#Africa Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution

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Ivory Coast-based startup studio Janngo has launched Jexport, an import-export solution aimed at accelerating access to regional and international markets for African small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Janngo builds, grows and invests in pan-African digital champions with proven business models and inclusive social impact, building digital ecosystems in high growth sectors by providing business support and digital platforms to SMEs.

Disrupt Africa reported in May it had raised EUR1 million (US$1.18 million) in funding to launch new digital solutions for African SMEs, and the newly-launched Jexport is the first such product.

A turnkey import-export platform, Jexport helps SMEs export their products globally at the best prices, while allowing freight forwarders and transporters to increase volumes, reduce costs, and optimise capacity on key corridors.

“Food waste represents more than 40 per cent of the whole production worldwide. The situation is equally dire in Africa where, contrary to the developed countries where the waste occurs downstream of the value chain, we face most challenges upstream in particular in terms of handling, transportation and distribution,” said Fatoumata Bâ, founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Janngo.

“Today, our farmers and local producers severely suffer from prohibitive transport costs which drives them in some cases to resort to sell off their crop at ridiculously low prices or even worse to see them rot on their stems.”

Jexport aims to solve this problem, enables SMEs and other economic players in Ivory Coast to trade globally, find the best prices regarding their transport needs, improve their operational efficiency, and manage their legal and compliance needs.

The post Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution

//

Ivory Coast-based startup studio Janngo has launched Jexport, an import-export solution aimed at accelerating access to regional and international markets for African small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Janngo builds, grows and invests in pan-African digital champions with proven business models and inclusive social impact, building digital ecosystems in high growth sectors by providing business support and digital platforms to SMEs.

Disrupt Africa reported in May it had raised EUR1 million (US$1.18 million) in funding to launch new digital solutions for African SMEs, and the newly-launched Jexport is the first such product.

A turnkey import-export platform, Jexport helps SMEs export their products globally at the best prices, while allowing freight forwarders and transporters to increase volumes, reduce costs, and optimise capacity on key corridors.

“Food waste represents more than 40 per cent of the whole production worldwide. The situation is equally dire in Africa where, contrary to the developed countries where the waste occurs downstream of the value chain, we face most challenges upstream in particular in terms of handling, transportation and distribution,” said Fatoumata Bâ, founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Janngo.

“Today, our farmers and local producers severely suffer from prohibitive transport costs which drives them in some cases to resort to sell off their crop at ridiculously low prices or even worse to see them rot on their stems.”

Jexport aims to solve this problem, enables SMEs and other economic players in Ivory Coast to trade globally, find the best prices regarding their transport needs, improve their operational efficiency, and manage their legal and compliance needs.

The post Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution

//

Ivory Coast-based startup studio Janngo has launched Jexport, an import-export solution aimed at accelerating access to regional and international markets for African small and medium enterprises (SMEs).

Janngo builds, grows and invests in pan-African digital champions with proven business models and inclusive social impact, building digital ecosystems in high growth sectors by providing business support and digital platforms to SMEs.

Disrupt Africa reported in May it had raised EUR1 million (US$1.18 million) in funding to launch new digital solutions for African SMEs, and the newly-launched Jexport is the first such product.

A turnkey import-export platform, Jexport helps SMEs export their products globally at the best prices, while allowing freight forwarders and transporters to increase volumes, reduce costs, and optimise capacity on key corridors.

“Food waste represents more than 40 per cent of the whole production worldwide. The situation is equally dire in Africa where, contrary to the developed countries where the waste occurs downstream of the value chain, we face most challenges upstream in particular in terms of handling, transportation and distribution,” said Fatoumata Bâ, founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Janngo.

“Today, our farmers and local producers severely suffer from prohibitive transport costs which drives them in some cases to resort to sell off their crop at ridiculously low prices or even worse to see them rot on their stems.”

Jexport aims to solve this problem, enables SMEs and other economic players in Ivory Coast to trade globally, find the best prices regarding their transport needs, improve their operational efficiency, and manage their legal and compliance needs.

The post Ivorian startup studio Janngo launches import-export solution appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa How Joburg is carving out its own niche startup ecosystem

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If you think about the South African tech startup ecosystem, you would be forgiven for equating it with that of Cape Town.

