Business News Profiles Technology

Kampala’s Multi-Hyphenate: Inside the rise of Zert Essential & Uganda’s new Creative Economy

Kampala’s Multi-Hyphenate: Inside the rise of Zert Essential & Uganda’s new Creative Economy

Kampala: On TikTok he is a steady stream of behind-the-scenes clips and brand collaborations. In Ugandan entertainment pages he is described as an actor, a film director, a digital strategist, and now an author. To the residents of Kyengera, a working-class suburb on Kampala’s southwestern edge, he is the man who turned up one afternoon last August with bags of clothing and sanitary pads for children who needed them. All of these are facets of the same person: Kizito Sirajje, who works under the name Zert Essential, and who has spent the past two years assembling one of the more visible personal brands in Uganda’s fast-growing digital media scene.
Zert Essential’s story, as it has been told across a string of Ugandan entertainment outlets since mid-2025, is a tidy parable of the modern African creative economy — a young Kampala professional who traded a conventional technical career for the unpredictable business of content, and who built an “empire,” as one outlet put it, spanning film production, television, social media, brand consulting, and publishing. It is also, on closer inspection, a story that is easier to find repeated than to independently verify in full — a point worth holding in mind even while tracing what has been reported.

From computer engineering to the camera

According to profiles published in Red Pepper and other outlets, Zert Essential’s path into media did not begin in a film school or on a stage. It began, by his own account, in a computer engineering program — the kind of degree that, on paper, points toward a career in software or systems work rather than storytelling. Somewhere along the way, the reporting goes, an interest in digital media and content creation pulled him in a different direction. He is described as having pursued further training in digital marketing, and — in the most specific and most repeated detail of his educational background — coursework in filmmaking at the National Film and Television School in the United Kingdom between 2018 and 2020.


That detail is worth pausing on, because the National Film and Television School (NFTS), based in Beaconsfield, England, is a genuinely prestigious and selective institution whose alumni include some of British cinema’s best-known directors and cinematographers. If accurate, training there would represent a serious credential. None of the Ugandan coverage that reports this detail cites a graduating cohort, a specific NFTS program name, or any confirmation from the school itself; the claim, as far as available reporting shows, traces back to profile material distributed about Zert Essential rather than to NFTS records. That does not mean it is false — but it means readers encountering the claim are essentially relying on the same secondhand source the press has been working from.
What the reporting describes as the result of this combined background — technical training, marketing study, and filmmaking coursework — is a working style that sets Zert Essential apart from many of his peers in Uganda’s content scene: a comfort with both the creative and operational sides of media-making. He is frequently described as equally fluent in talking about camera setups and about monetization strategy, a combination outlets have framed as central to his appeal to brands and to the aspiring creators who follow him.

Building an “umbrella company”

The centerpiece of Zert Essential’s business activity, as reported by Red Pepper, is a venture called Zert Creatives Uganda, described as an umbrella company housing several related ventures. Under that umbrella sit a media-and-television arm — referred to in coverage as Zert Creative Media TV Uganda — and a production wing focused on developing Ugandan and African film and television projects. His TikTok account, handled as @zert.essential, is treated by the same coverage less as a side project than as a core piece of the business: the platform through which he builds audience relationships that later translate into brand partnerships and project visibility.
This structure — a personal brand that functions as the front end for a small constellation of linked businesses — is increasingly common among African digital creators who have moved beyond posting content for its own sake and into running what amount to small media companies. It allows a single recognizable face to anchor multiple revenue streams: production work, brand consulting, advertising placements, and eventually, in Zert Essential’s case, publishing. Whether Zert Creatives Uganda is formally registered, how many people it employs, or what its production slate consists of beyond what has been described in profile pieces is not detailed in the available reporting, which tends to describe the company in broad, aspirational terms rather than with operational specifics.

A digital-marketing playbook, brand by brand

Coverage in ChimpReports and London Daily News has emphasized Zert Essential’s commercial collaborations with what is described as “major brands,” framing his ability to secure such partnerships as evidence of a broader shift among young Ugandan entrepreneurs who are using content creation as a structured career path rather than a hobby. The specific brands involved are not named in the reporting reviewed for this piece, and no campaign metrics, contract details, or independent commercial figures accompany the claim. The underlying argument advanced in this coverage — that Ugandan creators are increasingly professionalizing their relationships with advertisers, building media-buying-style packages around personal platforms rather than relying on one-off sponsored posts — reflects a real and well-documented trend across African digital markets generally, even where the specific examples cited are difficult to confirm independently.


In quoted remarks carried by Red Pepper, Zert Essential frames the wider opportunity in the language of access rather than personal achievement, arguing that streaming platforms and social media have democratized film access, and suggesting that African creators need more of their stories carried on global digital platforms. It is a framing — technology lowering the barrier between local talent and a worldwide audience — that recurs throughout coverage of his career, and one that situates his individual story inside a much larger narrative about the African creative economy’s growth potential.

