#Africa Kenya’s BitPesa raises funding from Japan’s Sompo Holdings

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Kenyan fintech startup BitPesa has secured an undisclosed amount of funding in return for a 10 per cent stake in its business from Japanese insurance group Sompo Holdings, which will use it to cut the cost and time associated with international transfers.

BitPesa, which raised two funding rounds last year to take its total secured investment to around the US$10 million mark, launched in Kenya in 2013, and has since expanded into a host of other African countries, including Ghana, Morocco, Nigeria, and Uganda.

The startup, which allows users to buy and sell digital currencies while also making international payments, also acquired Spain-based online money transfer platform TransferZero earlier this year in a bid to further accelerate its growth across the world.

Further funding has now arrived from the Japan-based Sompo, which said it will use BitPesa’s remittance business to help its customers make international transfers.

“Using Bitpesa’s technology, developed through various experiments in remittances and settlements, we will extend our presence in the international remittance service market and consider the application of this technology to the insurance field,” the company said.

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#Africa Egypt to host MENA’s first GEN entrepreneurship hub

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The Global Entrepreneurship Network (GEN) is launch its first entrepreneurship and innovation hub in the MENA region in Cairo, Egypt, hosting various spaces and initiatives to boost the local startup scene.

GEN is a platform of programmes and initiatives that help align a varied collection of players, programmes, and information to better support entrepreneurship. Its Cairo hub will be located on the 90-acre College Campus in Bloomfields in Mostakbal City.

GEN@Bloomfields, as the hub will be known, is expected to be operational by 2021 and will host several technology labs, “state-of-the-art” work stations, a co-working space, think tanks, a gym, lounges, boardrooms, training rooms, and an atrium which will be used for networking and events.

It will focus on bringing best-in-class programmes, communities and support from its network, operating in 170 nations, to Egypt’s next generation of entrepreneurs.

“Egyptians are building some of the most engaging, proactive and dedicated entrepreneurship communities around the world, that are working towards innovating for real impact for the nation’s benefit,” said GEN president Jonathan Ortmans.

“We could not be prouder to stand with our national affiliate, GEN Egypt, alongside Tatweer Misr and other partners in opening GEN@Bloomfields. We look forward to empowering entrepreneurs throughout Egypt and connecting them to the global ecosystem that will help them thrive.”

The campus will offer a 360-degree turn-key solution to start and scale – from the initial concept all the way to sustainable commercialisation. Participants will also have direct on-hand access to a global and diverse team of experienced entrepreneurs, mentors, scientists, managers, CEOs and funders to nurture and support them during every step of their journey.

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#Africa 16 startups shortlisted for Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation

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Sixteen companies from across the continent have been shortlisted for this year’s Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation, which offers total prize funding of GBP55,000 (US$71,000) to the most promising entrepreneurial engineers.

The Africa Prize, founded by the UK Royal Academy of Engineering, is dedicated to developing the entrepreneurial skills of engineers. Now in its fifth year, it provides a package of support, including funding, business training, mentoring and access to the academy’s network of engineers.

After seven months of mentoring and training, four finalists will be selected from the shortlist. In June 2019 these finalists will present their businesses to judges in front of a live audience in Kampala, Uganda, after which one winner will receive GBP25,000 (US$32,000), and three runners up will be awarded GBP10,000 (US$13,000) each.

Six of the shortlisted companies are from Kenya, namely e-health platform Chanjoplus, energy company Elo-cart, artisan platform JuaKaliSmart, water harvesting service Majik Water, sign language smart glove Sign-IO, and agri-tech solution Smart Brooder.

Another four are from Nigeria, in the form of industrial food dryer 3-D-3-P, currency exchange platform Kaoshi, e-health company WellNewMe, and ed-tech app Zenafri, while South Africa has two representatives – Pelebox Smart Lockers and the Hybrid five-axis machine tool.

Uganda is also represented by two companies, Smart Havens Africa and the Vertical Farm, with the list completed by Zambia’s Baby Delivery Kits and Burkina Faso’s SolarKoodo.

