The Illusion of Ecommerce in Ethiopia: Browsing Online, Buying Offline
You see them everywhere—sleek Facebook pages, polished Instagram shops, even mobile apps with "Add to Cart" buttons. Ethiopia, it seems, has embraced ecommerce. But has it really?
Let me paint you a picture of how online shopping actually works in Addis Ababa today.
A customer finds a beautiful piece of furniture on a popular Ethiopian ecommerce platform. They click through high-resolution photos, read the description, check the price. Then they do what 99% of Ethiopian "online shoppers" do: they scroll down, find the seller's phone number, and call.
"Hello, is the brown leather sofa still available? Can I come see it tomorrow?"
This is not ecommerce. This is a digital catalog with a phone book attached.
The Three Pillars That Don't Exist
For true ecommerce to function, you need three things: infrastructure that delivers, a business model that closes the loop online, and consumer protection that builds trust. Ethiopia has none of these.
Infrastructure: Payment gateways are unreliable. Cash-on-delivery is risky for sellers. Logistics outside of Addis are a nightmare. When a customer in Hawassa orders from a seller in Bahir Dar, there is no seamless, trackable, guaranteed delivery system. The transaction dies on the phone.
Business Model: Almost every Ethiopian "ecommerce" site operates as a lead generator. They make money by listing products, not by processing transactions. The moment a customer calls the seller, the platform loses control, visibility, and revenue. That's not a store—that's a classified ad.
Consumer Protection: What happens when the product arrives broken? Or doesn't arrive at all? Or looks nothing like the photo? There is no escrow system, no dispute resolution, no refund mechanism. The buyer's only leverage is prayer. So what do Ethiopians do? They call the seller, arrange to meet in person, inspect the product, and pay with cash. Offline. Every single time.
Call It What It Is: Classified Ads
Let's be honest. When you use a website to see a product and then pick up your phone to complete every meaningful step of the transaction—negotiation, verification, payment, delivery—you are not doing ecommerce.
You are doing what Ethiopians have done for decades with newspaper classifieds. The only difference is the paper is now a screen.
True ecommerce means you click "buy," enter payment, and the product arrives at your door without a single phone call, without a face-to-face meeting, without cash changing hands in person. Until that is the norm in Ethiopia, we are simply pretending.
The Hard Truth
Ethiopia does not have an ecommerce problem. It has an honesty problem. We have built the storefronts but not the stores. We have designed the shopping carts but chained them to the ground. We celebrate platforms as "ecommerce success stories" when they cannot complete a single transaction without a phone call.
Call it a digital marketplace. Call it an online directory. Call it what you will. But until a customer in Jijiga can buy from a seller in Gondar with one click, digital payment, and doorstep delivery—with a refund if something goes wrong—let us not insult ourselves by calling it ecommerce.
Because browsing online and buying offline is not the future. It is the past, dressed in a smartphone.
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