Across Africa, public relations is undergoing a quiet but significant shift. As startups, creatives, founders and fast-growing companies operate in a more competitive and capital-constrained environment, visibility is no longer a luxury or a late-stage activity. Credibility, trust, and media presence increasingly sit at the centre of growth, fundraising, hiring, and market entry strategies.
At the same time, traditional PR structures across the continent have struggled to keep pace with how modern businesses operate. Lengthy onboarding processes, opaque pricing, long turnaround times, and limited regional reach have created friction for clients who need speed, clarity, and measurable outcomes.
Launched in March 2025 by Olanrewaju Alaka, Pressdia emerged directly into this gap. Over the past year, the platform has quietly built momentum, positioning itself as a new kind of PR infrastructure for Africa—one designed around access, transparency, and scale. As 2026 approaches, Pressdia’s trajectory reflects both where African PR has been, and where it is heading.
Below, we examine the broader trends shaping PR and media across Africa, and how Pressdia’s performance in 2025 places it firmly among platforms to watch in 2026.
Across African markets, founders and organisations are increasingly expected to demonstrate legitimacy early. Media mentions, credible publications, and third-party validation now influence investor confidence, partnerships, visa applications, hiring decisions, and customer trust.
Pressdia’s model responds to this reality by making PR accessible earlier in a company or individual’s journey. In the first quarter since its establishment alone, the platform facilitated 960 confirmed publications, with coverage spanning Nigeria’s major national dailies, including The Guardian, Vanguard, BusinessDay, Tribune, The Nation, as well as industry-specific, regional and international platforms.
This growing volume reflects a shift away from PR as a closed, relationship-dependent service, toward PR as structured, trackable infrastructure—something businesses can plan around rather than hope for.
As African startups and professionals increasingly engage global markets, there is rising demand for coverage beyond home countries. Media exposure across North, East, and Southern Africa, as well as international business and technology platforms, is becoming part of the expansion strategy.
During the final quarter of 2025, Pressdia handled a notable increase in foreign and cross-border client requests, sourcing placements across North Africa (including Morocco), Southern Africa, East Africa, and international platforms such as Fast Company, Deutsche Welle (DW) and Onet.PL (Poland-based), alongside niche industry publications spanning mining, fintech, green energy, automobiles, and technology.
This regional breadth highlights a key advantage of Pressdia’s marketplace approach: the ability to activate diverse media networks quickly, without clients needing separate agencies or regional intermediaries. As African businesses continue to scale outward in 2026, this flexibility is likely to become even more valuable.
Globally, service industries are being reshaped by platforms that give users visibility into process and delivery. PR is no exception. Clients increasingly expect clarity on where their stories are going, how long delivery will take, and what outcomes to expect.
Pressdia’s platform reflects this shift. Clients select publications directly, upload materials, track progress through a dashboard, and receive coverage with an average turnaround time of under 24 hours. In a market where PR timelines have traditionally stretched into weeks, this speed represents a meaningful structural change.
Pressdia
By the end of 2025, Pressdia’s network encompassed 7,000+ media platforms, reaching an estimated 90 million monthly readers, with 1,500+ clients served across sectors ranging from fintech and real estate to entertainment, sustainability, fashion, clergy, and personal branding.
Another notable shift across African PR is the growing emphasis on why coverage matters. Clients are no longer satisfied with visibility alone; they want credibility that leads to tangible outcomes, whether funding, partnerships, visas, or market entry.
Pressdia’s work in 2025 reflected this change. The platform supported hundreds of professionals and creatives securing media features for Global Talent Visa and international relocation applications, alongside founders seeking investor-ready credibility. It also worked with over 15 personal branding clients on retained PR engagements, positioning them as industry voices rather than one-off news subjects.
This outcome-focused approach has helped position Pressdia not simply as a distribution channel, but as a strategic visibility partner.
As audiences fragment and attention shifts across platforms, PR increasingly overlaps with digital campaigns, influencer marketing, reputation management, and real-time visibility plays.
In response, Pressdia expanded its service offerings in 2025 to include social media virality campaigns (X/Twitter, TikTok, Instagram trends), affiliate programmes, influencer collaborations, and bundled packages such as the Pressdia Specials and Weekend Deals. These packages were developed after analysing client demand for combined visibility—editorial credibility alongside promotional flexibility, backlinks, and branded assets.
The result has been some of Pressdia’s strongest-selling offerings to date, particularly among startups and SMEs seeking cost-effective, high-impact exposure.
Across Africa, PR increasingly operates within ecosystems rather than silos. Tech events, product launches, cultural platforms, and community-driven initiatives are becoming key visibility moments.
In 2025, Pressdia partnered with multiple technology-focused events, app launches, fintech platforms, film projects, streaming services, concerts, and women-centred initiatives aligned with gender equity. The platform also received recognition from national Nigerian dailies including Punch and Premium Times, reflecting growing visibility within the media ecosystem itself.
Internally, Pressdia expanded its team and introduced new systems to support scale, while continuing to invest in automation, outreach infrastructure, and operational refinement.
Beyond visibility and impact, Pressdia’s 2025 performance demonstrated strong commercial momentum. The platform recorded consistent revenue growth throughout the year, secured multiple strategic partnerships, and consistently met internal growth targets. These indicators point to a model gaining adoption not only for its novelty, but for its practicality.
As Africa’s communications landscape continues to evolve, platforms that combine access, scale, and execution discipline are likely to shape the next phase of PR on the continent.
Pressdia enters 2026 positioned at the intersection of media, technology, and trust—with plans to expand coverage into additional African markets, deepen international media access, host virtual communications-focused events, and further automate PR workflows.
In a year where businesses are expected to do more with less, Pressdia’s trajectory suggests a platform aligned with the realities of modern African growth. Not by reinventing PR entirely, but by making it work the way today’s clients need it to.
The post How Pressdia is redefining PR in 2026 first appeared on Technext.