“The shortlist has come to represent the most talented engineers on the continent,” said judge Rebecca Enonchong. “Through the Africa Prize, we’ve seen cutting edge technologies and world-firsts develop into businesses that manufacture locally, and drive research and development on the continent. We can’t wait to meet the new group of engineering pioneers.”

The two most recent winners of the Africa Prize were Ugandan e-health startup Matibabu and Nigerian tutoring startup Tuteria.

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#Africa Ugandan micro-insurance startup winner of CATAPULT: Inclusion Africa

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Ugandan micro-insurance platform Mayicard has been named winner of the “Best Catapulter Award”, at the closing pitch event of the Luxembourg-based CATAPULT: Inclusion Africa business development programme.

Hosted by the Luxembourg House of Fintech (LHoFT) Foundation, CATAPULT: Inclusion Africa is a one week programme of fintech startup development, targeting companies focused on financial inclusion in Africa, and keen to build bridges between Africa and Europe.

Disrupt Africa reported recently 14 startups were selected to join the programme – although only 11 took up their places -, with nine of these companies hailing from Africa.

The programme culminated in a live pitching event, with the jury selecting Ugandan company Four One Financial Services – the creators of the Mayicard platform – as winner of the “Best Catapulter Award” – receiving EUR5,000 (US$5,700) and entry to the 2019 African Microfinance Week.

The Mayicard platform offers micro-healthcare insurance, as well as prepayments for assets like land and housing.  Four One Financial Services Limited also operates what it claims is Uganda’s first micro-pension scheme.

“When you realise that your failure might mean someone living in poverty, perhaps for the rest of their lives, you have no choice but to succeed,” said Livingstone Mukasa, founder of Four One Financial Services.

Nasir Zubairi, chief executive officer (CEO) of the LHoFT Foundation said: “The programme exceeded the objectives we had and, most importantly the participants’ feedback confirmed that we had succeeded in adding real value. We believe we have helped to ensure these businesses are better placed to scale and deliver real impact in relation to financial inclusion”

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#Africa Nigerian e-health startup SonoCare raises $250k from Gray Matters Capital

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Nigerian female health startup SonoCare has raised US$250,000 in funding from Gray Matters Capital to scale its operations by developing a mobile app and deploying more mobile units for catering to 200,000 pregnancies by 2020.

Founded in 2015, SonoCare provides services spanning the spectrum of women’s health such as on-demand mobile 3D/4D diagnostic imaging and cardiac monitoring.

It was the first company in Nigeria to deploy a web and mobile resource for patient information transmission and interdisciplinary collaboration. Offering both fixed site and mobile solutions, SonoCare provides cost efficient programmes scaled to the needs of hospitals, satellite clinics and healthcare providers using a combination of the most advanced imaging systems and highly trained, registered technologists as sonographers.

It currently operates its services across four Nigerian states, and has now secured US$250,000 in funding for further expansion from Gray Matters Capital through GMC coLABS, an early-stage investment portfolio that invests in innovative enterprises with the potential to dramatically improve the lives of women and girls around the world.

SonoCare becomes the second African e-health startup in the coLABS portfolio after its invested in Ghanaian startup Redbird earlier this year, and its third African investee in total after its backing for Rwanda’s A.R.E.D in 2017.

“We are excited to partner with GMC coLABS as our first institutional investor, as we both share the vision and passion to positively impact the lives of women. With this investment, we will be able to scale our operations through our mobile app in addition to deploying more mobile units. This will push us to reach our first 200,000 pregnancies by 2020 and to profitability,” said Dr Moses Owoicho Enokela, managing director of SonoCare.

SonoCare has so far screened over 26,000 women from 17 rural communities and detected over 15,000 high-risk pregnancies.

“With its mobile diagnostic services, SonoCare detects pregnancy complications before they become threats to the lives of women, giving those in low resource areas a better chance for safer pregnancies and deliveries,” said Jennifer Soltis, portfolio manager for coLABS at Gray Matters Capital.

