Global giants like Amazon have been trying to get a foothold in South African e-commerce, but local brands such as Takealot have continued to hold consumer loyalty. Last year's 23% revenue growth speaks to Takealot's penchant for outperforming the United States of America's largest e-commerce company on African soil. 

However, halfway into 2026, South African consumers are gearing up to swap their blue and white loyalty for the orange and black across the ocean. Having recently launched Prime in South Africa with quite the aggressive pricing, Amazon has intrigued the nation. For R59 per month or alternatively R399 per year, shoppers get free delivery, video and gaming. 

While Takelot's market strategy stemmed from product, price and delivery capabilities, Amazon flipped the proverbial script and turned their focus to consumer membership. While better service offerings might initially be the driving force, convincing their consumers to subscribe to long-term loyalty seems to be the marketing strategy at play here. 

Retailers today are trying to convince consumers to subscribe to a relationship instead of buying a once-off product. Being the default choice every time a consumer needs a product or service is a lot more beneficial to brands when what they can always depend on in globally competitive markets is the near-limitless array of choice. 

Amazon's entry therefore reflects not only heightened competition in the local e-commerce space — demonstrated with Amazon's recent e-commerce move in South Africa —  but it points to a structural adjustment in retail strategy. As this consumer relationship model develops, sustainable relevance may depend less on transactional appeal and more on consistent consumer integration

 

Did you find this article insightful? Let us know in the comments section below.

Want to stay up-to-date with the latest news? Subscribe to our newsletter

Want to learn more about brand loyalty and how to do it right? Read Forget Followers, Focus on Communities.

*Image courtesy of Canva 

**Information sourced from Business Insider, Tech Central and Business Tech