Beyond PESTEL: Decoding Africa’s Unique Business Terrain with PESTRE

For decades, global business analysts have relied on the PESTEL framework (comprising Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Environmental, and Legal factors )to understand national environments.
Developed through rigorous academic research and refined by economists, PESTEL actually depicts a structured lens through which businesses interpret trends, assess risks, and align with institutional systems. However, it works exceptionally well in contexts where institutions are stable and systems are predictable.
But what happens when the terrain itself defies predictability? What happens when the rules of engagement are written not in policy documents, but in the rhythms of faith, the bonds of community, and the whispers of networks? After years of working across Nigeria and Africa, I came to a sobering realisation: PESTEL could not fully explain the African reality.
Here, decision-making is more emotional, more religious, more community-driven, and far less predictable. Politics often bends the law, rather than the other way around. Religion shapes behaviour more powerfully than policy. Networks determine access more reliably than institutions. To navigate this landscape, I developed a new hypothetical framework, one born from the African experience. I call it PESTREN.
PESTREN evolved from PESTEL, but it speaks the truth of the African terrain. It stands for:
P – Political (a fusion of politics and legality)
E – Economics
S – Social
T – Technology
R – Religion
E – Ethnicity
N – Networks
Allow me to walk you through the forces that truly shape this continent.
1. Political: The Weather of Business
In much of Africa, politics is not just a factor—it is the climate. It sets the atmosphere in which businesses must breathe. A change in administration can redefine an industry overnight. Policies can appear without lengthy legislative debate; political will can accelerate or freeze economic activity in real time.
While the legal system provides the ground on which businesses stand—through contracts, courts, and corporate law—political power often influences how that ground is shaped. I have witnessed companies win legal battles but lose in reality because a rival had stronger political backing. Contracts can be reversed when the political “owner” of a project changes. In Africa, politics sets the weather; the law operates within it.
Thus, the strategic questions shift. A business leader in London might ask, “What does the regulation say?” In Lagos, the questions are: “Who is in power?” “What is their agenda?” “Which alliances shape this sector?” To ignore this is to sail into a storm without checking the forecast.
2. Religion: The Emotional Operating System
Africa is the most religious continent on earth. Faith here is not a private preference; it is a public compass, a worldview, and a decision-making framework. People often trust prophecy more than policy and fear spiritual consequences more than economic ones.
Religion permeates everything: spending habits, trust, loyalty, and identity. A sermon can shift consumer behaviour faster than a national budget speech. A pastor’s endorsement can propel a business to success; a warning can stall a trend. During elections, many wait for spiritual direction before casting their vote. This is a structural reality to understand. During religious fasting periods, businesses ought to adjust their menus or expect sales to decrease. The emotional and moral centre of society often resides with spiritual leaders, not just political figures.
To understand the African consumer, you must understand their spiritual ecosystem. Money followsbelief here, not only logic.
3. Ethnicity: The Subconscious Architecture of Trust
Long before colonial borders drew lines on maps, Africa was a continent of nations defined by tribe—Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Akan, Zulu, and countless others. These identities did not vanish with independence; they went underground, weaving themselves into instincts and social structures.
Ethnicity often determines trust before logic enters the room. The unspoken first question in many interactions is not “Is this business competent?” but “Who are they?” Shared names, dialects, and cultural cues create bridges of familiarity that accelerate hiring, partnerships, and negotiations.
We see this in Nigeria’s banking history, where certain banks grew dominant within specific ethnic communities through relational trust. We see it in Nollywood and Afrobeats, where artists often win their tribal base before conquering the national or global stage. To communicate effectively, to market successfully, you must learn the cultural tone, humour, and respect the language of the people you wish to serve. Ethnicity is not a barrier; it is a map.
4. Economics: The Pressure of Survival
In Africa, economics is not about preference; it is about pressure. Buying decisions are filtered through survival, insecurity, family obligation, and relentless inflation. The famous “sachet economy”—where products are sold in tiny, affordable units—is not poor marketing. It is a brilliant adaptation to daily cash flow realities. Central Bank data released in 2023 showed that fewer than two percent of Nigerians held balances above ₦500,000.
When economic shocks hit, as with Nigeria’s fuel subsidy removal, the entire market landscape can reshape in days. Brand loyalty bows to necessity. Long-term planning is a luxury. To understand the African customer’s mind, you must first understand the state of their wallet. Economic reality leads; consumer behaviour follows.
5. Networks: The Engine of Progress
In the West, networks can help you. In Africa, networks often decide for you. Competence matters, but connections regularly determine destiny. Access, trust, and opportunity flow through relational pipelines.
A warm introduction can outweigh a flawless CV; a phone call from the right person can move obstacles that would take months to clear through formal channels.
From the oil sector to Nollywood, from government contracts to startup funding, relationships quietly determine who gets what, when, and how. A strong network is not just social capital—it is a strategic asset that can protect during crises and accelerate during opportunities. In this terrain, success is not only about brilliance; it is about alignment.
6. Technology: The Great Leapfrog
If there is one force marching inexorably forward across Africa, it is technology. Unhindered by legacy systems, Africa has become a continent of leapfrog innovation. We skipped landlines for mobile phones. We bypassed traditional banking for fintech. Where infrastructure is weak, digital creativity becomes powerful.
Technology is the great equalizer here. It democratises opportunity, removes gatekeepers, and allows a young developer in a small town to build a product for the world. It has birthed global giants from local necessity. To ignore technology is to be left behind—quietly, slowly, but inevitably.
Why PESTREN Matters
PESTEL explains the global world in broad strokes. PESTREN attempts to explain Africa on its own terms. It provides a realistic, contextual, and deeply human map of the forces that shape behaviour, trust, and markets on this continent.
Victory in the African marketplace begins not with applying external frameworks, but with understanding the African mind. PESTREN is my humble contribution to that understanding.
These insights are not abstract theories; they are excerpts from a book I am writing on the architecture of influence, expansion, and strategy in Africa called “CONQUEST.”.. The goal is simple: to give leaders, founders, policymakers, and thinkers a framework that finally matches the reality we live and operate in. Africa is not chaotic; it is contextual. And once we learn to read it with the right lens, we stop reacting in confusion and start building with precision.