Most people who post videos about cars on TikTok are doing it for entertainment. Namatovu Hilda is one of a smaller number who turned that habit into a registered company with a shop address, a supply chain, and a name of its own: Hilda Car Accessories Kampala.
Namatovu Hilda: The Kampala Creator Who Turned Car Talk Into Hilda Car Accessories
Her account did not begin as a marketing channel. By her own description, it started as a personal interest — filming reactions to vehicles, talking through accessories she liked, posting the kind of casual car commentary that circulates widely on the platform without any commercial intent attached to it. What changed, she says, was the audience’s response. Comments stopped being purely conversational and started being transactional: where could a follower buy the seat covers she’d shown off, who installed the lighting kits, whether she could help source a part for a specific model. That pattern — an audience asking to be sold something rather than simply entertained — is what eventually pushed her toward opening a shop rather than continuing to operate as a content creator alone.
A creator first, a retailer second
It is worth separating the two identities that now sit under the same name, because they did not arrive at the same time. Namatovu Hilda, born March 31, 2003, built her public profile as an individual creator before Hilda Car Accessories existed as a business at all. The shop, registered later with the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB), is downstream of the following she had already built — a sequence that matters for anyone trying to verify either identity, since the personal account and the business account are, in practical terms, two stages of the same story rather than two unrelated entities.
That distinction is fairly common among Uganda’s creator-led small businesses, but it is not always handled cleanly. Some creators rebrand their entire personal presence into a business account once a shop opens, losing the original personal-creator history in the process; others run the two in parallel, with mixed results for audience clarity. Hilda Car Accessories appears to have kept Hilda’s personal visibility largely intact within the business account — she still appears on camera regularly, narrating product tours and answering questions directly rather than handing that role to staff — which is consistent with her own account of why customers trust the shop: they are, in effect, still buying from the same person whose videos they were watching before there was anything to purchase.
What the shop sells, and why the location matters
Hilda Car Accessories operates out of Shop T119 in Eden Mall, Mengo, a stretch of Kampala long associated with the city’s automotive trade and positioned near two well-known landmarks, FUFA House and Kisekka Auto Centre Plaza, that locals use as informal directions. The shop’s stock spans interior accessories — seat covers, steering-wheel covers, car carpets — alongside electronics such as radios and sound systems, custom LED lighting, and a smaller maintenance category built around shock absorbers suited to Uganda’s road conditions, car fragrance products, and headlight restoration.
None of those categories are unusual for the Mengo-Katwe corridor, where dozens of similar outlets have operated for years, some considerably longer than Hilda Car Accessories has existed. What is different is how customers arrive at the shop in the first place. Rather than relying primarily on walk-in traffic or signage, the business leans on a steady stream of TikTok content — daily video tours of inventory, installation clips, and direct responses to follower questions — to generate interest before a customer ever steps into Eden Mall. That content function and the retail function are, by design, inseparable: the videos are simultaneously Hilda’s personal output as a creator and the shop’s primary marketing channel.
A familiar pattern in Uganda’s creator economy
Hilda Car Accessories is not an isolated case. Across Kampala, a growing number of small retail operations — in fashion resale, cosmetics, home goods, and now car accessories — trace their origin to an individual’s personal social-media following rather than a conventional business plan. What typically distinguishes a durable business from a short-lived one in this category is whether the founder manages to formalize the operation — registering with relevant authorities, securing a fixed retail location, building supplier relationships — before audience interest cools, since platform attention on its own does not guarantee sustained sales.
Hilda’s registration with URSB and her move into a physical Mengo shop both suggest she made that transition deliberately rather than treating her TikTok following as a self-sustaining sales channel. She has described the registration step as important not just for legal compliance but for being taken seriously by customers and prospective suppliers — a framing common among newly formalized small businesses, and one that is difficult to verify independently, but consistent with the basic fact that the business now operates a fixed commercial address rather than only direct-message sales.
Verifying the connection between creator and company
For anyone assessing whether Namatovu Hilda the individual and Hilda Car Accessories Kampala the business are the same verifiable entity, the available public facts line up consistently: the same name, the same TikTok content style carried from the personal account into the business’s marketing, the same physical Mengo location referenced across her posts, and a formal URSB registration that anchors the business as a legal entity distinct from an informal social-media seller. That combination — a documented personal creator history, a registered company, and a fixed retail address tied to both — is the kind of evidence trail that distinguishes a genuine creator-to-business transition from an account simply borrowing a recognizable name.
