I have told pieces of this story before. But never the whole thing.
Today, I am going to sit down and tell you exactly how Accra Street Journal went from an idea in a small room in Oyarifa to a growing digital platform that reaches thousands of Ghanaian business owners every month.
No highlights reel. No “hustle porn.” Just the real story. The failures. The doubts. The small wins that added up. The mistakes that almost killed everything.
As the Editor-in-Chief and Founder of Accra Street Journal, and also the founder of The High Street Business and SamBoad Business Group Ltd, I have learned that people only see the success. They do not see the years of nobody caring.
Today, you will see it all.
This is for anyone in Ghana who wants to build something from nothing. A blog. A media brand. A digital platform. Any thing that starts with zero and grows through sheer will.
The Beginning: Before Accra Street Journal
Before the journal, I was a young Ghanaian trying to figure out life.
I had learned digital marketing by reading blogs, watching YouTube tutorials on slow internet, and practicing on anything that would let me. I had done small freelance jobs for friends and family. But nothing was stable. Nothing was growing.
I knew I needed something different. Something that was mine.
The idea came slowly. I saw that Ghanaian businesses needed practical, trustworthy information about marketing, business growth, and digital strategy. The existing media covered politics and entertainment. Business coverage was either too academic or too shallow.
What if I created a publication that spoke directly to Ghanaian business owners? Not in big English. Not copying foreign examples. Real talk for real people.
That was the seed.
The First Year: Humility University
I am going to be honest with you. The first year of Accra Street Journal was embarrassing.
I launched with great energy. I told everyone I knew. I posted on my personal WhatsApp. I shared on every social media platform.
And then? Silence.
My first article got maybe 10 views. Most of them were me checking from different devices. My second article got 7 views. My third got 4.
I remember sitting in my room, staring at my analytics, and feeling like a fool. Who was I to think anyone would read what I wrote?
But something kept me going. Stubbornness, probably. Pride, maybe. I had told people I was doing this. I could not just stop.
So I kept writing. Week after week. Month after month.
The numbers from year one:
- Articles published: Over 50
- Average monthly traffic: Less than 200
- Revenue: Zero cedis
- Times I almost quit: At least 10
I learned something valuable in that first few months. Building a digital platform in Ghana takes longer than you think. Much longer. And most people quit before anything happens.
I decided I would not be most people.
The Turning Point: When Things Started to Change
Around month seven or eight, something shifted.
I had been writing consistently. I had been sharing consistently. And slowly, painfully slowly, the numbers started moving.
Month seven: 300 visitors. Not great. But better than 200.
Month eight: 450 visitors.
Month nine: 700 visitors.
Month ten: 1,000 visitors.
One thousand people in a month. It was not huge by global standards. But to me, it was everything. It meant that someone, somewhere, was finding what I wrote useful.
What changed? I stopped writing what I wanted to write. I started writing what people were actually searching for.
I used Google Search Console and free keyword tools to find real questions that Ghanaians were typing. “How to register a business in Ghana.” “How to get a loan for a small business.” “How to price products in Ghana.”
I wrote detailed, practical answers. No fluff. No word count targets. Just useful information that helped someone solve a problem.
That was the turning point. I stopped guessing and started serving.
The Strategy That Actually Worked
Let me break down exactly what I did, step by step, so you can learn from it.
Strategy #1: I Chose One Channel and Dominated It
Everyone told me to be everywhere. Instagram. Facebook. Twitter. LinkedIn. TikTok. YouTube.
I ignored them.
I chose one channel: Google search. I decided that if someone searched for a business question in Ghana, my article would be the answer.
Everything I did served that goal. My headlines were written for search. My content answered specific questions. My website was optimized for mobile and speed.
Only after I had traffic from Google did I expand to other channels. But in the beginning, focus was everything.
Strategy #2: I Built an Owned Audience from Day One
This saved me.
From the very first article, I collected WhatsApp numbers. I put a simple form on my website: “Get new articles sent to your WhatsApp.”
Every person who signed up was mine. No algorithm could take them away.
Today, that WhatsApp list is one of my most valuable assets. When I publish something important, I send it to the list. They read it. They share it. They become customers.
If I had relied only on social media, Accra Street Journal would not exist today. Platform changes would have killed me.
Strategy #3: I Wrote for Mobile First
I noticed early that most of my traffic came from phones. Small screens. Slow data. Short attention spans.
I changed my writing style completely.
- Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max)
- Clear subheadings every few paragraphs
- Large, readable font
- No popups or annoying elements
- Images that loaded fast
The result? People stayed on my pages longer. Google noticed. My rankings improved.
Strategy #4: I Updated Old Content Relentlessly
New articles are exciting. Old articles are boring. But old articles are where the gold is.
Every month, I went back to my top 10 articles and updated them. New information. Fresh examples. Fixed broken links. Improved formatting.
Google loves fresh content. And updating old articles took less time than writing new ones but often brought better results.
Strategy #5: I Gave Away Value for Free
I have never hidden my best advice behind a paywall. Everything I know, I have published for free on Accra Street Journal.
Why? Because the free content builds trust. And trust leads to paid work.
Someone reads my article about digital marketing. They see that I know what I am talking about. They have a problem that needs more than an article. They contact SamBoad Business Group Ltd. We work together.
