Wimbart, a public relations agency focused on business and technology sectors across Africa and emerging markets, has launched Wimbart Lite, a dedicated service for pre-seed and early-stage startups.
The service is aimed at African companies that have raised under $1 million and need targeted, fast-turnaround communications support. Its launch comes as Africa’s tech ecosystem matures and competition for media attention intensifies, putting early-stage startups under pressure to showcase traction to investors, partners, and customers.
PR costs have long been a barrier for small companies. In some African markets, small businesses spend up to $1,500 monthly on basic PR retainers, while larger firms pay between $5,000 and $15,000, and international campaigns can exceed $20,000 per month. Combined with staffing and structural gaps in many agencies, these costs make professional PR largely inaccessible for startups. Wimbart Lite was designed to address this gap, joining other platforms offering affordable communications services.
“Wimbart was built in the trenches with African tech founders, before the market fully caught up with their vision,” said Jessica Hope, Wimbart’s founder and CEO. “Wimbart Lite has been in development as a service for early-stage companies who may not need full month-to-month PR support but do need to get their story out there.”
The service operates on a menu-based model with three core offerings: milestone announcements for launches and partnerships, founder profile packs to build thought leadership, and fundraise communications for early-stage rounds. Startups within VC portfolios receive a 15% discount.
Maria Adediran, Wimbart’s Associate Director and founding team member, has been appointed Head of Wimbart Lite. She brings over a decade of experience in consumer and corporate PR, having led multi-market campaigns for companies from early-stage startups to unicorns, including Andela, M-KOPA, TLcom, and Kobo360.
“Wimbart Lite exists to turn early milestones, partnerships, and fundraises into a clear, credible story the ecosystem can understand and trust,” Adediran said.
Founded in 2015, Wimbart operates across Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, and Egypt, and says it has supported more than 180 companies across 20 African countries.