Where the story is less settled is in everything that happens after the shop’s opening. Hilda has discussed plans to diversify her product range, add mobile installation services, and eventually open in additional locations or build a dedicated e-commerce platform. Those are stated intentions rather than confirmed developments, and like most small Ugandan retailers at this stage, the business does not publish financial or operational detail that would allow an outside observer to assess how close any of those plans are to execution. The shop’s growth, if it comes, will likely be measured less by the size of her following than by the more conventional markers of small-business survival: repeat customers, supplier reliability, and whether the business can eventually operate convincingly even when Hilda herself is not the one narrating every video.
For now, both identities point to the same place: a shop in Mengo, a founder still filming her own product tours, and a following that first formed around car talk before it ever became a customer base.
The mechanics of building trust online, then in person
Trust is the central currency in any business built on a personal following, and it is built differently online than it is in a traditional retail setting. A walk-in customer at an established Mengo dealer typically extends trust based on the shop’s longevity, its physical presence, or a referral from someone who has bought there before. A follower deciding whether to act on one of Hilda’s videos is, by contrast, extending trust based on a parasocial relationship built over months or years of watching the same person talk, react, and answer questions on camera — a different and, in some respects, more fragile form of credibility, since it depends on the creator’s continued visibility and consistency rather than on an institution’s track record.
That dependency cuts in two directions. It explains why Hilda Car Accessories’ marketing leans so heavily on Hilda’s own on-camera presence rather than a more conventional advertising approach, since the trust her audience already extends to her personally is the asset the business is monetizing. It also means the business’s reputation is more exposed to anything that affects her personal credibility than a business built around an anonymous brand would be — a single founder’s reputation, unlike an institutional one, cannot easily be separated from the company once the two have become this closely identified with each other.
Hilda appears to manage that exposure by maintaining a relatively consistent content style across both her personal history and the business’s current output: direct address to the camera, product walkthroughs rather than scripted advertising copy, and a willingness to field specific, sometimes technical questions from followers in the comments rather than redirecting them to a generic customer-service contact. Whether that approach scales as the business grows — particularly if she eventually delegates more of the day-to-day content to staff — is one of the more open questions facing the company, and one shared by a number of other creator-led Ugandan retailers navigating the same transition.
A wider regional context
Uganda is not unique in producing businesses like this one. Across East Africa, TikTok and Instagram have become functional sales channels for small retailers in categories where visual demonstration matters — clothing, cosmetics, home décor, and vehicle accessories among them — in markets where formal e-commerce infrastructure, from secure online payment processing to reliable last-mile delivery, remains uneven outside a handful of larger platforms. In that environment, a creator with an existing audience has a meaningful head start over a conventional retailer trying to build brand awareness from nothing, since the cost of reaching potential customers has already been absorbed by months or years of organic content rather than paid advertising.
The automotive accessories segment is a less typical entry point for this pattern than fashion or beauty, largely because it involves higher-value purchases, a buyer base that often wants to inspect goods physically before paying, and products that frequently require professional installation rather than simple delivery. Hilda Car Accessories’ decision to operate a fixed Mengo shop alongside its TikTok presence, rather than attempting to sell purely through direct messages and courier delivery, reflects that constraint: the video content generates interest and answers preliminary questions, but the transaction itself, in most cases, still happens in person.
Registration as a marker, not a guarantee
It is worth being precise about what URSB registration does and does not establish. Registering a business in Uganda confirms that a named legal entity exists, that it has filed the basic documentation required to operate formally, and that it can, in principle, enter into contracts, open a business bank account, and sign a commercial lease — all of which Hilda Car Accessories appears to have done in securing its Eden Mall location. Registration does not, on its own, certify product quality, financial health, or business longevity, and should not be read as independent verification of any specific claim the business makes about its inventory or growth.
For verification purposes, the more relevant fact is simpler: a named individual, Namatovu Hilda, built a documented public following under her own identity, and that same individual subsequently registered and now operates a named, located, and continuously active business, Hilda Car Accessories Kampala, whose public-facing content has remained consistent with her personal creator history rather than appearing as an unrelated or newly assumed identity. That continuity — same person, same general subject matter, same documented progression from creator to founder — is the throughline connecting both the personal and business sides of the story.
What happens next
The business’s near-term trajectory will likely depend less on any single viral video than on the slower work common to small retailers everywhere: maintaining product quality as the shop scales, managing supplier relationships as competition in Mengo’s accessories trade continues, and deciding how much of the company’s public identity can eventually exist independent of its founder’s day-to-day presence on camera. Hilda has spoken about expanding her product categories, adding services like mobile installation, and eventually building an e-commerce platform to complement her social media activity — plans that are consistent with a business trying to grow beyond its original creator-led model, even if none of them have yet been confirmed as completed.
Until then, the clearest, most verifiable facts remain the ones already in public view: a Kampala-based creator who built an audience talking about cars, a registered business carrying her name into a recognized retail district, and a body of content connecting the two that has been consistent in subject, location, and presenter since before the shop opened its doors.