As Africa marked Africa Day on May 25, Rania El Rafie, Vice President of Public Relations and Strategic Communications at APO Group, issued a pointed call for a fundamental shift in how global actors engage with the continent: stop translating Africa and start truly hearing it.
In an opinion piece timed to the annual commemoration, El Rafie argues that Africa’s story continues to be narrated from afar, often filtered through external lenses that prioritise consistency over relevance. With the African Union’s Agenda 2063 nearing its midpoint, she says the moment demands deeper cultural intelligence from brands, agencies, and institutions operating across the continent’s 54 markets.
“Africa Day is not a calendar moment; it is a mirror,” El Rafie writes. The continent is asking whether it is moving closer to a vision of self-determination economically, culturally, and narratively.
Relevance Before Reach
El Rafie, who brings over 20 years of experience in strategic communications across Africa and the Middle East, criticises the common practice of global brands entering African markets with pre-packaged messages refined elsewhere. African audiences, she notes, quickly detect when communications are not created for them, leading to eroded trust.
“Credibility in African markets must be earned, and the currency it demands is relevance before reach,” she emphasises. Many international players still operate on a model where strategies are formulated in London, Paris, or New York and then “adapted” for local contexts an approach she sees as increasingly outdated.
The piece highlights the structural imbalances in Africa’s communications landscape. While African professionals demonstrate exceptional talent, much of the decision-making power remains concentrated outside the continent, limiting authentic storytelling and effective engagement.
Lessons from Crisis Communications
El Rafie draws on firsthand experience to illustrate the risks of applying uniform global playbooks. In crisis situations, she says, headquarters often push for consistent messaging to protect brand reputation. Yet in one case she witnessed, rigid consistency nearly escalated tensions, while a locally attuned response helped contain the issue.
“Cultural intelligence demanded appropriateness,” she writes. “Those are not the same thing. The gap between them is where reputations are permanently lost.”
A Call for Structural Change
The opinion comes amid broader conversations about narrative sovereignty in Africa. Studies, including one by Africanofilter, have long shown that international media coverage of the continent often skews negative, reinforcing outdated stereotypes rather than reflecting its diversity, innovation, and ambitions.
El Rafie’s message aligns with growing calls from African voices for partnerships based on mutual respect and local insight. She challenges senior communicators to “stop briefing Africa and start listening to it first,” describing this as essential investment protection in dynamic and culturally rich markets.
As APO Group’s regional leader, El Rafie has been instrumental in supporting pan-African clients including major institutions and corporations seeking more effective engagement strategies across the continent.
Her perspective underscores a maturing communications environment where authenticity and local ownership are becoming competitive advantages. For global brands and agencies, the implication is clear: success in Africa will increasingly depend not on how well they translate their existing narratives, but on how genuinely they amplify African ones.


