In much of the world, business infrastructure is invisible. Payments clear instantly. Logistics networks hum quietly in the background. Marketing channels, customer databases, and storefronts are modular, specialized, and often expensive. In Silicon Valley or London, entrepreneurship is about assembling the right stack from a menu of mature tools.
But in large parts of Africa, South Asia, and Latin America, that menu does not exist.
Instead, social media has become the stack.
Platforms originally designed for photos, messages, and casual connection are now doing the work of banks, retail leases, CRM systems, call centers, and ad networks — often simultaneously. For millions of entrepreneurs in emerging markets, social media is not a growth channel layered on top of a business. It is the business.
“Social media didn’t just lower the cost of starting a company,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “In many places, it replaced entire institutions that were never accessible in the first place.”
This shift is easy to miss from a Western vantage point, where Instagram is seen as marketing and WhatsApp as a utility. But in regions with limited access to capital, formal employment, or reliable infrastructure, these platforms function as economic operating systems — enabling commerce to happen where it otherwise would not.
The Informal Economy Goes Digital
The informal economy has always been central to emerging markets. Street vendors, home-based tailors, food sellers, and micro-merchants have long operated outside formal retail channels. What has changed over the past decade is not informality itself, but its digitization.
Smartphone penetration has outpaced nearly every other form of infrastructure development. Mobile internet arrived before widespread credit cards. Messaging apps became ubiquitous before small-business banking. As a result, entrepreneurs skipped entire phases of economic development that Western economies consider foundational.
“Leapfrogging isn’t just about technology,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “It’s about skipping institutional dependencies that were never designed for small, informal entrepreneurs to begin with.”
Instead of registering a business, renting a storefront, opening a merchant account, and buying ads, a seller can open Instagram, post products, respond to WhatsApp messages, and accept mobile payments — all within hours. Trust is built through visibility, conversation, and community rather than through brand equity or regulatory enforcement.
This model thrives not despite informality, but because of it. Flexibility replaces scale. Relationships replace automation. Speed replaces polish.
Zulzi: A Storefront Without a Store
The South African retailer Zulzi offers a clear illustration of how social media becomes infrastructure rather than amplification.
Zulzi began not with a website or physical shop, but with Instagram posts and WhatsApp conversations. Product discovery happened in the feed. Orders were placed in direct messages. Customer service lived in chat threads. Promotions spread through shares, screenshots, and word of mouth.
There was no separation between marketing, sales, and support — they were collapsed into a single interface.
Crucially, Zulzi also used social platforms to coordinate logistics. Delivery updates, scheduling, and customer feedback flowed through the same channels used to sell. In a country where last-mile delivery and retail real estate present significant barriers, this approach allowed the business to operate without heavy fixed costs.
When COVID-19 disrupted traditional retail, Zulzi did not need to pivot. It was already built for a world where physical interaction was optional and digital trust mattered more than foot traffic.
“During the pandemic, many formal businesses were scrambling to go online,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “But companies like Zulzi were already there. Social platforms weren’t a contingency plan — they were the foundation.”
While large retailers struggled with closed malls and broken supply chains, Zulzi continued operating inside a system designed for constant adaptation. The same tools that once seemed informal proved resilient under pressure.
Why the Model Works
The success of businesses like Zulzi is not accidental. It reflects a deep alignment between social platforms and the realities of emerging-market entrepreneurship.
First, social media is mobile-first. In regions where desktops and broadband are rare, phones are primary computing devices. Platforms optimized for low bandwidth and intermittent connectivity naturally outperform traditional e-commerce infrastructure.
Second, social platforms are trust-native. Reviews, comments, follower counts, and shared content act as informal reputation systems. For customers wary of fraud or poor quality, visibility substitutes for institutional guarantees.
Third, customer acquisition is embedded. Entrepreneurs do not need to learn SEO or buy expensive ads. Discovery happens through social graphs that mirror real-world relationships.
Finally, the cost structure is asymmetric. Starting a social-first business requires time, attention, and responsiveness — not large upfront capital. That matters in economies where access to credit is limited or nonexistent.
“What looks inefficient from a Western lens — manual messaging, ad hoc logistics — is often perfectly optimized for local constraints,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “Efficiency depends on context.”
Beyond the Western Tech Narrative
Much of the global technology conversation still assumes a linear progression: informal markets formalize, analog systems digitize, and eventually everything converges toward the same platforms and business models seen in the West.
But social-first entrepreneurship challenges that assumption.
Rather than evolving toward Amazon-like structures, many businesses are stabilizing around flexible, relationship-driven models that resist full automation. They scale through networks, not warehouses. They rely on social proof, not branding campaigns.
This is not a transitional phase — it is a durable equilibrium.
In fact, some of the most sophisticated uses of social commerce are emerging from regions historically framed as “catching up.” Live selling, conversational commerce, and community-driven distribution are often more advanced outside the United States than within it.
“There’s a tendency to view these businesses as temporary or improvised,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “In reality, they’re pioneering models that large platforms are now trying to replicate.”
Western companies increasingly talk about “creator commerce,” “DM-to-checkout,” and “community-led growth.” In emerging markets, these are not trends — they are defaults.
The Limits — and the Opportunity
This model is not without risk. Dependence on third-party platforms exposes entrepreneurs to algorithm changes, account bans, and shifting policies. Informality can limit access to financing and long-term growth. And labor-intensive operations can strain founders as demand increases.
Yet the alternative — waiting for traditional infrastructure to arrive — has rarely worked.
What social media offers is not perfection, but possibility. It allows economic activity to emerge organically, shaped by local needs rather than imported assumptions.
The lesson for policymakers and investors is not to force formalization prematurely, but to recognize where value is already being created. The lesson for technologists is to design tools that respect informality rather than trying to erase it.
Most importantly, the lesson for global business culture is humility.
“Entrepreneurship doesn’t follow a single blueprint,” Gaurav Mohindra said. “In many parts of the world, the most innovative business systems are hiding in plain sight — inside apps we still underestimate.”
As social platforms continue to blur the line between communication and commerce, the question is no longer whether they can support real businesses. They already do.
The real question is whether the rest of the world is paying attention.