“We are proud to support the work of Dr Moses, a determined and resilient entrepreneur who has brought to market a solution to a problem that most lack the grit to attempt to solve at scale. We’ve been very impressed with what he’s accomplished with modest resources and can’t wait to see what the future holds for him.”

GMC coLABS continues to accept applications from innovative and scalable for-profit, early-stage companies that improve the lives of women and girls with their products and services.

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#Africa Why route to market is key ingredient to African startup success

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Securing route to market is the key ingredient to building successful tech startups in Africa, and corporate partnerships are one of the primary ways of doing this.

That is according to Zachariah George, co-founder and chief investment officer of Startupbootcamp AfriTech, who was speaking at last week’s startup-dedicated AHUB event at the AfricaCom conference in Cape Town.

He said startups were often too focused on securing funding, whereas building a customer base was the most important thing.

“The key question is how you secure your route to market. It is not about how much money you raise. Money will follow if you get customers,” George said.

“The reality is that people do not understand how to scale in Africa. You can’t just spend money to acquire customers here. It doesn’t work.”

The businesses that work best are businesses that are B2B and B2B2C, he said.

“The moment you convert B2B models into B2B2C models you have a much better chance of succeeding,” said George.

“We have had a lot of exits, but almost none of them are direct to consumer business models. The companies that have exited are B2B, or B2B2C. You have to be smart, you have to understand what your route to market is. You’ve got to look beyond what is sexy and appealing to the eye, and understand it is not just about a cool app. You need to look at what is appealing to a big company, a big bank, or a big telco.”

These corporates can play key roles in helping tech startups build their customer bases. Startupbootcamp is a corporate-backed accelerator that facilitates partnerships between big companies and startups, with George saying such deals can prove pivotal to growing a small business.

“There’s no point in spraying and praying. I would rather have 10 companies in my portfolio with corporate deals than 1,000 without any deals,” he said.

To work with corporates, however, startups need to figure out where the bottlenecks are, and understand how banks and other corporates work.

“Tech is disrupting the way large organisations work every day. Fintechs are the big competitors to banks. They understand how to fail fast. Corporates need you more than you need them but you need to understand how to solve a pain point. If you want to work with large corporates, you need to think like a corporate. You have to be able to understand how to use large institutions to your advantage. That’s the only way you can scale,” George said.

“The best way to build stuff is to use other people’s networks. It is the sharing economy. The biggest companies use other people’s networks – Uber, Airbnb, Spotify. Spotify got millions of users overnight when they signed a deal with Uber, and Uber got lots of new users. These are two big tech giants, but apply that logic too your startup. Understand how you can build your service if you partner with other companies. How can you leverage off a corporate’s, or another startup’s, networks? People say they want to raise money but they are not being smart.”

There has been a move towards bigger firms buying African tech startups, such as Standard Bank acquiring SnapScan in South Africa, but George said such acquisitions rarely worked well and that corporates should partner with, rather than acquire, startups.

“As soon as a corporate feels threatened by a startup, they buy it. It’s stupid. When you feel threatened, you make knee jerk reactions,” he said.

“Corporates do not understand how to run startups. But what they are good at is distribution. You as a tech startup need to understand what corporates have and make it work for you.”

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#Africa Cisco launches $700k incubation hub in Pretoria

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Leading global IT firm Cisco has launched a ZAR10 million (US$700,000) incubation hub in the South African capital Pretoria to help develop small and medium sized businesses and speed up their market entry.

The Cisco Edge Incubation Centre offers small businesses access to Cisco technology as well as a variety of training and enablement programmes. It offers work space, internet connectivity and boardroom facilities.

Companies based out of the centre will have the opportunity to connect with Cisco teams to develop business ideas. The centre will be run in conjunction with the Innovation Hub in Pretoria and the State Information Technology Agency (SITA).

At least 30 small businesses will be trained annually and given the necessary skills to enable them to compete in the market. In the coming months, Cisco plans to establish similar centres in Gauteng (Tshimologong), Eastern Cape (East London Industrial Development Zone) and KwaZulu-Natal (Dube Trade Port).

