The 2nd Francophone African Music Industry Exhibition (SIMA2025): Promoting a Stronger African Music Economy

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The Francophone African Music Industry Exhibition (SIMA2025) opened this week in COTONOU, Benin Republic, with a clear ambition: to transform the region’s vast musical talent into a structured, financially sustainable industry. Held under the theme “Promoting and financing Francophone African music: from potential to proof,” the two-day gathering brings together artists, producers, cultural entrepreneurs and policymakers from across the continent.

Unlike many industry events designed exclusively for insiders, SIMA2025 is deliberately open to the general public. Organisers say this is a conscious attempt to anchor music not only as an economic asset but as a shared cultural and family heritage. An event that cuts across generations, communities and borders.

The programme spans launch ceremonies, panel discussions (13 November), and a second day dedicated to networking sessions, keynote talks and a closing ceremony (14 November). But beneath the formal schedule lies a deeper conversation: how to turn Africa’s booming music presence on global streaming platforms into real jobs, stable revenue streams and stronger regional cooperation.

Created by seasoned industry professionals, SIMA positions itself as both a training hub and a business marketplace. It offers a rare space where emerging artists can meet international distributors, where local producers can compare models with global music executives, and where governments can observe firsthand the sector’s economic promise.

Beyond business deals, the event carries political and social implications. With many African economies seeking to diversify beyond commodities, the creative sector is gaining attention as a driver of youth employment. Music, in particular, plays an outsized role in daily life, shaping identity and giving families a platform to pass on language and history. SIMA becomes a testing ground for cultural investment strategies, especially in Francophone Africa for many stakeholders. A place, where talent is abundant, but industry infrastructure remains uneven.

Culturally, SIMA2025 highlights a shift in how African music is perceived: no longer just an export or a trend on global charts, but a self-sustaining ecosystem capable of shaping its own narrative. For the artists present, the event offers visibility and validation; for local communities, it reinforces the idea that creative careers can be viable; and for industry players, it signals that Francophone Africa intends to claim a bigger seat at the global table.

As SIMA2025 unfolds the 2nd edition in Cotonou, attendees say the challenge ahead is clear; transforming promises into proof and passion into an industry that works for the continent’s creatives, stakeholders and communities that sustain them.

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