The free content is my best marketing. It always has been.
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The Low Points: When I Almost Lost Everything
Building Accra Street Journal was not all progress and wins. There were dark moments.
There was the month when Google updated its algorithm and my traffic dropped by 60% overnight. I had done nothing wrong. The rules just changed. I spent weeks figuring out what happened and fixing it.
There was the time my hosting company had a major outage. The site was down for three days. I lost readers. I lost momentum. I learned to never trust one provider again.
There was the period when I had no money. Freelance work had dried up. Accra Street Journal was not making anything. I wondered if I needed to give up and find a regular job.
There were the attacks. People who said I was not a real journalist. People who copied my articles and published them as their own. People who left nasty comments for no reason.
Every low point taught me something. Backups. Multiple revenue streams. Emotional resilience. Ignoring the haters.
The platform grew because I did not stop when stopping would have been easier.
The High Points: When It All Felt Worth It
There were also moments of joy.
The first time someone I did not know sent me a message saying “thank you for this article, it helped my business.” That moment made all the struggle worth it.
The first time a major Ghanaian brand reached out to advertise on Accra Street Journal. I felt like I had arrived.
The first time I saw my article shared by someone I had never met, in a WhatsApp group I was not part of. The content had taken on a life of its own.
The first time a client told me they found me through Accra Street Journal and wanted to work with SamBoad Business Group Ltd. The ecosystem was working.
These moments did not come often. But when they came, they reminded me why I started.
How Accra Street Journal Makes Money
People always ask this. Let me be transparent.
Accra Street Journal itself does not make much direct revenue. Advertising in Ghana is not lucrative. Display ads pay pennies. Sponsored posts are inconsistent.
The real value of Accra Street Journal is indirect.
- It builds credibility for SamBoad Business Group Ltd. When potential clients see that I run a respected publication, they trust me more.
- It attracts clients. Business owners read an article, see that I understand their problems, and reach out for help.
- It creates networking opportunities. Other publishers, brands, and influencers know the name.
- It opens doors. Speaking opportunities. Partnerships. Collaborations.
The media platform is the marketing engine. The service business is the revenue engine.
I share this because many young Ghanaians think they can start a blog and make money from ads quickly. You cannot. Build a media platform to build authority. Monetize through services, products, or consulting.
What I Would Do Differently
Looking back, I made mistakes. Lots of them.
I would have niched down faster. I spent too much time trying to cover everything. When I focused on business and digital marketing for Ghanaian entrepreneurs, growth accelerated.
I would have built my WhatsApp list from day one. I did it early, but not early enough. Every day without a list was a day I was building on rented land.
I would have ignored social media metrics. I spent hours worrying about likes and shares that did not matter. I would focus only on website traffic and list growth.
I would have updated old content sooner. I left good articles to die when a simple refresh could have revived them.
I would have charged for services earlier. I undercharged because I lacked confidence. I would value my expertise from the beginning.
But mistakes are how I learned. So maybe I would not change anything. Because those mistakes made me who I am.
Lessons for Anyone Building a Digital Platform in Ghana
If you want to build something like Accra Street Journal, here is my honest advice.
Start before you are ready. If you wait until you have the perfect design, the perfect strategy, the perfect everything, you will never start. Start messy. Start small. Improve as you go.
Commit to a long time. Building a digital platform in Ghana takes years. Not months. Years. If you are not willing to work for 24 months with little reward, do not start.
Serve one person well. Do not try to please everyone. Pick one person. Your ideal reader. Write every article for that person. If you serve them well, others will come.
Build your own list. Social media is rented land. Build an email list or WhatsApp list from day one. That is your real audience.
Give away your best stuff. Do not hold back. Do not save the good advice for paying customers. Give everything away for free. It will come back to you multiplied.
Be patient. This is the hardest lesson. SEO takes time. Trust takes time. Growth takes time. Patience is not passive. It is active commitment to the process.
Where Accra Street Journal Is Going
Today, Accra Street Journal is a growing digital platform. But we are just getting started.
We are expanding into video content. We are building a community for Ghanaian business owners. We are exploring new formats and new channels.
The mission remains the same. Provide practical, trustworthy business information for Ghanaian entrepreneurs. No fluff. No politics. Just value.
As I build The High Street Business and Accra Street Journal, SamBoad Business Group Ltd remains the foundation. It is where my voice was born. It is where my audience found me. It is where the journey began.
Real Talk from a Ghanaian Publisher
I started Accra Street Journal with nothing. No funding. No connections. No media experience. Just a willingness to show up every week and write something useful.
Today, it is a real platform. It reaches real people. It has real impact.
I am not special. I am not a genius. I am just someone who refused to stop when stopping was the logical choice.
If you want to build something in Ghana, you can. But you must be willing to pay the price. The price is years of no one caring. The price is working when you are tired. The price is believing when there is no evidence.
Pay that price. It is worth it.
And if you ever need guidance, my team at SamBoad Business Group Ltd offers a free 30-minute digital platform strategy session for Ghanaian founders. No pitch. No pressure. Just advice from someone who has walked the path.
Because Ghana needs more digital platforms. And one of them could be yours.

