Description:
The use of mobile phone technology has increasingly been advocated to assist small‐
scale farmers. Accordingly, numerous studies have been conducted on the impact,
effectiveness, user's attitude, assessment, empowerment, and the potential use of
mobile phone technology in agriculture. This study explores the challenges that
small‐scale farmers in sub‐Saharan Africa face when using a mobile phone technology
in crop farming projects and proposes areas for future improvement. The study used a
systematic literature search conducted by authors at 3 levels, in which 134 studies initially identified were then narrowed to 11. These 11 studies generated 7 projects that
use specialized applications in a farming value chain. The findings from the study indicate some of the challenges faced by small‐scale farmers, including the lack of their
involvement in the initial phase of the invention process. Other obstacles include
low trust and transparency, inappropriate use of foreign language (English) in a local
cultural context, bureaucracy, and theft of mobile phones. On the basis of these
results, the authors conclude that there are generalized factors for understanding
deficiencies experienced by small‐scale farmers, which ought to be understood by
all crop farming stakeholders. These factors can be used by software engineers to
design future technologies beneficial to small‐scale farmers