A lot of this is down to excellent marketing, but Cape Town has been banking on startups for a while to shed its “weekend city” image, using its touristic appeal in its favour when it comes to attracting entrepreneurs, investors, and talent.

Its recent declaration that it has the most productive tech sector in Africa may need to be taken with a pinch of salt, but all the evidence does point to the city being the major hub for startups in South Africa – the flow of quality startups, the Bandwidth Barn, Silicon Cape, the huge numbers of accelerators and investors that call Cape Town home…

All of this has rather put Johannesburg, the business capital of South Africa – and perhaps even Africa as a whole – in the shade, but the city is gradually carving out a renowned tech startup ecosystem all of its own.

Fighting back

Even Johannesburg-based entrepreneurs admit the city has fallen behind Cape Town when it comes to being the heart of the South African tech scene. Shane Curran is co-founder of fintech startup InvestSure. He says Cape Town has a more entrepreneurial vibe, especially when it comes to tech.

“We struggled to hire a developer in Johannesburg due to a lot of the tech skills being based or wanting to be based in Cape Town,” he said.

“It seems that a lot more of the early stage, seed funding and Series A investors are based in Cape Town, so I guess proximity and awareness often go hand-in-hand in a business’s early stages, thus potentially giving a Cape Town startup a higher likelihood of being recognised and obtaining seed and Series A funding.”

Matthew Elan Smith, co-founder of another Johannesburg-based fintech startup, Pineapple, agrees.

“Johannesburg does have less of an entrepreneurial spirit compared to Cape Town. My belief is that this is due to Jozi having more of a corporate focused lifestyle and culture,” he said.

Yet trailing Cape Town in the startup stakes is not necessarily to Johannesburg’s discredit, and there are signs the city is staking a claim of its own. Abu Cassim, founder of angel investment group Jozi Angels, says the local tech startup scene is on a par with those in Lagos and Nairobi, and growing.

“Support for startups in the Johannesburg market is improving all the time, there’s never been a better time to be a startup here,” he said.

Smith echoes this view, saying the city is “hot on Cape Town’s heels”.

“There is also a large drive in Jozi to grow the space due to the corporate influence,” he said.

Corporate influence

This corporate influence could well be key to the space’s development, and attracting startups to launch in the city. The key example of an initiative linking startups and corporates is AlphaCode, but there are plenty of others, and Johannesburg may well be in the process of establishing itself as a fintech hub alongside its existing reputation as an economic one.

“From what we’ve seen and experienced there is a more active approach to corporate partnership in the startup scene in Jozi. This may, however, be due to startup’s who settle here having business models which are more B2B, partnership-focused, thus they choose Jozi,” said Smith.

Cassim says Johannesburg’s status as one of Africa’s economic powerhouses makes it a huge market for certain types of startups.

“If you’re a B2B business model you’ll eventually need to have some sort of presence in this market,” he said.

Llewellyn Morkel, chief executive officer (CEO) of real estate investment platform DreamBlock, goes so far as to say that Johannesburg is “the African entrepreneur’s Mecca”.

“At some point every growing business undertakes a trip to the financial hub of the continent to grow their business,” he said.

Aside from the well-known benefits of being near to corporates, Morkel cites more common startup hub pull factors as being ready and waiting in Johannesburg, including access to incubators, talent and funding, all of which are assumed to be more prevalent in Cape Town.

“The city offers an array of startup support services, some offered and funded by local government but most run completely independently by corporates and NGOs,” he said.

What next?

Johannesburg, then, is certainly growing as a tech startup ecosystem, but how much more needs to be done? Plenty, by the sounds of it. Curran believes there is a need for bigger incubators and accelerators in terms of the amount of funding provided, while Smith says the city’s startups need more large VCs to pay them attention.

There are other problems that run deeper, however. Salome Kgoale is marketing director of Johannesburg-based logistics startup Empty Trips. She highlights issues that are preventing the city from reaching its full potential.

“Firstly, issues of corporate bureaucracy and legacies inhibit startups from growing their product base and customers. Competitiveness is key and aggressive,” she said.

