Value Creation β The Heart of Every Business
π₯ Opening Hook
Every successful business in
history has one thing
in common.
Not a great founder.
Not a brilliant idea.
Not perfect timing.
Not abundant capital.
Every successful business creates
genuine value for the
people it serves.
That is it.
That is the whole secret.
A business that creates
real value for real
people will find customers,
generate revenue, attract talent,
and survive difficult periods.
A business that does
not create genuine value β
regardless of how sophisticated
its pitch deck or
how talented its founder β
will eventually fail.
Understanding value creation is
not just the foundation
of entrepreneurship.
It is the foundation
of everything in business.
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- What Is Value Creation?
Value creation is the
process of building something β
a product, service, experience,
or solution β that
improves the situation of
the people who receive it.
Value is created when:
β You solve a problem
that was causing pain
β You make something easier
that was previously difficult
β You make something accessible
that was previously unavailable
β You make something better
that was previously poor quality
β You save time that
was previously wasted
β You create an experience
that people genuinely enjoy
β You enable something that
was previously impossible
Value is subjective β
it is determined by
the person receiving it,
not the person creating it.
This is the most
important single insight in
all of business:
The value of what
you build is determined
by your customer β
not by you.
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- The Value Creation Framework
2.1 Identifying the Problem
Every great business starts
with a deep understanding
of a specific problem.
Not a vague sense
that something could be better.
A specific, well-understood problem β
felt acutely by a
clearly defined group of people β
that they are motivated
to solve.
The quality of a
business is often determined
by the quality of
the problem it chose to solve.
Questions to identify a
genuine problem:
β Who is experiencing this problem?
β How frequently do they
experience it?
β How much pain does
it cause them β
financially, emotionally, practically?
β What do they currently
do about it β
and why is that
solution insufficient?
β Are they actively looking
for a better solution?
The best problems to
build businesses around are:
β Felt frequently β not
occasionally
β Acutely painful β not
mildly inconvenient
β Currently unsolved or
poorly solved β not
already well-addressed
β Experienced by enough
people to represent a
viable market
2.2 Understanding the Customer
Value creation requires deep
customer understanding β not
assumptions, not projections,
not what you would want
if you were the customer.
What the actual customer
experiences, needs, and values.
How to develop deep
customer understanding:
Customer interviews:
β Talk to potential customers β
before building anything
β Ask about their current
experience β not about
your proposed solution
β Listen for the emotion
behind the words β
frustration, resignation, excitement β
these signals tell you
how acutely the problem is felt
Observation:
β Watch how people currently
solve the problem β
the workarounds people create
reveal what they actually value
β The gap between what
people say and what
they do is one
of the most valuable
pieces of customer intelligence
Jobs to be done:
A useful framework:
People do not buy
products β they hire
them to do a job.
When someone buys a
drill β they do not
want a drill.
They want a hole in the wall.
They want a picture hung.
They want their home
to feel like theirs.
Understanding the job your
customer is hiring your
product or service to do β
at this deeper level β
reveals value creation opportunities
that surface-level product
thinking misses.
2.3 Designing the Value Proposition
A value proposition is
a clear statement of:
β Who you are serving
β What problem you are solving
β How you are solving it
β Why your solution is
better than the alternatives
A strong value proposition
can be stated simply:
“We help [specific customer]
who want to [job to be done]
by [how you solve it]
unlike [current alternatives]
which [what is inadequate about them].”
Example β Bice Africa:
“We help African graduates
and young professionals who
want to build globally
competitive careers β by
providing CPD Accredited professional
certifications that develop the
digital, career, and business
skills employers demand β
unlike traditional education which
does not address these
practical professional competencies.”
A value proposition that
is clear, specific, and
differentiated is the foundation
of every effective business communication β
from your first customer
conversation to your investor pitch.
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- Types of Value
Understanding the different types
of value helps you
identify what you are
actually creating for your customers.
3.1 Functional Value
Solving a practical problem
or providing a practical benefit.
Examples:
β A faster route to work
β A cheaper source of goods
β A more reliable service
β A more effective treatment
Most businesses start with
functional value β and
many stay there.
3.2 Emotional Value
How your product or
service makes the customer feel.
Examples:
β Confidence from wearing
professional clothing
β Pride from owning
a high-quality product
β Security from having
financial protection
β Belonging from being
part of a community
Emotional value is often
more powerful than functional
value β and more
difficult for competitors to replicate.
The most enduring brands β
globally and in Africa β
create strong emotional value
alongside their functional proposition.
3.3 Social Value
How your product or
service affects the customer’s
relationships and social standing.
Examples:
β A product that signals
success to peers
β A platform that connects
people to important relationships
β A service that helps
someone fulfill their responsibilities
to their family or community
In many African cultural
contexts β where social
relationships and community are
central to identity β
social value is a
particularly powerful dimension of
value creation.
3.4 Economic Value
The direct financial benefit
to the customer.
