Koda adapts to how real merchants already sell — from a home kitchen on WhatsApp to a market stall going digital. Four ways it shows up.
Amaka used to run her kitchen out of three WhatsApp threads and a notebook of who owed what. Orders came in at all hours, and she'd lose track of who'd paid before a delivery went out. Now customers order from her Koda storefront or chat with her AI assistant on WhatsApp, and payment lands in her business account before the trays leave the kitchen.
“Customers order at 11pm and Koda takes the payment before I even wake up.”
Bimpe's fits sell fast when the drop looks good and the checkout is easy. Koda built her a storefront that matches her Instagram aesthetic in one afternoon, and every buyer is saved to her customer list automatically — so the next drop goes straight to the people who bought last time, no manual DM list.
“My shop link is in every bio now. People check out without leaving the chat.”
Ngozi used to lose bookings to the salon that showed up first on Google. Koda got her listed for local 'near me' searches and gave her an AI assistant that answers booking questions instantly, day or night — so her chair fills up without her picking up the phone between clients.
“Clients find me on Google Maps and book without calling. My chair is never empty on a Saturday.”
Musa ran his textile stall on a personal account for years, which made it impossible to prove his real sales to any lender. Koda gave him a proper business account and payment collection, and every sale now builds the history that will make him eligible for working capital — no paperwork chase, just proof he already sells.
“I finally have a real account for the stall — not my personal one. And Koda knows my sales for the loan.”
Whichever way you sell, Koda meets you there — brand, shop, AI employee, bank account, and payments in one place.