“Secondly, Johannesburg has a high number of graduates, yet these graduates are not employable in many cases, with limited practical expertise that are valued within a startup. Lastly, the pay-scale in Johannesburg is often unaffordable for startups to employ top talent, a key stumbling block.”

While being at the centre of an institutional and corporate hub comes with its own advantages, including information, expertise and access to resources, she said many Johannesburg corporates prefer to develop innovative and technological ideas internally, sometime pilfering young concepts, instead of partnering with agile startups.

“This hinders the ecosystem, because many startups cannot compete with their balance sheets, and often their credibility. The few corporates that recognise that many flagship startups build, deploy and implement technologies faster, cheaper and better than they ever could, are the type of companies we look to elevate,” she said.

There are increasing signs, however, that more and more corporates are recognising this, and it is these growing linkages between the corporate and startup worlds that could yet see Johannesburg carve out a sizeable niche for itself, especially in the fintech space.

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#Africa SA property startup HouseME secures latest funding round

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South African property startup HouseME has raised a multi-million rand funding round, its largest to date, with a leading national property development company being confirmed as the latest investor.

Formed in 2015 and available to the public by the end of 2016, HouseME is a digital platform that connects prospective tenants to landlords with full automation of the letting agency process, and fair and transparent rental pricing – all for a fraction of traditional fees.

The startup raised angel funding in August 2015 and September 2016, and a seed round in January 2017. In June of this year it announced a multi-million rand follow-on funding round from existing shareholders, and it has now raised an even larger amount to help it scale even faster, expand further into the market, and launch new products.

“’We are delighted to be backed by such experienced and strategic investors. HouseME has once again been afforded the opportunity to pursue its vision of happier homes for landlords and tenants alike,” said HouseME chief executive officer (CEO) and co-founder Ben Shaw.

“By enhancing our understanding of new product opportunities, and in particular leveraging the knowledge of top financial services players, we certainly anticipate announcing plenty of exciting new products and services in the new year.”The news of the latest investor comes off the back of HouseME announcing a deal with online classifieds Gumtree.

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#Africa Moroccan e-commerce startup WaystoCap expanding into West Africa

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Moroccan B2B e-commerce startup WaystoCap is busy expanding in the West African region having opened offices in Burkina Faso and Togo to add to its existing operations in Benin.

WaystoCap allows African businesses to buy and sell products, helping them to discover products, verify them, obtain financing and insurance, manage their shipments, and ensure payments security.

The startup was a participant in the Y Combinator accelerator and raised a funding round last year, beginning its expansion by opening a satellite office in Benin. That earned it a place in Disrupt Africa’s list of 12 Startups To Watch for 2018, and it has continued growing by opening two new West African offices in Burkina Faso and Togo.

It has also expanded its product offering in West Africa with WaystoCap Local, which helps buyers and sellers get closer to each other, and enables trust and ease. The platform offers even more flexibility to buyers and sellers, helping them deal in smaller amounts and pay in cash, and developing credit models to suit them.  

Nic Pantucci, head of product and co-founder of WaystoCap, told Disrupt Africa the new offices and the new product have been very successful and are growing quickly.

He said the logic of expanding into neighbouring countries was threefold.

“The Franc CFA region is well integrated from a logistics and economic perspective. We are able to easily work across the three markets,” Pantucci said.

“A number of customers had been asking for us to present in those markets too with WaystoCap Local,” he added.

The third is the ability to more deeply assist trade for customers.

“We are getting closer to our customers, so we can service them better with local payment options, and other security benefits,” said Pantucci.

The post Moroccan e-commerce startup WaystoCap expanding into West Africa appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa Senegal’s OniriQ provides solar-powered digital services to off-grid populations

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Senegalese startup OniriQ has combined the traditional Solar Home System (SHS) with a set-top box to provide off-grid African populations with access to solar-powered digital services.

Founded in December 2016, and a winner of an energy challenge at the recent AfricArena conference in Cape Town, OniriQ doubles up access to energy with access to the internet, and all that comes with it.

