Impact vs Attention in Bitcoin Africa

OPINIONS

Being in Kampala right now, hosting the Lightning Developer Bootcamp with Africa Free Routing, I’ve been thinking about something that doesn’t get said enough.

A lot of people in the Bitcoin space are optimizing for making money.

Very few are optimizing for impact.

And the difference is starting to show.

The Shift I’m Not Comfortable With

Somewhere along the line, the conversation changed.

Instead of:
“How do we use Bitcoin to solve real problems?”

It became:
“How do I make money from Bitcoin?”

There’s nothing wrong with making money. Let’s be honest, incentives matter. But when that becomes the primary focus, everything else starts to suffer.

You see it in the kinds of products being built.
You see it in the conversations being had.
You even see it in how people measure success.

More attention is going to hype than to utility.

The Ecosystem We’re Quietly Creating

If we’re honest, some of what we’re building today is starting to feel performative.

Projects that exist more on Twitter than in real life.
Communities that are active in pictures, but inactive in substance.
Events where the highlight is the group photo, not what was actually learned or built.

You see “initiatives” that launch loudly and disappear quietly.
You see people attach themselves to Bitcoin without doing the hard work of understanding or contributing to it.

And slowly, a pattern forms.

Optics over outcomes.
Visibility over value.
Momentum without depth.

The Cost of Chasing Appearances

At first, it might not seem like a big deal.

But over time, it compounds.

Developers get discouraged when there’s more recognition for noise than for real work.
Builders start to question whether depth is even rewarded.
Newcomers enter the space and get a distorted view of what actually matters.

And worst of all, the real problems remain unsolved.

Because solving real problems is harder than taking good pictures.
It’s harder than announcing partnerships.
It’s harder than “being seen.”

What Real Work Actually Looks Like

Real impact is quieter.

It looks like:

  • debugging for hours with no audience
  • building tools that may not be flashy but are actually useful
  • teaching others without expecting recognition
  • staying consistent long after the hype is gone

If the Bitcoin ecosystem in Africa is going to mature, we need to reset what we celebrate.

A Pattern That Keeps Repeating

This isn’t something I noticed just once.

It’s something I’ve been seeing over and over again.

Across different cities. Different events. Different communities.

The same cycle plays out.

Something launches.
There’s excitement.
There’s noise.
There are pictures.

And then, slowly, it fades.

Not because the idea was bad.
But because there was no real depth behind it.

The Gap Between Saying and Doing

It’s easy to say you’re building.

It’s harder to actually build.

It’s easy to gather people and call it a community.

It’s harder to create an environment where people are actually learning, growing, and shipping real things.

It’s easy to talk about impact.

It’s harder to stay long enough to create it.

And that gap is where a lot of things fall apart.

Why This Matters More Than We Think

The Bitcoin ecosystem in Africa is still early.

Which means the culture we normalize now will shape what this space becomes.

If we normalize hype, we’ll attract people who chase visibility.
If we normalize shortcuts, we’ll get shallow solutions.

But if we normalize real work, consistency, and depth, we’ll build something that actually lasts.

That choice is being made every day, whether we realize it or not.

Maybe it’s time we start asking better questions.

Not “Who is making the most noise?”
But “Who is actually building something useful?”

Not “Who is visible?”
But “Who is consistent?”

Not “Who showed up for the photo?”
But “Who stayed to do the work?”

In the end, Bitcoin doesn’t need more attention.

It needs more intention.

Because long after the tweets, the events, and the announcements fade, the only thing that remains is what was actually built.

And that’s what will define this ecosystem.