Five thousand people. That’s how many entrepreneurs, distributors, and wellness advocates converged in Accra last year for QNET’s inaugural regional African convention, a gathering that marked a turning point for the direct selling company’s presence on the continent. Now, the company, which focuses on wellness and lifestyle products, is preparing to go bigger.
At a media briefing in Accra in January, QNET outlined an ambitious agenda for its presence in Africa in 2026, anchored by plans to host an expanded V-Africa Convention in Ghana’s capital later this year. The event builds on momentum from 2025, when the company not only brought thousands of participants from across Africa to Ghana but also deepened partnerships with law enforcement to combat scam schemes falsely using its name.

Fighting Scams in Ghana
That infrastructure includes a forthcoming QNET Experience Centre in Ghana, a physical space designed to demystify the company’s operations and allow the public to interact directly with its product line.
QNET’s business model centers on selling tangible products—wellness devices, water filtration systems, health supplements—through independent distributors who earn commissions on sales. Unlike pyramid schemes, which rely primarily on recruitment fees with little to no product value, QNET’s distributors purchase inventory that they then sell to consumers. The distinction matters legally and operationally, but public confusion persists.
That confusion has real-world consequences. Over the past year, fraudsters have exploited QNET’s brand recognition to run scams targeting vulnerable populations, including young people seeking opportunities abroad. The schemes often promise overseas employment or business ventures, collect fees, then deliver nothing—or worse, facilitate illegal migration under false pretenses.
Enter QNET’s partnership with Ghana’s Economic and Organised Crime Office. The collaboration, highlighted at the briefing by Head of Compliance Naana Quartay, has produced tangible results: more than 300 victims rescued from fraudulent schemes, support for repatriating foreign nationals deceived into traveling to Ghana, and intensified public education through community roadshows.
The roadshows are meant to reach groups at heightened risk: young people searching for economic opportunities, communities with limited digital literacy, populations susceptible to false promises of quick wealth or foreign migration.
The education campaign extends beyond warning signs. It explains what QNET actually does, how legitimate direct selling differs from illegal operations, and where Ghanaians can verify information. The company’s Compliance Office, launched last July and inaugurated by CID Director-General COP Lydia Donkor, serves as a coordination hub for law enforcement collaboration—a physical manifestation of QNET’s effort to separate itself from the criminals misusing its brand.
This institutional scaffolding reflects broader challenges facing direct selling companies operating in Africa’s fast-changing digital economy. Mobile penetration and social media adoption have created unprecedented opportunities for legitimate businesses and microentrepreneurship, but also fraudsters. When scammers attach themselves to recognized brand names, the damage can spread quickly through digital networks.
QNET’s response combines enforcement cooperation and proactive transparency. The planned Experience Centre represents the latter—an acknowledgment that physical presence and tangible demonstration can cut through online noise and misinformation.
QNET’s Products
On the product front, QNET highlighted continued strong interest in its EDGE Plus nutritional supplement, Amezcua energy-based wellness products, and HomePure air and water filtration systems throughout 2025.
This year is also set to feature new additions: wearable wellness devices and supplements designed for African markets.
QNET’s product development focus is an important distinguishing factor. Legitimate direct selling revolves around merchandise with inherent value: items consumers would purchase regardless of any business opportunity. QNET’s wellness focus taps into growing African middle-class demand for health and environmental products, from water purification in regions with infrastructure challenges to air quality solutions in rapidly urbanizing cities.
Beyond commerce, QNET has expanded its social impact programming. The company’s free financial literacy initiative reached over 1,000 participants across five Ghanaian cities in 2025, teaching budgeting, saving, and entrepreneurship fundamentals to populations often excluded from formal financial education. Support continues for the ANOPA Project, which promotes inclusive education for children with disabilities.
The upcoming V-Africa Convention is part of QNET’s bet on Ghana as a regional hub. Accra’s selection for both the 2025 and planned 2026 events signals confidence in Ghana’s stability, infrastructure, and position as a leading West African market. For a company operating across Africa, conventions serve multiple purposes: distributor training, product launches, and community building.
The thousands expected at this year’s V-Africa Convention will be participating in QNET’s effort to demonstrate—through transparency, collaboration, and physical presence—that legitimate direct selling can coexist with aggressive fraud prevention.
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