Temu’s Business Model Depends on You Buying Things You Never Needed
Those Random Things Sitting in the Corner of Your Room? Temu Put Them There.
You know that collection of random things gathering dust in the corner of your room, the ones you added to cart just to hit Temu's minimum purchase amount? That is not an accident. That is Temu's entire business model, and it is working at a scale most people are only beginning to understand.
Temu, the Chinese e-commerce platform owned by PDD Holdings, did not become a global force by selling things people actually needed. It became one by convincing you that you needed them.
The Trust Play: How Temu Won Over Millions of Sceptical Shoppers
When Temu launched in the United States in 2022, the first question most people asked was: why is everything so cheap? The instinct was suspicion and Temu knew it.
So instead of fighting that suspicion, it buried it under a 90-day money-back guarantee, no-questions-asked refund policies and a flood of social proof.
The platform deployed countdown clocks, "Almost Sold Out" tags, and gamification elements like "Spin the Wheel" and "Shake to Win." These strategies are all rooted inthe psychology of reward systems borrowed directly from gaming and gambling. The user does not feel manipulated. The user feels lucky, instead.
The deeper trick is in the design itself. Temu's system dynamically reshapes each user's journey, surfacing items based not just on past behaviour but on inferred intent, price sensitivity, and emotional response patterns.
The Numbers That Explain Why Nobody Is Laughing Anymore
If you still think Temu is just a quirky app full of cheap knockoffs, you should know this. PDD Holdings' revenues grew from RMB 247.6 billion in 2023 to RMB 393.8 billion, approximately $54 billion USD, in 2024.
The company has not yet released its 2025 full-year figures, but every quarterly indicator points upward.
In 2023 alone, the platform invested $1.3 billion in Meta advertising, significantly outspending established local platforms like Jumia and Konga in every market it entered.
That is not a startup burning cash in desperation. That is a calculated land grab.
How Temu Is Quietly Taking Over Africa's E-Commerce Market
Temu launched in South Africa in January 2024 and has since expanded aggressively into over 80 markets, leveraging its Chinese roots and supply chain expertise.
Its model involving the cutting out of middlemen entirely through a direct-from-manufacturer, consumer-to-manufacturing structure, means it can price products at rates that African competitors structurally cannot match.
Africa's e-commerce market is projected to grow from $12 billion in 2019 to $75 billion by 2025, and Temu arrived exactly when that runway was becoming obvious.
Nigeria Is the Real Prize, And Temu Knows It
Culture
Read Between the Lines of African Society
Your Gateway to Africa's Untold Cultural Narratives.
Temu made a rapid entrance into Nigeria's $13 billion online retail market in November 2024, luring shoppers with ultra-low prices and freebies. Within weeks, Nigerians were sharing screenshots of N500 earrings and N1,200 kitchen gadgets across WhatsApp groups and TikTok pages.
The marketing was social and viral before it was even paid.
Nigeria's e-commerce market, valued at $8.53 billion in 2024, is on track to grow to $14.92 billion by 2029, with nearly 50% of the population connected to the internet and increasingly shifting toward online shopping.
For a price-sensitive, mobile-first, young population dealing with inflation and a weakened naira, Temu's pricing is almost irresistible.
The consequences for incumbents have been immediate. Jumia, Africa's leading e-commerce platform, reported a 13% decline in year-over-year revenue for Q3 2024 and has struggled to grow its customer base, which has been stuck at around 2 million users since 2023.
Meanwhile, Jumia, Konga, and Temu jointly accounted for about 54% of Nigeria's e-commerce gross merchandise value as of 2024, and Temu only arrived at the end of that year.
There are, however, concerns and it is not just economic. Temu is currently contending with lawsuits in Europe and the United States regarding data privacy and anti-competitive practices.
In June 2024, Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin sued the platform, describing it not as an online marketplace but as a "data-theft business that sells goods online as a means to an end."
For Nigeria, the stakes are also local. Analysts have warned that while Temu's entry might push competitors to improve production happening entirely outside the country means increased foreign exchange spending with limited benefit to the local economy. The goods are cheap. The structural cost may not be.
The Model Is the Message
Temu did not build a better store. It built a better trap, one lined with discounts, spinning wheels, countdown timers, and the quiet thrill of feeling like you got away with something.
A 2022 report by the European Commission found that 97% of the most popular shopping apps use at least one dark pattern. Temu uses several, and it uses them well.
The things sitting in the corner of your room are proof. You did not need them. You bought them anyway. And somewhere in a revenue report measured in tens of billions of dollars, that purchase has already been counted.
More Articles from this Publisher
Stereotypes Often Contain the Truth. That Is Why They Are So Powerful
Stereotypes sometimes carry statistical truth, and that's exactly what makes them dangerous. The real problem isn't wher...
Temu’s Business Model Depends on You Buying Things You Never Needed
Spinning wheels, countdown timers, and prices that make no sense — Temu's business model was never about cheap goods. It...
The Problem With Self-Help Books: Wisdom Cannot Be Packaged
Self-help books promise transformation but rarely deliver it. Here's the psychology behind why packaged wisdom fails, an...
App Features That Should Already Exist in 2026, But Don’t
From WhatsApp's missing edit button to TikTok's broken caption fix, here are the app features that should exist by now, ...
How Nigerians Could Buy SpaceX Shares If the IPO Opens to International Investors
SpaceX’s historic IPO could open the door for Nigerian investors to buy into Elon Musk’s space company. Here is how Nige...
Smoking May Take Your Hearing Before It Takes Your Life
Smoking doesn't just damage your lungs — it silently destroys your hearing too. Here's the science behind how cigarettes...
You may also like...
Stereotypes Often Contain the Truth. That Is Why They Are So Powerful
Stereotypes sometimes carry statistical truth, and that's exactly what makes them dangerous. The real problem isn't wher...
Temu’s Business Model Depends on You Buying Things You Never Needed
Spinning wheels, countdown timers, and prices that make no sense — Temu's business model was never about cheap goods. It...
Before Bobrisky, There Was Calypso King
Long before Bobrisky became famous, Crossdresser Calypso King was already one of Nigeria’s most controversial entertaine...
JAMB’s New Era: Can Professor Segun Aina Fix Nigeria’s Examination Trust Problem?
Professor Segun Aina is stepping into JAMB leadership at a critical time for Nigeria’s education system. Can the technol...
The Problem With Self-Help Books: Wisdom Cannot Be Packaged
Self-help books promise transformation but rarely deliver it. Here's the psychology behind why packaged wisdom fails, an...
App Features That Should Already Exist in 2026, But Don’t
From WhatsApp's missing edit button to TikTok's broken caption fix, here are the app features that should exist by now, ...
Boxing Shocker: Eddie Hearn Declares Usyk vs Verhoeven 'Impossible on Paper'

Kickboxing sensation Rico Verhoeven is set to challenge undisputed heavyweight boxing champion Oleksandr Usyk at the Pyr...
Premier League Blocks Crystal Palace's Bold Bid to Reschedule Arsenal Clash for Conference League Final

Crystal Palace manager Oliver Glasner revealed the club's unsuccessful attempt to reschedule their final Premier League ...
