Kenya’s PR industry does not often rally around a single agency narrative, but in 2026, Engage Communications has managed to insert itself firmly into that conversation.
Part of that is timing. Part of it is strategy.
The firm, formerly Engage BCW, quietly dropped the BCW identity after the global consolidation that led to the formation of Burson. On paper, it was a straightforward structural change. In practice, it signalled something more consequential, a deliberate step away from being seen as an extension of a global network, and towards standing on its own as a Kenyan agency.
That distinction matters more today than it did a few years ago. Clients in Nairobi and across the region are no longer automatically drawn to global affiliations. They are looking for firms that understand the local landscape instinctively, but can still operate beyond it when required. The balance has shifted.
Engage’s next move leaned directly into that shift. Its entry into PROI Worldwide in March did not just expand its international links, it reframed how those links are structured. Instead of being tied into a single global parent, it is now part of a network of independent agencies, each rooted in its own market. Managing partner Desiree Gomes framed it as a step that opens up wider expertise for clients, without diluting local perspective.
On the ground, that positioning feels deliberate. Nairobi remains the region’s corporate and media hub, but the work itself has become more complex. Reputation management is no longer reactive. Stakeholder engagement stretches across borders. Campaigns are expected to travel, but still land with local relevance. Agencies that can navigate that tension are the ones being taken seriously.
Engage is clearly trying to sit in that space. Whether it fully owns it is still an open question, but the intent is evident.
It is also operating in a market that is anything but thin. Ogilvy Africa continues to dominate through scale and reach, with a footprint that few can match across the continent.
Edelman, strengthened by its earlier acquisition of Gina Din Corporate Communications, remains a powerful player with global muscle and a growing East African base.
And Africa Practice has stayed consistent in its lane, focusing on policy, public affairs and high level advisory, often around some of the continent’s most visible conversations.
So this is not a story about a clear market leader emerging. It is more nuanced than that.
What Engage has, at least for now, is momentum and a narrative that fits the moment. An agency that has stepped out of a global structure, reasserted its independence, and then reconnected internationally on different terms.
In a crowded field, that is enough to make people pay attention. Whether it is enough to sustain that attention is what the next phase will test.












