Source: MercyCorps Agrifin Accelerate (2021). Digital Agricultural
Platforms Blueprint Series; Busara Data Analytics for DigiFarm (2020); ISF
Advisors and RAF Learning Lab analysis
THE MARKET OPPORTUNITY FOR WOMEN: LESSONS FROM DIGIFARM
As with many other services, women face unique barriers to accessing and engaging with Digital
Platforms. Women tend to have lower access to mobile phones, higher levels
of digital illiteracy
and distrust for new technologies. According to GSMA, women in low-income countries are 8%
less likely than men to own a basic mobile phone. More importantly, they are 20% less likely to
use mobile Internet services than men—meaning their access to an essential component of most
Digital Platforms is limited. The gap is even more pronounced in sub-Saharan
Africa and South
Asia, where women are 37% and 51% less likely, respectively, to use mobile Internet services. A
similar trend can be seen in mobile money usage. While there are important regional variations, women are overall 33% less
likely than men to have a mobile money account, constraining their ability to transact through Digital Platforms.
In addition,
women tend to face important mobility barriers due to caregiving responsibilities and social norms.
For Platform operators, these barriers often make targeting and serving women customers an expensive and time-consuming
endeavor. It requires heavy investments in targeted customer acquisition and engagement, often through trusted agents or lead
farmers who can drive product awareness. Operators may also have to invest in infrastructure and logistics services to make up
for women’s mobility constraints. With many Platforms tight on cash—not to mention focused on fast
growth to trigger network
effects—these investments are rarely a priority. Instead, marketplace operators may focus on the easiest-to-reach customers (often
male farmers), further perpetuating gender gaps in digital access and usage, productivity, and income.
In the process, however, Platforms may be missing out on a wider market opportunity. Early evidence from DigiFarm—
an integrated product and service marketplace with more than 1.4 million registered users in Kenya—suggests that, when ser-
vice delivery is adapted to fit their needs, women are as or even more likely
than men to register for, and actively use, DigiFarm.
When the Platform launched in 2017, customer acquisition focused primarily on registering farmers on market days in “market
towns”. This allowed DigiFarm to scale quickly but with a predominantly male customer base. Recognizing the challenges
women face in digital access, in 2019 DigiFarm partnered with a women’s cooperative, whose agents
supported women farmers
in signing up for and engaging with the Platform.
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