This article was originally published on TechCabal.
The 22-year-old content creatorâs growth has been stunning, with an Instagram following that has grown from 300,000 in 2023 to over two million today. On a social media platform where engagement is the foremost metric, Layi has so far enjoyed the highest engagement rate on Instagram in 2024, outpacing other Nigerian skitmakers like Taooma, Broda Shaggi, and Sabinus.
Despite these early successes, content creators like Layi Wasabi know theyâre in a space where a notoriously fickle audience constantly changes its preferences. The punchline is that staying power requires more than humour.
For a while, the formula for virality stayed the same: slapstick, action-packed humour that may get some knocks for being simplistic. But Layi hasnât taken the well-trodden path. Instead, he leans on familiar characters and pokes fun at stereotypes. In hisCost of Loving sketch, Mr. Richard tells a client, âThe circle of friends you have determines the circumference of the earth to you,â as he talks him into joining GNCC, a fictional pyramid scheme.
These kinds of schemes are common in Nigeria. In 2016, three million Nigerians lost âŠ18 billion to MMM, a popular Ponzi scheme with Russian roots.
While Layi has perfected this method of using the familiar to create relatable content, heâs hardly a pioneer.
âIf you closely follow skit characters, youâll see that several other comedians have picked up the schtick but dropped it too early or didnât refine it,â says Olufemi Oguntamu, Layiâs manager.
âAs soon as we saw The Law, we knew there was a space for such a character in the skit market, and we were convinced that Layi could pull it off.â
âThe first series of The Law skits I dropped blew up on social media,â said Layi. âI knew that we were here.â
The business of laughter: Platform and monetisation strategies
Part of Layiâs strategy is to focus primarily on skits while establishing himself in the comedy industry. He can make people laugh in one minute, which is less complex to achieve than the longer-form content on YouTube favoured by creators like Lasisi and Mr Macaroni.
While his first viral video was on TikTok in 2020, he is now more active on Instagram and posts only occasionally on TikTok.
The move to Instagram was strategic. Layi Wasabi and his team believe Reels appeals to a broader audience and is the preferred app for his target market: millennials and Gen Zs.
Instagram is also a popular choice for influencer marketing, the primary way creators like him make money. Unlike their counterparts in America and Canada, African creators do not have monetisation available on Meta platforms like Instagram, where the majority of Layiâs audience is.
Now that Layi has established a strong presence on Instagram, he is working on expanding to other platforms like YouTube.
âHe wants to do a lot on YouTube to take advantage of the monetization available to creators there, but also doesnât want to do the same kind of content as he does on Instagram,â he shared. âWeâre taking our time, but Layi will be on YouTube very soon.â
While sponsored posts do not get as much engagement as original skits â as the internet audience is notoriously averse to ads, influencer marketing remains one of the most popular marketing strategies.
In March 2024, Meta announced that their platforms will open up direct monetisation to African creators where theyâll be able to get paid based on the number of plays their reels get.
Dealing with an evolving audience
Audience size affects a creatorâs ability to monetise, and although valuable to the influencer, is also dynamic and can be volatile. Instagramâs algorithm prioritises engagement, leaving creators scrambling to adapt their content as audience preferences shift.
âItâs much easier to navigate your audience and their preferences when youâre a macro influencer. When you have millions of followers, itâs hard to navigate their preferences,â Layi shared with TechCabal.
For Layi, itâs not just about the laughs, itâs about understanding what the audience wants, even when it means creating content he doesnât love.
He typically creates content on a whim, but there are occasions when he consults with his team of seven on whether or not certain ideas work for his brand and the type of audience he has.
âThereâs some ideas that I may be feeling, but I share with my team and they think itâs not great [in terms of what the audience would like],â Layi said. âAnd there are some ideas they [my team] suggest to me that Iâm not interested in but we go ahead and execute anyway.â
âThere are also ideas the team shared with me because they feel like there should be a Layi Wasabi content around this subject matter,â
Keeping up with shrinking attention spans
Unlike long-form skits, Layiâs content doesnât always require scriptwriters. As soon as the content idea is established, Layi works with his team to execute it. He has a team of seven, comprising his manager, road manager, scriptwriter, personal assistant, client service manager, production manager, and editor. Execution, which takes one to three days, including production, covers where to shoot and what kind of actors to hire.
Since he started creating content in 2015, a lot has changed in the content creator industry, with one of such being shrinking attention spans. According to a CNN report, the average attention span to a screen is now about 47 seconds from the two and half minutes it was in 2004.
Layi Wasabi understands the value of brevity. His skits, meticulously created to hit the sweet spot between 60 â 90 seconds, keep the audience hooked from start to finish.
âWith Instagram, people had some patience for content thatâs between one to three minutes long,â he shared. âHowever, I think TikTok is taking us back to fast-paced content [like with Vine]. People want you to get your points across as fast as possible. They donât have the patience for four or five-minute content, except theyâre core fans.â
Another thing that is significantly different from when he started is the engagement metrics. When he began creating content on TikTok and Twitter, 7,000 retweets or likes signalled that the audience loved the video.
âOnce that number gets to 10K, it means the video was epic.â
Now, his videos average 50K likes on Twitter and over 100K on the clock app, occasionally going as high as 600K.
âInstagram is hard to tell for me, but I average about 100K likes for original content there. If it does 200K then itâs great content.â
*Editorâs Note: Rate prices have been removed at the intervieweeâs request.