Cellulant builds Africa’s first Augmented Reality (AR) experience on Messenger in partnership with Facebook

Cellulant builds Africa’s first Augmented Reality (AR) experience on Messenger in partnership with Facebook

Pan-African Payment company, Cellulant, has built Africa’s first Augmented Reality (AR) powered try-on experiences in leveraging on Facebook to provide a unique experience where to customers can discover, try the product before they buy.

Cellulant is revolutionizing experiences on how consumers discover, try and pay for things that matter to them. The company built Mula to provide simple and convenient payment experiences for the rising number of global, business, and micro-merchants (or Hustle-preneurs). With this partnership with Facebook, Mula integrates Augmented Reality into the Facebook Messenger where customers are able to discover and try products before they purchase.

Brands that leverage social media as platforms for e-commerce can now give their customers a world-class one-stop-shop service from trial, to payment and delivery, all within Facebook and Instagram. This is a departure from the current disjoined social commerce experience.

The uniqueness of the digital experience using Augmented Reality is exciting. Trying out a product on social commerce before purchase has previously been impossible. Augmented Reality presents an opportunity for African brands and companies to build trust with consumers where “touch and feel” is often a pre-requisite before purchase.

For Huddah lipsticks, for example, the AR technology switches on the camera on your cell phone and engages the buyer to try different shades before making a choice and concluding the purchase through Mula seamlessly. Augmented Reality presents an opportunity to push brand lift, deliver world-class customer experience, brand interactions, improving conversion, and real-time purchase fulfillment.

According to Cellulant’s Chief Product Officer Faizal Mirza, “no matter how you look at the future of innovation in Africa- the future is in providing a seamless experience in a space that is currently fragmented.

This partnership with Facebook allows us to do so for a segment that is often neglected when considering the economies of scale in Africa. This is the beginning of our journey to offering seamless, smart and connected digital payment experience to our customers across Africa. Fundamentally, we will be able to connect one of Africa’s growing base of micro-merchants’ gig economy a.k.a Hustle-preneurs to their ever mobile and digital customers.

The success of Huddah Cosmetics, a beauty company, is credited to its bold and daring founder, Kenyan model and entrepreneur, Alhuda Njoroge better known as Huddah Monroe. Born and raised in Nairobi, Huddah has captured the attention of the Kenyan masses and enjoys a huge following on Social Media. Launched in 2016, Huddah Cosmetics provides a solution to long lasting day-to-day makeup needs for African women.

I started my company out of pure passion and vision to offer every woman a product that celebrate the diversity of African beauty. Huddah Cosmetics is for every woman who is strong-willed, outspoken and stands for what they believe regardless of what the society thinks,” says Huddah Monroe.

“I am excited to be the first Hustle-preneur to work with Cellulant and Facebook as they launch this new shopping experience using Augmented Reality on Facebook Messenger. This is an opportunity for my company to give a unique online shopping experience of our beauty products to our customers in a way that has never happened before.”

A GeoPoll survey published in February this year* found that a significant number of online shoppers utilize Facebook groups. At 32%, Facebook is the second leading online retailer in the main e-commerce regions. More and more, informal entrepreneurs are using this leading social media channel to sell through their groups or similar interest groups. With mobile phones having such huge penetration on the continent, e-commerce is an opportunity for online retailers to reach the youthful African consumer population, the survey reports.

Proud Dzambukira, the Facebook Product Partnership Lead, Middle East & Africa commented: “We’re thrilled to be partnering with Cellulant and Huddah Cosmetics in a first for the continent, Augmented Reality (AR) in Messenger, a powerful and innovative tool to aid her customers discover, try and buy her range of cosmetics through Facebook and Instagram. With nearly 1 in 2 SMBs on Facebook building their business on Facebook, our platform can play a powerful role in enabling social commerce. We want to help drive innovation by supporting Africa’s entrepreneurship ecosystem, and this is just one of the many ways.”

This partnership with Huddah Cosmetics is in line with one of Cellulant’s objective to empower youth and transform their online hustle into a viable and scalable business by creating platforms that help grow their bottom-line.  As a payment platform, the company is investing in advancing Africa’s economic footprint by building payments infrastructure that gives the customer the choice on how they manage and use their money. Ultimately, the payments infrastructure will power the success of millions of businesses by providing a simple and easy way to receive money from their customers.

Kenya is the first country to launch this new online experience with Nigeria, Tanzania, and Rwanda to follow.

Related posts

900 Million Users Globally, but Telegram has Just 15 Employees

Cost vs. Value in Banking App Development: What You Need to Know

What’s the Difference between Ubuntu and Kubuntu?