This Is Why We Built MySA
Yesterday I spoke to a small business owner.
Fourteen years in business.
Twelve thousand followers online.
And his latest post reached less than 300 people.
He asked me something that stuck with me:
“Domenico, must I now pay just so the people who already follow me can see my post?”
He wasn’t angry.
He was tired.
And that’s when it hit me again.
South Africa is full of people who wake up early.
Who work late.
Who hustle.
Who sacrifice.
Who build something from nothing.
But online?
We rent space.
We don’t own the ground we stand on.
Our businesses grow… until an algorithm changes.
Our reach drops… unless we pay more.
Our data leaves the country.
Our money leaves the country.
And we are told this is “just how it works.”
No.
It doesn’t have to work like that.
I didn’t build MySA because I was bored.
I didn’t build it because I wanted another app.
I built it because I was tired of watching local businesses fight for oxygen in a room they don’t control.
MySA is not about competing with global platforms.
It’s about building something of our own.
A place where:
• Verified users are real people
• Verified businesses are real businesses
• Support stays local
• Engagement means something
• Your effort isn’t filtered into silence
When you join MySA, you are not just creating a profile.
You are choosing to support a local digital economy.
When you verify your business, you are not just getting a badge.
You are telling customers:
“I am real. I stand behind my name.”
When you review a local company, share their post, or support their service, you are not just scrolling.
You are strengthening your own community.
Every country protects what matters to it.
Why shouldn’t we protect our digital space too?
This is bigger than social media.
This is about dignity.
This is about visibility.
This is about ownership.
This is about South Africans backing South Africans.
We cannot complain about global control while refusing to support local solutions.
We cannot ask for change while staying comfortable in systems that don’t serve us.
MySA is not perfect.
It is growing.
And growth takes people who believe in building, not just consuming.
So the question is simple:
Will you watch from the sidelines…
Or will you stand up and be part of building something South Africa can call its own?
Let’s build this properly. Together.
#ImpactSA #MySA
This Is Why We Built MySA
Yesterday I spoke to a small business owner.
Fourteen years in business.
Twelve thousand followers online.
And his latest post reached less than 300 people.
He asked me something that stuck with me:
“Domenico, must I now pay just so the people who already follow me can see my post?”
He wasn’t angry.
He was tired.
And that’s when it hit me again.
South Africa is full of people who wake up early.
Who work late.
Who hustle.
Who sacrifice.
Who build something from nothing.
But online?
We rent space.
We don’t own the ground we stand on.
Our businesses grow… until an algorithm changes.
Our reach drops… unless we pay more.
Our data leaves the country.
Our money leaves the country.
And we are told this is “just how it works.”
No.
It doesn’t have to work like that.
I didn’t build MySA because I was bored.
I didn’t build it because I wanted another app.
I built it because I was tired of watching local businesses fight for oxygen in a room they don’t control.
MySA is not about competing with global platforms.
It’s about building something of our own.
A place where:
• Verified users are real people
• Verified businesses are real businesses
• Support stays local
• Engagement means something
• Your effort isn’t filtered into silence
When you join MySA, you are not just creating a profile.
You are choosing to support a local digital economy.
When you verify your business, you are not just getting a badge.
You are telling customers:
“I am real. I stand behind my name.”
When you review a local company, share their post, or support their service, you are not just scrolling.
You are strengthening your own community.
Every country protects what matters to it.
Why shouldn’t we protect our digital space too?
This is bigger than social media.
This is about dignity.
This is about visibility.
This is about ownership.
This is about South Africans backing South Africans.
We cannot complain about global control while refusing to support local solutions.
We cannot ask for change while staying comfortable in systems that don’t serve us.
MySA is not perfect.
It is growing.
And growth takes people who believe in building, not just consuming.
So the question is simple:
Will you watch from the sidelines…
Or will you stand up and be part of building something South Africa can call its own?
Let’s build this properly. Together.
#ImpactSA #MySA