The Oppo Find X9 Pro is, by all accounts, a statement piece: a massive, dense piece of engineering that seems specifically designed to punch a hole through the industry’s well-worn spec sheet. But even a 7,500 mAh battery and a ridiculous 200 MP telephoto lens can’t sell themselves in a fiercely contested market built on partnerships and customer loyalty.
That final, crucial step of converting audacious hardware into cold, hard market share, is the problem that now sits on the desk of a familiar face.

In a move that signals a pivot from mere brand establishment to disciplined, volume-driven growth, Oppo South Africa has appointed Jace Chen as its new chief executive. This isn’t just another foreign executive parachuting in from Shenzhen; Chen previously helped establish the brand’s local footprint during its 2020 entry and was responsible for the launch of the realme sub-brand locally. He now has a mandate to wring more value from its operations.
The Distribution Scramble
For a Chinese tech giant like Oppo, the challenge in a market like South Africa has always been less about innovation and more about distribution and trust. With a current 3% market share, the company has built a foundation—reaching 1.5 million users and embedding devices in over 3,000 outlets,but it remains a distant contender to the likes of Samsung, Huawei and recently HONOR.
Chen’s plan is Machiavellian in its simplicity: accelerate retail execution, deepen operator confidence, and prioritize affordability.
“Our next phase is about reliability at retail and relevance to price-sensitive customers, while strengthening operator partnerships,” Chen stated.
This is a direct acknowledgment of the local market’s brutal logistics. Oppo knows that for the Find X9 Pro to succeed, it can’t rely solely on sponsorships and PR hype; it needs to be available on contract packages and accessible across the entire operator spectrum. The move to scale premium devices, alongside its budget-friendly options, is a classic “full-spectrum assault” strategy. You use the affordable models to drive volume, and you use the Find X9 Pro as the aspirational lure. The halo device that positions the company as a serious engineering powerhouse.
The Flagship Gauntlet
The timing of this leadership shuffle and product launch is key. Geekhub has already secured an invitation to the Find X9 Pro’s local launch next week. This changes the tenor of the local flagship conversation entirely.
We’ve been eagerly watching the horizon for the arrival of the Vivo X300 Pro, whose predecessor was a top-tier contender in our books, but the Find X9 Pro’s impending arrival introduces a far more interesting dynamic. This is a battle between China’s tech giants on local shores, each trying to claim the high ground abandoned by the recent stumbles of other players.
The Find X9 Pro is the company’s confidence play, it’s a defiant rebuttal to the notion that all premium devices must bow to the gods of thinness and lightness. But the success of that colossal battery and camera system will ultimately rest on Chen’s ability to execute on the boring, complex realities of the South African smartphone market: tightening operator collaboration and ensuring customers nationwide can actually “Find” and afford the phone.
Oppo has built a beast, seems to have the right team to guide it through the retail wilderness, and thrown down the gauntlet to its rivals. Now, we wait to see if the South African consumer is ready to “Find X”