The startup claims to have invented the concept of Solar and Digital Home Systems (SDHS), a crossover between the traditional SHS and set-top boxes. The OniriQ SDHS come with a 50W solar panel, several LED lamps, a 24-inch TV set and an embedded connection to internet for domestic uses and for internet protocol television (IPTV).

“The competitive landscape for domestic off-grid energy is quite crowded in Africa, but the majority of companies are specialised on distribution. We observed that the top 10 companies specialising in hardware development focused on electrifying rural houses but neglected all the digital uses,” OniriQ chief executive officer (CEO) Rodolphe Rosier told Disrupt Africa.

“So we decided to develop an all-in-one product in partnership with an internet provider. We wanted to be able to provide digital contents as well as electricity. That led us to rethink SHS entirely from a connectivity perspective.”

The self-funded startup spent 18 months developing prototypes in several Senegalese villages, testing its system in real conditions and interviewing rural families. After securing key partnerships, it now deploys 200 products in the field and is planning to roll out 5,000 units in 2019.

“We are currently raising funding to accelerate our development in Senegal and to invest in manufacturing,” Rosier said. “If pilots are successful, 2019 should be a commercial deployment phase, with 5,000 units forecasted, and between 10,000 and 15,000 for 2020. We plan to expand in 2021 to two other countries in West Africa.”

OniriQ sells its SDHS to mobile network operators and energy companies, along with service contracts, in partnership with a pay-as-you-go platform. Final users pay their operator using mobile money.

“We have been in Senegal for two years by now and we will continue our development for the next two years in this country. Our strategy is to manufacture and recycle our products in Senegal, to develop some strong partnerships with our clients, and to deploy our service teams with reactivity,” said Rosier.

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#Africa Ghanaian agri-tech startup AgroCenta closes $650k seed round of funding

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Ghanaian agri-tech startup AgroCenta has closed a seed round of equity and non-equity funding worth US$650,000 in order to scale its operations.

Founded in 2015, AgroCenta is an online sales solution for smallholder farmers, with two offerings – supply chain platform AgroTrade, and financial inclusion service AgroPay.

The startup was crowned global winner of early-stage pitching competition Seedstars World back in April, and Seedstars is a participant in its seed round of funding, alongside other investors that include Switzerland-based company NP Consulting.

Disrupt Africa reported yesterday AgroCenta was one of six African startups awarded non-equity funding by the GSMA Ecosystem Accelerator. Though the startup’s co-founder and chief executive officer (CEO) Francis Obirikorang declined to disclose the breakdown of equity versus grant cash, Disrupt Africa can confirm that the GSMA input is worth around US$250,000.

Obirikorang said the funds will be used to scale up AgroCenta’s operations in Ghana, while the GSMA grant is more specifically geared towards the AgroPay platform, which provides any smallholder farmer who has traded using AgroTrade with a financial statement they can use to get access to finance.

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#Africa SA’s Karri thinking big with geographical and sector expansion

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South African startup Karri Payments is quickly broadening its horizons, expanding its offering to various organisations and launching in Australia, the United Kingdom (UK), United States (US) and Canada.

Founded in 2017 in partnership with Nedbank, Karri began with a pilot in four schools across the Western Cape, but is now in use across hundreds of schools across Africa.

The payments platform allows schools collecting funds for various things to message parents, who are able to quickly make payments via the app. It reconciles what payments have been received and sends reminders, and is fully supported by Nedbank.

Founder Doug Hoernle came up with the idea for the service while running his other business, ed-tech startup Rethink Education.

“After spending the past few years working with schools across South Africa, I came across an enormous opportunity to build a product which allows parents to pay schools conveniently and securely directly from a mobile wallet on their smartphone,” he told Disrupt Africa.

“At the time, my fiancé was a geography teacher and taught in a school in Cape Town. Each evening when she came home from a busy day of inspiring the minds of tomorrow’s leaders, she would sit up counting ZAR5 coins for the civvies day her school had just ran, or the ZAR100 notes for the geography trip that she was taking her class on. It was painful to watch, even more painful for her to count.”

To make matters worse, he said his friends were “constantly whining” about the ZAR10 that they needed to send to their child’s teacher for the class bake sale, saying they did not carry cash and ATM trips with children were a hassle.