International screen credits — and a necessary caveat

Much of the coverage of Zert Essential leans heavily on two specific acting credits: a role described as “Bell” in Netflix’s The Umbrella Academy, and a role described as “Noah” in something referred to as “Rotten Tomatoes.” These two credits appear, in nearly identical phrasing, across multiple separate Ugandan publications throughout mid-2025, and they form the basis of his claim to international recognition in almost every piece written about him during that period.
A companion piece to this profile examines those two credits in detail and finds that neither holds up against publicly available production records: no character by the name “Bell” appears anywhere across The Umbrella Academy’s four-season run, and “Rotten Tomatoes” is not a film or television production but a review-aggregation website, meaning there is no “Noah” role to be found in it. Readers interested in international screen credits as a measure of Zert Essential’s career should treat that claim with caution pending further verification, rather than take the repeated framing in Ugandan entertainment coverage at face value. The rest of this profile focuses on activities — the company, the social media following, the book, the community outreach — for which there is more than a single press-release-style claim to go on, even if full independent verification remains limited across the board.

A book aimed at Africa’s creative class

In mid-2025, Zert Essential added “published author” to his list of roles. SoftPower News reported that he released a book available through Google Books, pitched as a practical guide to building a digital brand, navigating the entertainment industry, and monetizing creative work, with what the outlet described as a specifically Afro-centric framing — material aimed at the particular constraints and opportunities facing African creators rather than a generic guide imported from a Western media context.
The timing was not incidental. SoftPower News tied the release to projections that Africa’s creative economy could grow past $100 billion by 2030, positioning the book as arriving at what it called a pivotal moment for the continent’s media industries. Coverage described the book in sweeping terms — less a memoir than what one outlet called a “manifesto” for an African digital renaissance — though, as with much of the surrounding coverage, the language leans promotional, and concrete details such as sales figures, a publisher beyond Google Books’ self-publishing infrastructure, or independent reviews of the book’s content are not part of the available record.
What is verifiable is more modest but still notable: a listing for the work exists on Google Books, consistent with the claim that something was, in fact, published. For a Ugandan content creator without a traditional publishing deal, getting a book onto that platform — whatever its ultimate commercial reach — represents a concrete step beyond the typical scope of an Instagram-and-TikTok career, into something closer to thought leadership packaging.

Giving back in Kyengera

Away from the branding and the book launch, one of the more grounded threads in Zert Essential’s recent coverage involves direct community work. The Observer reported in August 2025 that he visited Kyengera, a lower-income suburb on Kampala’s outskirts, where he distributed clothing and other essential items to children, including sanitary pads that the report said brought particular relief to girls in the community. The newspaper described the visit as part of an ongoing charitable effort rather than a one-time gesture, and noted that his outreach work has previously focused on children and orphans specifically.
Speaking to The Observer, Zert Essential framed the effort in terms of timing rather than scale, saying he didn’t intend to wait to become a millionaire to start thinking of sharing with the less privileged. It’s a sentiment that, notably, does not depend on any of his disputed screen credits — distributing supplies to a community that needs them is independently photographable and was reported with a named byline (Geofrey Serugo) rather than carried as unattributed wire-style content, which gives this particular thread of his public activity a firmer evidentiary footing than the Hollywood-adjacent claims discussed above.

The wider picture: Uganda’s creative economy, opportunities and strain

Coverage of Zert Essential rarely treats him purely as an individual case; it is consistently woven into a broader argument about where Uganda’s creative industries are headed. ChimpReports and London Daily News both quote film producer Grace Nakitende making the case that the country’s creative talent pool is deep but underfunded, arguing that more investment is necessary to nurture and develop the next generation of filmmakers and content creators. The same reporting lists limited funding, inadequate production infrastructure, and a shortage of formal training pathways as the structural obstacles facing Ugandan creatives more broadly — obstacles that exist regardless of how any single creator’s individual story checks out.

This framing situates Zert Essential as something closer to a case study than a singular phenomenon: evidence, in the reporting’s own terms, that a Ugandan creator with the right combination of technical skill, marketing instinct, and content output can build a multi-platform presence even within an industry that lacks the institutional scaffolding — financing structures, distribution pipelines, vocational training infrastructure — that more established film industries take for granted. Whether or not every credential and credit attached to his name holds up, the structural argument about Uganda’s creative economy being talent-rich and resource-poor reflects a genuinely longstanding and widely documented concern among people working in the country’s film and media sectors.

A figure still being assembled in public

What emerges from the available coverage is less a fully settled biography than a brand still very much being built in real time, largely through outlets that appear to have published closely related material within a short window of each other in mid-2025 — a pattern explored more fully in the companion piece to this article. Some elements of Zert Essential’s public story are corroborated by direct, attributable, on-the-record reporting: the existence of his TikTok following, the Google Books listing, the Kyengera outreach visit documented with photographs and a named reporter. Others — most significantly, the specific Netflix and “Rotten Tomatoes” acting credits that anchor nearly every published profile of him — do not survive a check against the production records they invoke.

For a creator whose entire public narrative rests on the idea of Ugandan talent reaching a global stage, that distinction matters. The verifiable parts of Zert Essential’s story — a tech-trained Kampala entrepreneur building a content company, publishing a guide for fellow African creators, and using a growing platform to fund small-scale charitable outreach — are, on their own terms, a reasonably compelling account of how a young person can carve out a media career in a market without much institutional support. Whether that account needed the embellishment of two screen credits that don’t appear to exist is a separate question, and one this profile leaves to the companion piece that follows.

Verified by MonsterInsights