
Audio By Carbonatix
Before TikTok and Instagram dominated the Ghana advertising scene, Dulcie Boateng was experimenting with the idea on Snapchat. Her actions rewrote the influencer playbook as we know it, catapulting her to the top of the country’s influencer culture.
The blueprint for life-changing money is not as complicated as it seems. Dulcie Ewuraama Afriyie Boateng cracked it early.
“You have to be very calculated, it’s always the simple things,” she says. By combining immersive content, authenticity, and sharp strategy, the social media star discovered the secret to generating unlimited earning potential online. Seven years later, her observation has paid off and inspired thousands in the process.
Back in 2017, the social media landscape was different from what it is today. But even then, it was full of opportunity, and Dulcie Boateng moved fast to seize it. Before becoming Ghana’s highest-paid influencer, signing lucrative deals, and launching Porials Pitch–now West Africa’s biggest shopping event, Dulcie already mapped out how to transform Snapchat into the ultimate cash machine.

Where others used Snapchat for mere fun, Dulcie turned it into a chessboard. This power play led her to nurture an identity that capitalised on what made Snapchat unique: ephemeral content, Snap Map, Geofilters, and the youthful culture around it, and so forth. The app served as the perfect tool to amplify her first hustle–selling clothes for commission. In no time, Dulcie introduced a convincing style of advertising on Snapchat, laying the groundwork for influencer campaigns, brand ambassadorships, and real-time selling strategies.
The result? Dulcie’s reign on the app is almost eternal, to the point she is essentially royalty, hence the title, “Queen of Snapchat.” Today, she attracts partnerships and sponsorship from some of Ghana’s biggest businesses, including Absa Bank, Woodin, Hollard Insurance, TECNO, Bolt, JAC Motors, Pizzaman-Chickenman, Clozar Africa, and more.
Dulcie Boateng went from financially vulnerable to invaluable in a couple of years. She has mastered the art of monetizing her passions. Today, her Snapchat account isn’t just a channel–it is a cash cow, powered by deals that many can only dream of. While others used Snapchat to pass time, Dulcie used it as a template for societal impact, and this is just the beginning for the young mogul.
Latest Stories
-
First Afcon, now World Cup – Senegal trapped in ‘football hell’
32 minutes -
Glasner poised for Forest job as Pereira exits
36 minutes -
UEFA will not use red cards for players who cover mouth
51 minutes -
‘You cried for DDEP victims; where are your tears for flood victims?’ – Akosua Manu to Nana Yaa Jantuah
54 minutes -
Akosua Manu says government’s first duty is to protect lives amid flood disaster, not ‘settings’
58 minutes -
Former Arsenal midfielder Cazorla retires at 41
1 hour -
The World Cup’s free agents looking for their next move
1 hour -
‘We want to win World Cup for him’ – Portugal carry Diogo Jota’s memory
1 hour -
Spain beat Austria for first World Cup knockout win since 2010
1 hour -
World Cup boom falters as US hospitality jobs fall in June
1 hour -
GH¢34.5bn paid out in cocoa purchases as COCOBOD injects more cash
2 hours -
COCOBOD releases GH¢2.6m to LBCs to settle cocoa farmers
2 hours -
‘I spent $6,000 on a World Cup trip but was left stranded at the gate’
2 hours -
Google must pay €4.1bn fine for using Android to ‘block’ rivals
2 hours -
Singapore seizes $42m mansion over Nvidia chip smuggling
2 hours