“I knew there had to be a better, easier and safer way to make these payments back to schools, and get rid of the administration around these kind of collections for schools,” Hoernle said.

The solution was Karri, which was swiftly rolled out to schools across South Africa in order to help schools collect funds from their parents. It is also now expanding its offering to include other organisations, such as churches and sports clubs.

Hoernle says Karri is more than just a payments platform, however.

“Karri has a unique mobile wallet functionality that allows parents to load funds onto their Karri accounts. To date, over 40 per cent of parents using Karri store funds in their wallets each month, as they see it as a way to budget for the upcoming months school activities,” he said.

The startup, which has a team of 20 full-time employees, is now actively expanding into other markets. It already has small teams based in Dublin and Sydney, and is in the process of launching in Australia, the UK, US and Canada.

“We will also consider launching in other African countries through our relationship with Nedbank,” said Hoernle.

All this has been achieved without the need for external investment. Karri is funded by its own revenues – charging a small fee on funds collected through the platform.

“A typical school will collect a few million rands through the Karri app a year. If the school runs school fees through Karri, this can easily get into the hundreds of millions,” Hoernle said.

“We have no intention of raising traditional VC funding as Karri’s model was operationally profitable from day one. We have every intention of building Karri into a global fintech company that competes with the likes of AliPay and Naspers.”

The post SA’s Karri thinking big with geographical and sector expansion appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa SA’s Karri thinking big with geographical and sector expansion

//

South African startup Karri Payments is quickly broadening its horizons, expanding its offering to various organisations and launching in Australia, the United Kingdom (UK), United States (US) and Canada.

Founded in 2017 in partnership with Nedbank, Karri began with a pilot in four schools across the Western Cape, but is now in use across hundreds of schools across Africa.

The payments platform allows schools collecting funds for various things to message parents, who are able to quickly make payments via the app. It reconciles what payments have been received and sends reminders, and is fully supported by Nedbank.

Founder Doug Hoernle came up with the idea for the service while running his other business, ed-tech startup Rethink Education.

“After spending the past few years working with schools across South Africa, I came across an enormous opportunity to build a product which allows parents to pay schools conveniently and securely directly from a mobile wallet on their smartphone,” he told Disrupt Africa.

“At the time, my fiancé was a geography teacher and taught in a school in Cape Town. Each evening when she came home from a busy day of inspiring the minds of tomorrow’s leaders, she would sit up counting ZAR5 coins for the civvies day her school had just ran, or the ZAR100 notes for the geography trip that she was taking her class on. It was painful to watch, even more painful for her to count.”

To make matters worse, he said his friends were “constantly whining” about the ZAR10 that they needed to send to their child’s teacher for the class bake sale, saying they did not carry cash and ATM trips with children were a hassle.

“I knew there had to be a better, easier and safer way to make these payments back to schools, and get rid of the administration around these kind of collections for schools,” Hoernle said.

The solution was Karri, which was swiftly rolled out to schools across South Africa in order to help schools collect funds from their parents. It is also now expanding its offering to include other organisations, such as churches and sports clubs.

Hoernle says Karri is more than just a payments platform, however.

“Karri has a unique mobile wallet functionality that allows parents to load funds onto their Karri accounts. To date, over 40 per cent of parents using Karri store funds in their wallets each month, as they see it as a way to budget for the upcoming months school activities,” he said.

The startup, which has a team of 20 full-time employees, is now actively expanding into other markets. It already has small teams based in Dublin and Sydney, and is in the process of launching in Australia, the UK, US and Canada.

“We will also consider launching in other African countries through our relationship with Nedbank,” said Hoernle.

All this has been achieved without the need for external investment. Karri is funded by its own revenues – charging a small fee on funds collected through the platform.

“A typical school will collect a few million rands through the Karri app a year. If the school runs school fees through Karri, this can easily get into the hundreds of millions,” Hoernle said.

“We have no intention of raising traditional VC funding as Karri’s model was operationally profitable from day one. We have every intention of building Karri into a global fintech company that competes with the likes of AliPay and Naspers.”

The post SA’s Karri thinking big with geographical and sector expansion appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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