Breaking the Bottlenecks: How Data-Driven Location Intelligence is Fuelling Africa’s Digital Economy
By Antonie Peens, AfriGIS (Pretoria, South Africa – 16 January 2026)

PRETORIA, SOUTH AFRICA – As South Africa’s e-commerce sector continues its rapid ascent, the primary barrier to growth is no longer consumer demand, but rather the “hidden friction” of flawed location data and inefficient logistics. Antonie Peens, Client Consultant at AfriGIS, argues that for the digital economy to thrive, businesses must bridge the gap between the physical and digital worlds through intelligent, data-driven solutions.
The Location Data Constraint
While online retail adoption is outpacing traditional infrastructure, many businesses are finding their expansion stalled by a fundamental problem: poor or incomplete address data. In the African context, the “last mile” is more than a delivery phase; it is a strategic battleground where efficiency determines survival.
In Africa, the last-mile economy is essentially a location economy. Its success hinges on accurate addresses, precise navigation, and real-time insight into where customers are.
Solving the Last-Mile Puzzle
AfriGIS is playing a critical behind-the-scenes role in clearing these roadblocks by providing a geospatial foundation that allows retailers and couriers to operate with speed and precision. Key solutions include:
- Accurate Address Validation: Utilising National Address Databases and geocoding APIs to transform inconsistent addresses into precise coordinates with Level 1 confidence.
- Navigational Intelligence: Building routing models based on verified street networks, access rules, and granular mapping for complex environments like gated estates and informal settlements.
- Operational Efficiency: Reducing costly delivery failures and speeding up checkout processes by auto-correcting customer-entered data in real-time.
Strategic Expansion through Hyper-Local Insight
Beyond daily logistics, data-driven solutions are reshaping how businesses scale. Peens notes an accelerated demand for “micro-catchment modelling” and “drive-time analytics”. By leveraging competitive heatmaps and demographic segmentation, retailers can identify which neighbourhoods offer the highest ROI, ensuring they open delivery hubs in the right places rather than just convenient ones.
The Future of the Digital Marketplace
With the last mile accounting for up to 53% of total logistics costs globally—and often more in Africa – the pressure to optimise driver movements and reduce routing inefficiencies has never been higher.
The last mile determines whether a market grows or stalls. For the digital economy to thrive, location complexity must be turned into a competitive advantage. By integrating accurate location intelligence and contextual data, businesses can break through operational bottlenecks and build a scalable foundation for growth.