Sprite Masterclasses Are Coming to Pwani to Teach You How to Win

On April 10th, the Hook’d on Fresh Masterclass lands at Pwani University and for a generation of Coast creators who have been building in the background, this is the conversation they’ve been waiting for.

There is a creator in Kilifi who has been making content for two years. Not as a hobby. As a vocation. She films on her phone, edits in the same apps, posts consistently, watches her numbers, learns what works and does it again. She knows her audience. She understands how the algorithm moves in a way that most people who talk about the algorithm do not. She has done all of this without a studio, without a brand deal, without a single masterclass or formal workshop. She has done it with instinct and grit and the particular creative stubbornness that the Coast raises in people.

She is exactly who the Hook’d on Fresh Masterclass at Pwani University on April 10th is made for.

Sprite’s masterclass series has been running since March. It started at JKUAT in Nairobi, continued at the University of Eldoret and Africa Nazarene University, and drew close to a thousand students at its first session alone. Each masterclass pairs the country’s most influential digital creators with the students most likely to become them, giving practical, applicable knowledge about what actually drives content performance, how to build an audience that stays, how to turn creative work into income, and how to navigate the strange and frequently unforgiving world of brand collaborations and digital partnerships.

She has done it without a studio, without a brand deal, without a single masterclass. She has done it on instinct. The April 10th masterclass is made for her.

The masterclass sessions themselves will cover the full arc of what it means to build a content career in Kenya right now. How to start when you have nothing but a phone and a point of view. How to understand trends without chasing them at the cost of your own voice. How to grow an audience that is genuinely engaged rather than passively present. How to approach brands, how to price yourself, how to protect your work in a digital space that moves fast and forgets faster. There is also, unusually for an activation like this, a section on building sustainably, on data privacy, on protecting your creative identity, on the long game.

THE COMPETITION THAT RUNS ALONGSIDE IT

The masterclass at Pwani feeds directly into the Hook’d on Fresh UGC competition, which is live throughout all of April on spriteke.com. Anyone can register on the site, pick their content format, music, fashion, sport, or comedy, and start creating. Videos go up on TikTok and Instagram with the hashtags #HookdOnFresh and #SafaricomHook, tagging Sprite Kenya and Safaricom Hook. A live leaderboard aggregates your views across both platforms in real time, making your progress visible and your competition concrete.

The reward structure is tiered and generous, designed to recognise consistency rather than just a single viral moment. Four hundred and three creators will be rewarded across nine levels of performance, with cash prizes running from KES 3,000 at entry level up to KES 20,000 for top performers. Beyond cash, the competition offers smartphone devices, Safaricom data bundles, and, most significantly for anyone thinking about this as a career, brand visibility and the kind of measurable reach that actually attracts partnership deals. Top performers are recognised monthly across the duration of the campaign, so the incentive compounds the longer you stay in it.

The reward structure is designed to recognise consistency rather than a single viral moment. The longer you stay in it, the more the incentive compounds.

The partnership with Safaricom Hook, and specifically with the Safaricom Hook BLIVE Bundle available on *555#, means that the infrastructure for content creation and distribution is part of the package. Connectivity is built into the campaign which matters enormously for creators who have been creating content in places where data costs are a real consideration.

WHAT THIS ACTUALLY MEANS FOR COAST CREATORS

The masterclass gives you the knowledge. The competition gives you the platform. The prize structure gives you the reward and the evidence of your own growth. The Safaricom partnership gives you the tools. Put all of it together and you have something that did not exist in this form before April 2026, a structured, incentivised, skills backed pathway from casual content creation into the creator economy.

For Coast creators specifically, this is a moment to take seriously. The competition rewards content that is authentic and culturally specific. Coast creative culture, the aesthetic, the humour, the music, the fashion, the particular coastal way of seeing the world, is not a liability in this competition. It is an asset. The content that is going to cut through the noise on a national leaderboard is not going to look the same as everything else. 

Register now at spriteke.com.

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