Examples:
β Saving money on
a regular expense
β Generating more income
through improved productivity
β Avoiding a costly problem
Economic value is easy
to measure and easy
to communicate β making
it a powerful foundation
for a business case.
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- Revenue β How Value
Creation Becomes Sustainable
Creating value is necessary
but not sufficient for
a sustainable business.
The business must also
capture enough of the
value it creates to
sustain and grow itself.
This is where revenue
comes in.
Revenue is the mechanism
through which value creation
becomes financially sustainable.
Common revenue models:
Direct sales:
β Customer pays once for
a product or service
β Simple and clear β
requires continuous customer acquisition
Subscription:
β Customer pays regularly β
monthly or annually β
for ongoing access
β Predictable revenue β
powerful for business planning
β Bice Africa uses this
model β learners pay
once for course access
Marketplace or platform:
β Takes a percentage of
transactions between other parties
β Value created by facilitating
exchange between buyers and sellers
Freemium:
β Basic version free β
premium features paid
β Effective for building
large user bases with
a percentage converting to paid
Advertising:
β Service free to users β
revenue from advertisers
who want to reach them
β Requires significant scale
to be viable
Licensing:
β Others pay to use
your intellectual property,
technology, or brand
The right revenue model
depends on what customers
are willing to pay for β
and in what form.
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- Value Creation in
the African Context
Value creation in African
markets has specific characteristics
that any entrepreneur building
for African customers must understand.
Price sensitivity and affordability:
β Many African markets include
large populations with limited
disposable income β creating
the need for genuinely
affordable solutions rather than
diluted versions of expensive ones
β The most successful African
businesses build for the
price points of their
actual customers β not
for the price points
of wealthier markets
Mobile-first delivery:
β Most African consumers access
services through mobile phones
rather than desktop computers
β Value propositions that work
on mobile β and
specifically on low-bandwidth
mobile connections β reach
the broadest market
Community and relationship:
β In many African contexts β
trust is built through
community relationships rather than
institutional credibility
β Value propositions that leverage
existing community relationships and
trust networks can reach
customers that formal channels cannot
The aggregation opportunity:
β Many African markets are
fragmented β millions of
small sellers, buyers, farmers,
or service providers operating
without coordination
β Businesses that aggregate these
fragmented markets β connecting
supply and demand efficiently β
create enormous value
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π Global and African Context
The most impactful businesses
in Africa are those
that create genuine value
for the customers they
serve β not those
with the most impressive
technology or the largest
investment.
M-Pesa created value because
it solved a real
problem β moving money
safely without a bank account β
for tens of millions
of real people.
Jumia created value because
it made products accessible
to consumers who could
not easily reach physical stores.
Andela created value because
it connected African technical
talent with global opportunities
they could not otherwise access.
In each case β
genuine value creation for
real customers at the
right price point in
the right delivery format β
was the foundation of the business.
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β‘ Power Insight
Every business conversation β
every pitch, every proposal,
every negotiation β ultimately
comes back to one question:
what value does this
create for the person
receiving it? The entrepreneur,
professional, or leader who
can answer that question
clearly, specifically, and convincingly β
for any product, service,
or idea β has
mastered the most fundamental
and most powerful business skill available.
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βοΈ Quick Action Challenge
β‘ Takes 10 minutes:
Think of a business,
product, or service you
use regularly and genuinely value.
Write down:
β What specific problem does
it solve for you?
β What type of value
does it create β
functional, emotional, social, economic?
β What is its value
proposition in one sentence?
Then think of a
problem in your own
life or community:
β Who else experiences this problem?
β What value would a
solution create?
β What might a simple
value proposition look like?
You have just done
the first step of
entrepreneurial thinking β seeing
a problem through the
lens of value creation.
π Want to go deeper?
“Value Proposition Design” by
Alexander Osterwalder is the
most practical and visual
guide to building value
propositions that genuinely resonate
with customers. It is
used by startups and
established businesses globally and
provides concrete tools for
translating customer understanding into
compelling business propositions.
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π Sources & Further Reading
- Alexander Osterwalder β
Value Proposition Design
strategyzer.com/books/
value-proposition-design - Clayton Christensen β
Jobs to Be Done Theory
christenseninstitute.org/
jobs-to-be-done - Harvard Business Review β
Creating Value in Business
hbr.org - Tony Elumelu Foundation β
Building African Businesses
tonyelumelufoundation.org
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π Key Takeaway
Value creation is the
heart of every business β
and the foundation of
every entrepreneurial journey. A
business that solves a
real problem for real
people at the right
price in the right
format will find customers,
generate revenue, and endure.
Understanding what creates genuine
value β for your
specific customer, in your
specific market, at your
specific price point β
is the most important
business skill you can
develop. In Africa right
now β where genuine
value creation for underserved
populations represents both a
social mission and a
market opportunity β it
is also one of
the most important contributions
you can make.
