For more than two decades, Dr Kristy Leissle has dedicated her career to cocoa. As an academic, advisor and industry insider, she has been on the ground with farmers, buying sheds, warehouses and depots, while also partnering extensively with processors, traders and chocolate brands.
Now, the launch of the African Cocoa Marketplace (ACM) – a venture years in the making – brings these two worlds together. By placing sellers at the centre while reducing procurement risk for buyers, Leissle is uniting the realities of cocoa production with the need for reliable, trustworthy supply.
Leissle’s work has long centred on Ghana, the world’s most regulated cocoa market and one of its most storied producers. But her network extends across Liberia, Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Togo, Uganda and Cameroon, with a pipeline of sellers emerging from eight or nine countries across the continent.
At launch, ACM will feature around 20 sellers – a carefully curated mix of registered and verified businesses – with more than 100 additional sellers progressing through the onboarding process. What distinguishes ACM is not scale at speed but a careful, intentional approach, rooted in integrity.
Deeper Relationships for Buyers and Sellers
Leissle describes ACM as the natural culmination of decades spent observing a persistent market gap. Time and again, she hears the same frustration from cocoa sellers: the “first prize” is securing a direct international buyer who understands and values their work. Yet many struggle to find those buyers – or to build transparent relationships that improve trade terms over time.
Buyers express similar frustrations. They want trustworthy supply and traceability data, insight into farmer membership and confidence that sourcing aligns with their expectations and regulatory obligations.
But cultural and technological barriers often stand in the way. With many African cocoa businesses operating face-to-face or via WhatsApp, and digital presence a rarity, finding the right partner – and assessing credibility from afar – can feel risky. ACM addresses that gap directly.
By centring sellers within a transparent, data-driven system, ACM aims to create more balanced trade relationships – where improved terms emerge from verified information rather than opaque negotiation.
A Marketplace Centred on the Sellers
Despite being built on generations of knowledge, land stewardship and technical skill, many cocoa businesses in rural Africa are underrepresented in global markets.
Without foreign backing, these tight-knit teams are without the administrative bandwidth to navigate complex international compliance regimes or to market themselves abroad. The stakes are high.
This is why, unlike many certification schemes or sourcing platforms, Leissle has ensured that ACM is free for sellers. It provides an internationally visible platform that showcases capacity, professionalism and production scale.
Leissle is also clear-eyed about current headwinds in African cocoa. While West Africa remains the world’s largest cocoa-producing region, liquidity challenges have intensified across the continent, tightening margins and straining payment cycles. Liquidity constraints do not negate operational capacity, but they do heighten buyer caution.
Conversations with buyers about African production often begin with scepticism – particularly when discussions turn to traceability, governance or sustainability. The result is friction on both sides: sellers struggle to secure better trade terms, while buyers struggle to de-risk procurement.
ACM operates squarely within that tension. By layering validation and verification before a buyer even initiates direct communication, the marketplace reduces uncertainty and lowers the psychological and financial barriers to trade.
De-Risking Procurement Through Transparency
At its core, ACM de-risks procurement. But unlike traditional intermediaries, it is not an e-commerce platform and does not take ownership of cocoa at any stage. Rather than enabling buyers to purchase beans, ACM supports, verifies, introduces and facilitates – building the scaffolding for direct relationships grounded in transparency and evidence.
Onboarding is rigorous by design. Phase one establishes sellers as registered participants, through online submission or, preferably, an in-person meeting. Sellers must provide commercially verifiable evidence of their ability to trade the cocoa they claim to offer.
Once registered, sellers appear on the marketplace, giving buyers immediate confidence that these are legitimate businesses with a real product and credible production scale.
But registration is only the beginning. Phase two is a comprehensive due diligence process. For each seller, ACM creates a detailed file comprising more than 300 data fields – each a structured inquiry into the business.
Questions range from operational capacity and asset ownership to logistics, staffing and quality control practices. Does the seller own motorbikes or pickup trucks? Do they use calibrated weighing scales? What is their farmer membership structure? How prepared are they for compliance with regulations such as the EU Deforestation Regulation (EUDR)? Responses are triangulated to build an accurate, evidence-based picture of each business.
Verification Reports: Key Decision-Making Tools
Once a seller completes the due diligence process, ACM produces a verification report – a deep dive into the enterprise’s operations, strengths and potential risks.
For subscribed buyers, these reports become important decision-making tools. If a buyer identifies a seller who appears to meet their needs, they can request the verification report and, depending on their level of interest, commission additional services.
These services can include coordinated origin visits, quality assessments (including cut tests and bean counts), micro-batch production for flavour analysis, and sustainable pricing exercises to evaluate long-term viability.
Careful Growth, Rooted in Credibility
ACM’s initial cohort reflects Leissle’s deliberate approach. Wary of overreach, she emphasises that each seller must represent quality, credibility and readiness. Over the coming months, the priority will be to move launch participants from registered to fully verified status, while selectively onboarding new enterprises.
The long-term vision, however, is expansive. Leissle ultimately wants every cocoa-producing country in Africa represented on the marketplace. Beyond raw beans, she envisions inclusion of cocoa butter, liquor, powder, husks and pod husks. Some sellers already offer multiple products. In time, derivative products could be integrated, creating a turnkey ecosystem for buyers seeking African cocoa and its value-added derivatives.
Shifting the Narrative
As ACM progresses, its impact will be measured not only in contracts signed but in perceptions shifted.
Importantly, Leissle does not deny the exploitative history embedded in cocoa supply chains. But she insists that cocoa should not be defined solely by its past. This is also a story of aspiration and possibility – a sector that has sustained families, built businesses and created opportunity for more than a century.
By making African cocoa businesses more visible and verifiable, Leissle hopes that the industry will lose some of its hesitation. Buyers will see what she has witnessed for decades: skill, resilience, professionalism and generational expertise embedded in farming communities across the continent.
Through transparency, rigorous due diligence and an unwavering focus on sellers, ACM honours that story. By de-risking procurement for buyers and levelling the playing field for rural enterprises, it offers a practical pathway toward fairer trade – one verified seller at a time.
Live Walkthrough Sessions
Buyers interested in exploring the African Cocoa Marketplace are invited to register for upcoming live executive walkthrough sessions with Dr Kristy Leissle on March 11 and March 12. Early adopter subscription access is available through March 15.
Register here:
March 11 – 4pm GMT https://zoom.us/meeting/register/3X1EPXEJRdq_CA9SEr-lVw
March 12 – 9am GMT https://zoom.us/meeting/register/VUqtrTBmTJqOQSl9yasGBQ
- For more information on African Cocoa Marketplace, email Dr Kristy Leissle: kristy@cocoamarket.com
- Sponsored content: This article was created in collaboration with African Cocoa Marketplace. While it aligns with our audience’s interests, the ideas and content are provided by African Cocoa Marketplace, which retains copyright and editorial responsibility. We’re sharing it to offer our readers relevant information and perspectives.