
The Creative Economy in Kenya: Why Creative Skills Are Kenya’s Most Valuable Asset
By Delight Technical College | Industry Insights | 2026
For decades, the narrative about economic opportunity in Kenya focused on agriculture, finance, tourism, and manufacturing. But a new story is being written. One in which creative skills are recognised as a powerful, scalable, and internationally competitive economic asset. The creative economy is one of Kenya’s fastest-growing sectors, and Delight Technical College is training the professionals who will drive it.
🌍 What Is the Creative Economy?
The creative economy encompasses all industries and activities that generate economic value from creativity, knowledge, and intellectual property. In Kenya, this includes:
- Fashion design and production- from individual tailors to fashion labels and garment exporters
- Film and television production- from Kenyan Originals on streaming platforms to corporate video
- Photography, videography, and visual media- editorial, commercial, and documentary
- Graphic design and digital content- branding, advertising, and social media
- Journalism and digital media- news, commentary, podcasting, and content platforms
- Technology and AI- software, applications, and AI-powered creative tools
📈 The Numbers
The creative economy is one of the fastest-growing sectors globally. In Kenya specifically:
- Nairobi is home to one of Africa’s most active start-up ecosystems, much of it driven by creative tech
- Kenya’s film industry has grown significantly, supported by streaming platforms and international co-productions
- The fashion industry employs hundreds of thousands from artisan tailors to corporate designers
- Digital content creators are generating substantial incomes through monetised platforms
- Kenya’s graphic design and branding sector has expanded rapidly with the growth of digital marketing
💡 Why Creative Skills Are Particularly Valuable
Scalability:
A fashion designer can start with one sewing machine and grow to a team of fifty. A videographer can start with one camera and grow to a production company. Creative businesses can be scaled from the very small to the very large.
Low Capital Requirements:
Many creative businesses require relatively modest start-up capital compared to manufacturing or technology making them accessible to entrepreneurs without significant financial resources.
Digital Export Potential:
Creative services can be sold globally without physical export. A Nairobi graphic designer can serve a London brand. A Kenyan videographer can edit footage for an Australian client. The internet has made creative talent location-independent.
Cultural Value:
Creative industries carry and communicate culture preserving and promoting Kenyan heritage while generating economic value. This dual social and economic function gives creative industries a unique place in Kenya’s development story.
🎓 Delight’s Role
Delight Technical College is not just a school, it is an economic development engine. Every graduate who starts a fashion business, launches a photography studio, or builds a media company adds to Kenya’s creative economy. The collective economic impact of Delight’s graduates over eight years of operation represents a meaningful contribution to Nairobi’s and Kenya’s economic landscape.
“Creative skills are not a soft option, they are a hard economic asset. At Delight, we are building Kenya’s creative economy one graduate at a time.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke



