Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you for standing by. Welcome to Jumia's Results Conference Call for the Fourth Quarter of 2021. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After management's prepared remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call over to Safae Damir, Head of Investor Relations for Jumia. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our Fourth Quarter 2021 Earnings Call. With us today are Sacha Poignonnec and Jeremy Hodara, Co-Founders and Co-CEOs of Jumia, as well as Antoine Maillet-Mezeray, CFO. This call is also being webcast on the IR Section of our corporate website. We will start by covering the Safe Harbor. We would like to remind you that our discussions today will include forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Moreover, these forward-looking statements may speak only to our expectations as of today. We undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise these statements.
For a discussion of some of the risk factors that could cause actual results to differ from the forward-looking statements expressed today, please see the Risk Factors Section of our annual report on Form 20-F as published on March 12, 2021, as well as our other submissions with the SEC. In addition, on this call, we will refer to certain financial measures not reported in accordance with IFRS. You can find reconciliations of these non-IFRS financial measures to the corresponding IFRS financial measures in our earnings press release, which is available on our investor relations website. With that, I'll hand over to Sacha.
Thank you, Safae. Welcome, everyone, and thank you very much for joining us today. Before going into the results, I would like to remind you of our current strategy and where we stand right now. We are currently focused on scaling our platform with a fundamental and unchanged strategic objective of reaching profitability. To get there, we have very clear priorities. Accelerate usage growth, GMV, consumers, orders. Increase monetization and cost efficiency. Continue developing JumiaPay. This is the natural next step in the journey we've been on since inception. We have a vast and largely untapped market of almost 600 million consumers across 11 countries. To capture this opportunity, we've spent the first years of our journey building the solid foundation for our platform across e-commerce, logistics, and payment. This platform is uniquely tailored to the specifics of our markets.
With this foundation in place, we focused over the past three years on enhancing the fundamentals of our business. We made tremendous progress building everyday product categories, and our platform has never been more diverse and relevant for consumers as part of their daily lives. We have also strengthened our unit economics and crossed a major milestone of positive gross profit after fulfillment expense, and it has now been the case consistently for the past nine quarters. Lastly, we've raised over $570 million in cash over the past two years, giving us a strong balance sheet to finance our strategy. Leveraging these strong fundamentals, we turned our focus in 2021 to accelerating usage growth to scale our business and take it to profitability.
We are pleased to report very good progress on growth acceleration during Q4, and let's please turn to page four for the highlights of the quarter. Best usage ever. GMV reached all-time high. Active consumers reached all-time high. Orders reached all-time high. This is very good. We're now back to growth. The acceleration strategy is paying off. Monetization. Highest revenue ever. Highest gross profit before consumer incentives ever. EBITDA loss stood at -$70 million in Q4, mainly driven by strong investments in sales and advertising and consumer incentives. We invested $27 million more into sales and advertising and consumer incentives than last year. We're comfortable with this level of investment because of the strength of our unit economics and because we're seeing the dynamics on usage growth acceleration.
Overall, a good quarter in our view, yielding the acceleration of usage we all wanted to see and some great progress on monetization. Now, we still wanna see more, of course, and I will give more precise guidance for 2022 at the end of the call. If we review our usage metrics on page 5, please. Quarterly active consumers reached a record of 3.8 million in Q4, up 29% year-on-year, driven by all-time high, new consumer adds during the quarter. This is a new KPI that we will now provide every quarter, so that we give even more granularity on usage performance, and we will still provide the annual active consumers on a yearly basis. You can see in the presentation later that we reached, this year, 8 million active consumers, also a record.
Orders accelerated by 40%, also reaching an all-time high of 11.3 million. This acceleration in both consumers and orders is driving what we believe to be an inflection in GMV, which was up 20% year-over-year, reaching again all-time high of $300 million. We're very encouraged, obviously, by this acceleration and view it as strong evidence that our strategy is paying off. We intend to build on this momentum to further scale our platform and continue to accelerate. In parallel, let's turn to page six, please. Underlying monetization is also reaching new highs. If we look at our monetization metrics before consumer incentives, which are counted as deductions from the revenue line, we see a clear trend of acceleration with new records achieved in Q4. Revenue before consumer incentives reached $73 million, up 39%, the fastest revenue growth in the past two years.
Gross profit before consumer incentives reached $45 million, up 24%, while the margin as a percentage of GMV reached 13.6%. Finally, gross profit after fulfillment expense and still, of course, before consumer incentives, also reached a new high at $14 million, up 9% year-over-year, while margin as a percent of GMV here remained at above 4% at 4.3%. We're very pleased to drive both strong usage growth and strong monetization, and this is giving us the flexibility to further invest in the growth of our platform. On page 7, you can see that we continued leaning into growth investments in Q4, which is what we had initiated earlier in 2021. There are two key areas of investments for us. First is consumer adoption.
We are increasing our investments in sales and advertising and consumer incentives, and we're doing so in a targeted and disciplined manner. Over 57% of the increase in sales and advertising is coming from increased offline marketing costs, which are largely geared towards brand awareness and consideration. Second area of investment is platform development, technology and G&A. Tech is the backbone of everything we do at Jumia. We are accelerating the development of products and features, which are creating a more engaging and seamless user experience, more effective operations with a fully dedicated tech stack for payment and fintech as well. We are comfortable with the increased level of adjusted EBITDA loss during this quarter and the pace of investments for a number of reasons. Number one, these investments are coming from a place of strength.
Our levels of monetization have never been higher, and we have the financial firepower to make those investments. Secondly, it's the right time for us to be making this investment. There is strong momentum in the business in terms of usage, and we are building on this momentum to drive even more growth. Three, these investments are of course creating even more strength in the platform, more compelling experience and more compelling value proposition for all participants, as well as bigger scale, which ultimately contributes to the path to profitability. Now, let's go into more details in the performance, and Jeremy will take it from there.
Thank you, Sacha. Hello, everyone, and thanks for joining today. I start with the review of the usage trends during the quarter on page 9. On page 9, we have a very clear acceleration in the usage growth in Q4. We have posted during the quarter the fastest sequential growth rate in almost three years across consumers, orders, and GMV. We have reached all-time high across each one of these metrics in the quarter. We're adding more consumers than ever before, and quarterly active consumers reached a new high of 3.8 million, up 29% year-over-year. Our consumers are also purchasing more often with almost three orders placed on average by an active consumer in the fourth quarter. Orders reached a record high of 11.3 million, up 40%, as a result of both increased consumer add and increased purchase frequency of existing consumers.
Driven by the acceleration in both consumers and order growth, we are reaching what we believe to be a clear inflection in the GMV trajectory, which increased by 20% year-over-year, reaching a record of $330 million during the quarter. There is strong growth momentum in the business, and that's partly a result of the success of our strategy to increase the focus on everyday product categories. On page 10, you can see a fundamental shift in our GMV mix. In Q4 2019, we had half of our GMV coming from phone and electronics. In Q4 2021, only 35% of our GMV is coming from phone and electronics, with 65% coming from categories which are relevant to consumers as part of their everyday lives, such as fashion, home, lifestyle, food delivery, FMCG, et cetera.
Average order value now stands at $29 as we further penetrate more affordable and smaller ticket size categories. On page 11, the growth trends by product category convey a similar message about the importance of everyday categories. The fastest-growing categories in both GMV and items sold are categories that are relevant to consumers as part of their everyday lives. In particular, the food-related categories, which are food delivery and FMCG, are growing in excess of 50% year-over-year in both GMV and items sold terms. Phone and electronics are showing some early signs of improvements, growing in excess of 10% in terms of items sold. Also, the global supply chain situation for these categories remain volatile with continued pressure on the chipset supply side.
I'd like to give you more color on the FMCG category, which more than doubled in volume terms, demonstrating its strong relevance for consumer in our markets. On page 12, you've heard us talking in the past about our efforts, commercial efforts to build out the assortment on the FMCG side with a view to cover the full product spectrum of a typical grocery basket in each one of our markets. We also placed particular emphasis and focus on developing our relationships with blue chip FMCG brands such as P&G, Unilever, Coca-Cola, Nestlé, Mondelez, and many more. In the full year 2021, we added over 850 new brands on our platform, and we are also adapting our operating model to work efficiently with these brands to secure relevant stock at the best price.
This led us to do more business on a first party basis with almost 40% of GMV in the FMCG category generated on a first party basis. The FMCG category is starting to account for a meaningful share of the business. 14% of items sold versus 9% a year ago, which we see as a great news because this is a category where the annual purchase frequency is 25% higher versus the other categories on the platform. The development of FMCG is a case study of our ability to identify relevant categories for our consumers and build them out in an agile manner, adapting our operating model for a win-win partnership with suppliers and an attractive value proposition for consumers. We are overall very pleased with the accelerating usage growth on the platform and have clear priorities for 2022 to further build on that momentum.
On page 13, we have outlined selected initiatives to drive the usage growth in 2022. The first one is the continued development of what we call Jumia Everyday, which are the everyday product categories, including FMCG that I have just touched upon. On the supply front, we intend to further expand our assortment, leveraging both our third-party sellers as well as our first-party sourcing capabilities. On the delivery front, we intend to leverage our e-commerce logistics infrastructure for the delivery of planned purchases as early as the next day, while catering also to immediate needs with under one hour delivery via our on-demand platform, Jumia Food. The second lever of usage growth is the rollout of targeted free shipping. At this stage, free shipping is available in certain cities for baskets above a minimum size comprised of Jumia Express items.
These items are the one we hold in our warehouse and that are picked and packed by Jumia. The third lever is tech-driven user experience enhancements. We plan to further increase the level of personalization across the platform, improve our search algorithm and filtering modules, while increasing our gamification for an even more engaging experience. We expect these three levers to drive usage growth acceleration, support conversion rate, consumer acquisition, and loyalty. With respect to the free shipping specifically, we expect the sales uplift generated by sellers via free shipping to help us drive more revenue from Jumia Express, which is barely monetized today. We are confident accelerated usage growth and increased scale will help us further improve marketing efficiency and ultimately contribute to our path to profitability. Let's now move on to JumiaPay.
We're also seeing good momentum here and are constantly enhancing our platform and expanding the range of financial and digital services available to consumers. We've highlighted on page 15 some selected developments related to JumiaPay in Q4 2021. To support the growth of JumiaPay on and off platform, we conducted an upgrade of our risk infrastructure. In addition to our proprietary in-house risk engine, which scans each transaction real time against over 300 factors, we rolled out a third-party device fingerprinting technology. This tool aggregates over 1,000 data points, providing an even more precise basis for fraud detection and prevention. We further expanded the range of consumer finance products available to our consumers as part of the Black Friday campaign. We established a partnership with valU in Egypt, a leading Buy Now, Pay Later fintech platform, allowing consumers to pay through interest-free installments over nine months.
We're currently working on expanding the range of tenures for the Buy Now, Pay Later installments. In addition, we partnered with seven different banks as part of the Black Friday campaign in Egypt to offer installments to consumers. On the JumiaPay app, we continued adding more relevant everyday services. In Nigeria, we set up an integration with Quickteller, the largest billing aggregator in Nigeria. This partnership allows us to offer over 70 additional billers on the JumiaPay app, including government services, internet service providers, airlines, and many more. Moving on to the TPV on page 16. JumiaPay TPV increased by 29% from $70 million in Q4 2020 to $90 million in Q4 2021, supported by the growth in GMV and JumiaPay app digital services in particular.
On-platform penetration of JumiaPay as a percentage of the GMV reached a new high, 27.4% in Q4 this year, up from 25.5% in Q4 2020. Turning to transactions on page 17. JumiaPay transactions reached 3.9 million in Q4 2021, up 46% year-over-year, the fastest transactions growth rate of the past seven quarters. JumiaPay transactions growth was supported by accelerating volume growth across the business and in particular, the food delivery category, which more than doubled year-over-year. Overall, 34.7% of orders placed on the Jumia platform in Q4 were completed using JumiaPay, compared to 33% in Q4 last year.
We made good progress on JumiaPay throughout 2021, and we intend to build on this momentum to further expand the range of payment and fintech solutions for both merchants and consumers in 2022. On page 18, we have outlined selected initiatives that we are driving to push the development of JumiaPay in 2022. The first one is the development of our payment processing activities off-platform. We intend to start offering in 2022 our payment processing solutions off-platform to third-party merchants, starting in Egypt, initiating off-platform TPV and payment processing revenue. 2021 marked an important milestone f'or JumiaPay, as we obtained in Egypt, under the sponsorship of National Bank of Egypt, the relevant licenses to process payments on behalf of third-party off-platform. In 2022, we intend to secure the relevant licenses in selected other markets for off-platform payment processes.
The second initiative is to further develop our consumer finance solutions, offering more Buy Now, Pay Later option for consumer in order to drive usage growth on our platform. I now hand over to Antoine, who will walk you through our financial performance in more detail.
Thank you, Jeremy. Hello, everyone. As mentioned by Sacha in the intro, monetization performance in Q4 2021 was very strong as we reached record highs in terms of revenue, gross profit, and gross profit margin before incentives. This is allowing us to increase investments in the long-term growth of Jumia. I would like to start with a recap of the building blocks of our revenue on page 20. We present revenue in our financials under three main buckets. The first one is first-party revenue, which are the proceeds generated from our retail activity. The second one is marketplace revenue, which are the various fees that we receive from our third-party activity. The third bucket is other revenue, which at this stage mainly includes revenue from our logistics- as- a-s ervice activity launched in 2020.
This bucket will include in the future revenue from off-platform payment processing once this activity is up and running. Let's now look at the overall revenue trajectory in Q4 2021. Here we observe three main things. The first one is the overall revenue growth, which was up 26% year-on-year, the fastest growth rate of the past two years. I would like to point out that the particularly strong performance of the first-party revenue, which was up over 79% before consumer incentives, which is also the fastest growth rate of the past two years. This is the result of us undertaking more business on a 1P basis, particularly for the build-out of the grocery subcategory. The second observation is the development of new monetization streams, such as advertising or logistics- as- a-s ervice, the major part of the other revenue.
The third observation is that this revenue growth momentum is giving us the flexibility to invest more into growth in the form of consumer incentives, including sales discounts, shipping discounts, and free shipping. Let's now dive deeper into the various components of marketplace revenue on page 21. Marketing and advertising revenue increased by 20%, supported by robust seller take-up of our ad solutions, particularly during the Black Friday campaign. Value added services revenue increased by 63% year-over-year, mostly as a result of an increase in international logistics revenue. Commissions and fulfillment revenue are both impacted by consumer incentives. Excluding this impact, commissions revenue was up 25%, driven by usage growth, while fulfillment revenue was down 2% as we chose to reduce the shipping pass-through to customers.
The diversity of our revenue sources gives us the flexibility to adjust the monetization intensity on certain revenue streams as we execute on our usage growth acceleration strategy. While we are driving much faster usage growth, we are also reaching record high levels of monetization. On page 22, you can see that gross profit before the impact of consumer incentives reached an all-time high at $44.8 million, accelerating by 24% year-over-year, while the margin as percentage of GMV reached 13.6%. We made the decision to reinvest some of these monetization gains into our price competitiveness and more attractive shipping tariffs, increasing consumer incentives to $11 million in Q4 2021 from $3 million in Q4 2020. I would point out here that the Q4 2020 levels were very modest and were down 45% compared to Q4 2019.
Despite more than tripling consumer incentives level, gross profit, which is net of consumer incentives, was still up by 2% year-on-year and up 22% compared to Q4 2019. Similarly, gross profit as percentage of GMV decreased from 12% in Q4 2020 to 10% in Q4 2021, which is more than 1.5 percentage points above the margin level of Q4 2019. We are overall very pleased with the strong performance of monetization in Q4 2021, and we continue building new monetization streams such as advertising or logistics- as- a-s ervice to further increase the earning power. Let's now move on to cost on page 24. While we are in a phase of expansion and increased investment, we are maintaining strong cost discipline.
As you can see, we continue generating logistics efficiencies on a volume unit basis. Fulfillment expense increased by 32% year-on-year, while others accelerated by 40% over the same period. Fulfillment expense on a per order basis is showing a steady decline over the past two years, reaching $2.7 per order in Q4 2021. Moving on to sales and advertising costs, page 25. This has been a key area of investment for us in the second half of 2021, after 6 quarters of significantly reduced marketing spend. In Q4 2021, we continued ramping up marketing investments across channels, albeit at a slower pace compared to Q3 2021. Sales and advertising expense increased by 159% year-on-year in Q4 2021, compared to 228% year-on-year in Q3 2021.
On a compounded basis, sales and advertising expense was at 35% compared to 4.19%. Over 57% of the year-on-year increase in sales and advertising expense is coming from the increase in above the line marketing, such as offline, TV, and video advertising, which are aimed at driving brand awareness and consideration. Our sales and advertising spend is disciplined and targeted. To optimize our overall marketing spend and allocation by channel, in addition to our existing marketing optimization tools, we are deploying an enhanced return on marketing investment or ROMI model. This is a customized engine trained on multiple years of Jumia data to model the differentiated impact of various marketing activities and channels on customer acquisition and loyalty, informing the marketing budget allocation. Informed by the ROMI model, as well as in-depth customer research in selected markets, we rebalance our marketing investment mix.
We have done so by increasing the share of offline media and video advertising to drive awareness and activation and replenish the funnel of consumers. In Q4 '21, 50% of our sales and advertising expense was allocated to online marketing campaigns, 41% to offline media and video advertising, and 9% to staff costs. In Q4 '20, offline and video advertising accounted for only 17% of the sales and advertising expense, with online marketing campaigns and staff costs representing 63% and 20% respectively. We are confident this targeted and disciplined approach will allow us to further improve marketing efficiency as we move beyond the initial phase of ramp-up. Turning to technology and G&A expense on page 26.
Technology is another area of increased investments, with technology and content expense reaching $13.1 million, up 51% year-on-year, and 53% compared to Q4 2019. Tech is the backbone of our platform, and we are increasing our investments in this area to enhance user experience and engagement on our platform, as well as overall operational efficiency. In Q4 2021, we initiated a revamp of our homepage structure and content to simplify navigation and product discovery. To support these efforts, we have been expanding our technology headcount. In H2 2021, we opened a new tech hub in Cairo, which housed over 120 technology professionals at the end of 2021, taking the total count of technology staff across the group to over 400. G&A expense, excluding share-based compensation, reached $32 million in Q4 2021, up 22% year-on-year.
This was mostly due to a temporary increase in professional fees, as well as an uptick in staff costs as we strengthen the management team in selected areas to support the growth of the business. G&A costs, excluding SBC, remained 15% lower in Q4 2021 compared to their levels in Q4 2019, as we maintain cost discipline in this area. Before moving on to the balance and cash flow items, I'd like to wrap up on monetization and cost with an overview of our priorities on this front in 2022. Page 27 outlines selected initiatives we intend to pursue in 2022 to increase monetization and cost efficiency. On the monetization front, we want to diversify our revenue streams and drive more revenue from our platform assets.
We wanna grow advertising by expanding the range and efficiency of our advertising solutions while increasing the take- up of these services by our sellers and third-party advertisers. Jeremy referred earlier to Jumia Express in the context of free shipping. This is a promising revenue stream that we intend to further develop in conjunction with free shipping as our sellers start to see sales uplift from free shipping. Last but not least, we intend to further develop our logistics-as-a-service offering to third-party businesses. This activity was rolled out in 2021, and we have seen very good traction there last year. We plan to build on this momentum to acquire more logistics clients and increase revenue from this activity. The development of newer revenue streams help us reduce reliance on commissions and shipping fees from consumers, which ultimately supports usage growth.
On the cost front, we intend to drive more operating leverage and efficiency as we scale the platform. We expect increased volumes to support fulfillment cost efficiency. On the sales and advertising front, we expect our brand awareness and activation investments to gradually translate into new consumer acquisitions other than GMV growth, thereby supporting marketing efficiency. Let's now turn to balance sheet and cash flow items, page 28. CapEx in Q4 2021 was $4.4 million, compared to less than $1 million in Q4 2020, mostly due to purchases of technology and logistics equipment. Net change in working capital resulted in an inflow of $4.1 million in Q4 2021. This was mainly a result of an increase in payables relating to the uptick in the first-party activity, as well as a shorter receivable cycle.
Cash utilization for the quarter, defined as cash used in operating and investing activities, excluding investments in financial assets, was $66.6 million in Q4 2021, supported by the working capital inflow during the quarter. At the end of December 2021, we had a liquidity position of $513 million of $170.1 million of cash and cash equivalent of $395.7 million of term deposits and other financial assets. With that, I'll hand over to Sacha for concluding remarks.
Thank you, Antoine. We closed 2021 with strong momentum, executing successfully on our growth acceleration strategy. We posted all-time high levels of consumers, orders, GMV, new highs in terms of monetization. The combination of accelerating usage growth and increased monetization are essential stepping stones towards profitability. We have brought forward today an illustration of
Ladies and gentlemen, please hold a moment while we reconnect the speaker.
Hello, everyone. I'll take over from Sacha. I think he's reconnecting.
I'm back if you want, Jeremy.
So if you-
But, uh, go-
Okay. No, go on, Sacha, if you are back. No, go on. Yeah, go on, Sacha, you are back.
Okay. Up to you. Okay, great. Sorry, guys, I got dropped off from the call, and we were about to show Nigeria's case study. We're on page 29. Here on this slide, we are illustrating how the scale is taking us towards profitability. You can see that we have been accelerating GMV growth. This is the blue line on the chart in case you're looking at the presentation, and we have grown GMV over the last two years and during Q4 by a factor of 1.7. At the same time, we have been accelerating monetization. That is represented here as the gross profit after fulfillment and before consumer incentives.
For those again looking at the presentation, here we are looking at the orange bar, and you can see that we've been growing steadily over the last two years and by a factor of 2.4 in Q4. Finally, you can see on this chart as well our local G&A, which represent our cost structure to run the business locally. Now, for the last five quarters, the monetization has been paying for the local G&A base. This is one new milestone that we wanted to bring forward as another positive development on the path to profitability and on the benefit that scale brings to the business. Nigeria, as you are well aware, is our largest market, represents about 20%-25% of the business, depending on the metrics you take. It's great to see that our largest market has reached this milestone.
On page 30, we have recapped here the key initiatives for 2022, and we would like to share some guidance for 2022. We intend to further accelerate GMV growth. As a reminder, we grew GMV by 15% in H2 2021, and we intend to continue to build on that momentum. In terms of investments, we are going to deliver that growth acceleration with similar levels of investments as in 2021. For example, we expect to invest between $50 million and $55 million in sales and advertising expense in the first half of 2022. This compares with $55 million during H2 of 2021. Overall, a very similar level of investments and no further increase in absolute terms during the first half of 2022 for sales and advertising.
For EBITDA, we expect the overall adjusted EBITDA loss for the full year to be in the range of $200-$220. Again, this compares with $197 in 2021. Finally, we expect to invest between $15 million and $25 million of CapEx this year. This is an increase versus 2021, during which we invested $7 million. This investment is focused on our logistics platform and will allow us to increase our reach, improve the speed of delivery, and deliver also cost efficiencies going forward. Once again, we have three priorities for 2022: usage growth, JumiaPay development, increased monetization and cost efficiency. We have very clear initiatives already ongoing to support each. We're very excited by the prospects of the business in 2022 and beyond, and believe we have all the building blocks to take Jumia to profitability.
Thank you very much for your attention, and we're now ready to take your questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, the floor is now open for questions. If you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone at this time. We do ask that if you are listening via speakerphone, that you please pick up your handset for optimum sound quality. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone now. If you wish to leave the queue, you may press star two. Please hold a moment while we poll for questions. Our first question today is coming from Aaron Kessler at Raymond James. Your line is live. You may begin.
Great. Thank you and congrats on the acceleration. A couple of questions. First, just maybe on some of the new buyer cohorts. Can you just talk about some of the quality of the new buyers in terms of repeat activity? Engagement. There's always kind of concern with incentives that you're tracking some non-repeat buyers as well. So if you can maybe talk through that. Then, maybe in terms of the brand advertising opportunity as well. We've seen obviously in the U.S., some nice opportunities with FMCG advertisers on platforms like Amazon. If you can just talk about what you're seeing there today and maybe the opportunity going forward on the brand advertising side. Thank you.
Great. Thank you, Aaron. Yeah, very good question on cohorts and incentives. It's something that we have observed also as well in the past, that the type of incentives that are being used can drive better cohorts or worse cohorts in some cases. Very clearly for us, the increasing the customer lifetime value and optimizing the customer acquisition cost at the same time is very critical. It's a key objective. We use of course the sales advertising and the consumer incentives to drive just that. We're very confident that the type of consumer incentives that are deployed are incrementally driving the customer lifetime value and that are driving overall long-term increase of the consumer lifetime value, certainly. In order to measure that, of course, we look at a number of KPIs.
You can see that the number of orders per consumers have been trending in the right direction. If you look at the quarterly active consumers that we are providing now, the KPI, you can see that the number of orders per consumer is increasing. Certainly we think that all the initiatives around what we call the Jumia Everyday, the FMCG, the drive also of free shipping and more personalization, convenience, FMCG, all that is there to increase the frequency and the loyalty of the consumers. That we will continue to see increased KPIs with this. Very much confident here. In terms of FMCG, you are very right.
Certainly we have with many of those big brands that we have displayed on the slide and that Jeremy talked about, we have what we call joint business plan, and we work hand in hand with them in order to grow the business, in order to grow the online business that they are generating through Jumia. As part of that, we have joint business plan, and we have joint advertising plans. Certainly this is driving for us very promising prospects for the advertising revenue. As we have mentioned in the presentation, we also have a significant part of the FMCG that we do on 1P basis, which is in the retail. The brands there, they are also willing to participate into advertising campaigns, and they are supporting, you know, our retail with advertising campaigns.
Certainly we think that the evolution of Jumia towards this mix of category is going to also support the advertising revenues going forward.
Great. Thank you, Sacha.
Thank you. Our next question today is coming from Lamont Williams at Stifel. Your line is live. You may begin.
Hi, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Sacha, could you just talk a little bit about the change in the operating model for JumiaPay in Nigeria? Could you just give us a little more color on what that entails? Then secondly, you know, you mentioned in the release the study from Boston Consulting Group. You know, I think it appears and looks like some of the customers are looking for more free shipping. Is there anything else that study would have revealed about what your consumers are asking from the platform?
Thanks, Lamont. On the first question, you know, we have discussions with local regulators, with JumiaPay, of course, on an ongoing basis. Sometimes we are making adjustments to the operating model and to the type of integrations and processes and flows that are happening. Here, this is one that is taking place in Nigeria. For us it's very important to maintain this dialogue with the relevant regulators obviously, and ensure compliance with existing or anticipated regulations, because regulations in fintech and payments in general are evolving on a regular basis. Here it's an update to the model, and we'll have to see.
You know, it's hard to estimate ahead what are the impacts of those type of changes. But we expect this arrangement to be anyway if there's any disruption, we expect any disruption to be transitory. Right. I'm sorry, your second question, Lamont, is to make sure is on the
Yeah. Any kind of findings from the study with BCG?
The study. Of course, sorry.
Right.
Yeah. I think the study is a really in-depth market study about a range of topics around the consumer and the expectations and the perception of the value proposition and how can we maximize any change that we're making to the value proposition, right? It's very 360 and help us to do more targeted offering and have a value proposition towards segments which are more likely to use e-commerce and so on and so forth. I think free shipping is one of the conclusions that we have made, right? We've taken a hard look at the ROI of the implementation of free shipping, especially on Jumia Express, right? Of course, we don't do free shipping on everything.
We're gonna do free shipping on Jumia Express, which is gonna enable us to drive more usage in general. It's gonna also enable us to address some of the concerns or the expectations around speed of delivery, because, for example, Jumia Express is delivered faster than the marketplace. Also the consistency of the quality of the products which are offered on Jumia Express, because of course we have more control on those. I think there's a number of, I would say, adaptations of the customer experience which can have higher return on investment than others. Improving the return experience, for example, accelerating the speed of delivery in certain categories.
I think there's a lot of, let's say, quote-unquote, small findings which are gonna help us drive the value proposition forward, right? Those are some of the examples.
Okay, great. Thank you.
Thank you. Once again, ladies and gentlemen, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone now. Our next question today is coming from Luke Holbrook at Morgan Stanley. Your line is live. You may begin.
Great, thanks. Thanks for letting me on the call. I had a question just on your sales and advertising spend. That's ramped up quite significantly over the last few quarters. It looks set to do so the next couple of quarters as well. Can you give us any more detail on where that's being spent on a geographic basis? Is this more seen as a push into Nigeria, as you kind of alluded to on slide 29, or is this into Egypt more? Any color there would be useful. And just anything you can provide on your long-term plans here. Is this something that we should expect a more sustained level of sales and advertising heading into the back part of this year and also kind of 2023 as well? Any color there would be useful.
Thanks.
Yes, of course. Very good questions. The spend is really, I would say well, spread across the portfolio of countries, and there's not like one very specific geographical push in one country or the other. We have accelerated the level of spend pretty much across all countries in H2 of 2021, right? There will be some nuances to that. In general, this is an increase that is really well spread and certainly not focused on Nigeria or focused more on Egypt and quite well balanced, right? Respecting, I would say, the size of our existing operations, relative to the size, right? No particular country focus there that is out of ordinary.
I think for H1, you know, we really want to invest about $50 million, and this is really the same level that we have invested in H2. Here, you know, we don't intend to further increase the levels of investment that we have done in Q3, Q4, but rather maintain them. We want to see further accelerations of usage metrics with a similar level of spend in absolute terms, at least for H1, right? That's the guidance we have for the first half, and then we'll take it from there and, you know, see the acceleration and continue to observe the customer lifetime value and the level of acceleration that we see.
At least for H1, we have similar levels in absolute terms as H2. After that, we'll have to see.
That's very clear. Just one quick follow-up just on you know, slide 29, gave us some illustrative details on Nigeria. Do you have any plans to disclose more financials on a geographic basis that we kind of see more of the spread of your operations?
Well, we certainly are committed to bringing any relevant path to profitability milestone, right? We have done that in the past several times when certain milestones in a country. It's a very good illustration and to show a deep dive of how, you know, the business is playing out, especially in Nigeria, in the largest country. We certainly plan to continue to bring those milestones. Then we have also always volunteered, you know, the sort of relative size of the countries, Nigeria being 20%-25%, Egypt being around 20%, and then having the other countries, all of them being, you know, plus or minus between 5% and 10%, right? If that were to change, I think we would also bring it forward.
I think the weight of the countries, although we have never published it per se, has not really changed. We have always volunteered, you know, those ratios to give you a sense of the presence. Also, the geographical diversity of Jumia is one of the amazing assets, I think of the company, because we are not overexposed to a given market. We are not overexposed to a macro situation in one geography, right? It's that nice balance, I think, that is very attractive for us to have the presence in all those countries and to have some strong foothold in countries like Nigeria and Egypt, but also a strong presence elsewhere. Again, like this, we volunteer.
For now, we have no plans to disclose on a regular basis specific geographical KPIs. We always would volunteer this, and highlight if there were any big changes.
Understood. Thanks very much.
Thank you. Once again, if you have any questions or comments, please press star one on your phone now. Our next question today is coming from Sarah Simon at Berenberg. Your line is live. You may begin.
Yes, good afternoon. Apologies if there's background noise. I'm in transit. I just had a question about the growth acceleration that you talk about. You referenced growth acceleration relative to the second half of fiscal 2021, which I think was about 15%. Is that the benchmark against which you're expecting to accelerate? Or should we really be thinking, you know, Q3 was less growth than Q4, Q1 should be more growth than Q4, and so on. Just a bit more color on how you're thinking about that acceleration would be helpful. Thanks.
Yeah. Look, Sarah, thank you for the question. At this stage, we really, I think we want to see more acceleration versus where we are now, right? The benchmark for us, because there can be some quarterly variations and so on and so forth, we wanna make sure that we are accelerating versus where we come from, at least on an H2 basis, right? Of course, then there's GMV orders, consumers, we are expecting to accelerate, and the benchmark for us right now is H2. Of course, as we see it coming, we will, you know, publish more data. For now, this is the benchmark that we use.
Okay, that's helpful. Thanks.
Thank you. We have no further questions in the queue at this time. I will now turn it back to management for any closing remarks.
Well, thank you very much, and looking forward to a great 2022. Thank you, everyone. Take care. Bye.
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. This does conclude today's event. You may disconnect at this time, and have a wonderful day. We thank you for your participation.