice, cashew, and soy value chains are turning WhatsApp, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram into agricultural intelligence networks, connecting markets, training peers, and building trust with customers across hundreds of miles.
Turning Chat Groups into Marketplaces
In villages where internet access is patchy and banking systems thin, WhatsApp groups have evolved into lifelines. Farmers organize themselves by crop and region, sharing daily price updates and warning one another about fraudsters.
“One clear example was during the last harvest season,” Diane says. “We had excess soy cheese that could not be stored for long. By posting photos and prices on WhatsApp status, we received several orders from nearby towns within a few hours. Customers placed orders and paid deposits, and we sent products to them by bus the same day. Without WhatsApp, we would have lost that stock.”
Meanwhile, Facebook has become an informal storefront. Small processors upload photos and videos of their workspaces to show urban buyers their products are genuine, a digital trust mechanism in economies where quality assurance systems are weak. On TikTok, young farmers upload short clips of pest management techniques or irrigation hacks, drawing thousands of views.
“They are repurposing these platforms into marketplaces, training tools, and trust-building systems,” Charlene Migwe, Program Director at Caribou, told Impact Newswire. “Farmers are not passive beneficiaries but active designers of their own digital systems.”
A Quiet Digital Revolution
This new digital ecosystem is thriving without the formal infrastructure that governments and donors have poured millions into. While national agricultural strategies often focus on purpose-built AgTech platforms — which attract only hundreds of users — millions of young farmers are already using free social tools to reach markets and learn.
“The creativity is astonishing,” Migwe said. “Women pooling resources to share one smartphone, or cooperatives using WhatsApp voice notes in local languages — these are examples of people innovating with what they already have.”
But the digital revolution comes with growing pains. Fraud, poor transport, and gender inequality threaten to erode its gains.
“Fraud discourages farmers from exploring wider markets, while lack of financing limits growth even when demand is strong,” Migwe said. “Gender inequality is especially worrying: women are 19% less likely to use mobile internet, and without targeted support, they risk being excluded from this transformation.”
Diane knows this risk firsthand. “Once, a customer placed a large order via Facebook Messenger but disappeared after we had prepared the goods,” she said. “We now insist on advance payments, but that can scare away new buyers.”
Women Take the Lead
In many parts of Benin and Côte d’Ivoire, women’s groups have formed digital cooperatives to bridge the gap. “The shift has made women more visible in the value chain,” Diane said. “Women in our cooperative can now negotiate better prices because we see updates in groups before traveling. Using WhatsApp voice notes in local languages has allowed women with limited literacy to participate in business decisions.”
The study documents “DigiQueen clusters” in Benin — women who pool money to buy shared smartphones, teach each other digital skills, and record training content for newcomers. Across the border, Ivorian cooperatives use voice notes in local dialects to include members who can’t read or write.
“Women agripreneurs across West Africa are innovating with limited resources,” said Eunice Muthengi, Acting Senior Director for Research and Learning at the Mastercard Foundation. “From sharing devices, teaching digital skills, and building inclusive networks on platforms not designed for agriculture — imagine what they could achieve with the right tools, training, and support.”
Policy Blind Spots
Despite its promise, “social agriculture,” as Caribou calls it, remains invisible to most policymakers. National digital strategies across the West African Economic and Monetary Union focus on formal businesses, overlooking how millions use social media for livelihoods.
Without regulation, these informal networks leave farmers unprotected from scams, data privacy risks, and unreliable logistics systems. At the same time, those without smartphones, particularly rural women, face exclusion from emerging opportunities.
“The role of governments and donors should be to strengthen, not replace, what farmers have built,” Migwe remakred. “They should recognize these practices in agricultural policies and provide consumer protection frameworks. Donors can fund training delivered through the platforms farmers already use. Tech companies should integrate mobile money or local language tools to make platforms safer and more inclusive.”
A Glimpse of the Future
In five years, Migwe predicts a new wave of professionalized digital agribusinesses. “As smartphone access increases and data costs decline, more young people will build businesses directly on social platforms,” she said. “If stakeholders invest wisely, this farmer-led digital ecosystem could reshape agriculture in West Africa within five years.”
Diane shares that optimism, but with cautious realism. “We would like training on digital marketing,” she said. “Many of us rely only on simple photos, but we see that videos and well-designed visuals attract more customers. Skills in mobile payment systems would also help us manage transactions securely.”
For now, she and her cooperative continue to navigate this evolving landscape, one voice note and Facebook post at a time, quietly proving that in parts of Africa often written off as “offline,” the future of farming may already be connected.
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Originally published at https://impactnews-wire.com on October 8, 2025.