South Africa’s independent businesses could soon have an artificial intelligence assistant helping them manage sales, customers and day-to-day operations, after commerce platform Yoco unveiled a suite of new digital tools aimed at easing the burden on entrepreneurs.
The launch comes as many small businesses battle subdued consumer spending and rising operating costs. The latest survey shows 46% of independent business owners feel less confident than they did at the start of the year, with more than half saying pressure on household spending has further dented their optimism.
Against that backdrop, the platform announced on Thursday more than 20 new products and features — including its first AI-powered business agent — in what the company describes as its biggest expansion since launching as a payments provider.
South Africa’s independent businesses, from neighbourhood cafés and salons to clothing stores and family-run retailers, often operate with limited staff and tight margins, leaving owners to juggle everything from stock management and bookkeeping to customer service and marketing. Yoco Chief Business Officer Carl Wazen said the company wanted to make sophisticated business tools accessible to smaller enterprises. “Yoco started by giving independent businesses access to payments. Today, we’re giving them the tools that used to belong only to big business, at a price built for small business. We call it the unfair advantage,” he said.
Central to the expansion is Yoco AI, an upcoming AI agent designed to learn a merchant’s sales trends, costs and staffing patterns. The system will alert business owners to potential opportunities or problems and suggest actions before they need to ask for insights. Industry-specific features for restaurants, retailers and beauty businesses have also been added to the platform’s point-of-sale offering. The investment reflects the growing importance of South Africa’s small business sector, which the platform estimates contributes around 40% of the country’s economic activity.
Many entrepreneurs continue to face significant headwinds, including weak economic growth, cautious consumer spending and increasing competition. Yoco said its network of more than 200,000 merchants has highlighted a common challenge among business owners: finding enough time to focus on growth while managing the daily demands of running a business.
Rather than replacing workers, the company believes AI can help entrepreneurs make faster decisions, reduce administrative workloads and improve customer retention. The launch also signals a broader shift in South Africa’s digital economy, where technologies once associated with large corporations are increasingly becoming available to small and medium-sized enterprises.