“The hub is designed to impart business knowledge and technology skills along with collaborative opportunities. Our goal is to help prepare SMMEs for the digital economy and ultimately lead to job creation,” said Cisco’s general manager for Sub-Saharan Africa Clayton Naidoo.

“As a global company, we want to enable SMMEs to have access to our resources no matter where these resources sit in the world.”

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#Africa Online sports community wins GreenHouse Lab Demo Day

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Online sports community AMPZ.tv has been named winner of Nigeria’s female founder-focused GreenHouse Lab accelerator, receiving a NGN2 million (US$5,500) cash prize.

Disrupt Africa reported in July Nigerian investment fund GreenHouse Capital, launched by VC firm Venture Garden Group last year, had set up GreenHouse Lab, an accelerator programme focused on building world class, women-led technology companies.

Nine startups with female founders were selected to form the first cohort of the accelerator; with the three-month programme aiming to equip the founders with the skills, resources and support needed to rapidly grow and scale their companies in emerging African markets.

The accelerator culminated in a Demo Day held in Lagos over the weekend, at which the five remaining participants to complete the accelerator pitched their businesses.

AMPZ.tv was selected winner, for its platform connecting young sports people with opportunities, events and scouts.The startup received a NGN2 million (US$5,500) cash prize.

One of the startups from the cohort will receive at least US$100,000 equity funding from GreenHouse Capital – although the recipient has yet to be selected.

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#Africa Kenya’s FreshBox pioneers solar-powered refrigeration in East Africa

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Kenyan startup FreshBox is introducing sustainable refrigeration to East African produce markets with its solar-powered, walk-in cold rooms.

If it all sounds quite familiar, it is because you read about Nigerian equivalent ColdHubs on Disrupt Africa last month. But FreshBox is carving out its own niche on the other side of the continent.

Its flagship unit is a solar-powered, walk-in cold room that can hold over 2100kg of fruits and vegetables, and can reach temperatures below freezing point.

“By increasing the longevity of a fruit or vegetable’s selling period by up to 950 per cent, our cold storage system can provide more consistent revenues to the retailers in produce markets and provide more consistent availability of nutritious produce,” co-founder Thomas Schmedding told Disrupt Africa.

FreshBox came about after its chief executive officer (CEO) John Mbindyo noticed while buying produce at a local market that vendors were forced to restock their supply regularly due to excess produce spoiling after two or three days. By expanding upon proven cold storage technology, he designed a way to provide cold storage for retailers in markets at an affordable rate.

“We put our idea to the test with a pilot project in a Nairobi fruits and vegetables market. To assess the demand for a large-scale cooling unit in similar markets across Kenya, we first purchased a used household refrigerator. After we installed the refrigerator in the market, the unit was fully booked within a day. Over the course of the next three months, the pilot refrigerator achieved a 100 per cent utilisation rate,” Schmedding said.

Backed with a successful pilot and proof of concept, the FreshBox sold its refrigerator and turned its attention to developing and manufacturing a larger, industrial-sized prototype.

“We designed a simple and efficient model that would self-regulate temperature, thus limiting the demand for electricity. Designed to be sourced and manufactured locally, the unit has the additional capacity to run on solar power, significantly increasing opportunities for penetration into rural markets,” said Schmedding.

The gap in the market targeted by FreshBox is post-harvest refrigeration, which can be particularly difficult to navigate for the average market vendor in Kenya. Typically, solutions are either to purchase a large refrigeration unit from a commercial refrigeration company, an expensive purchase that could cost US$10,000 or more, or to sell to a large supermarket wholesaler and accept much lower prices for refrigeration.

“By maintaining ownership at the individual level throughout the value chain, we can reduce corporate margins and provide more money to retailers who typically come from bottom-of-the-pyramid backgrounds,” Schmedding said.

The startup has received grant funding from the Tony Elumelu Foundation and the Global LEAP Off-Grid Cold Chain Challenge to to help jumpstart its operations, and seen positive initial uptake. So far, around 30 customers have use its flagship unit, with each of these typically taking two or three crates worth of space.

“Roughly 30 per cent of our returning customers use the unit every day, while the remainder uses it on an as-needed basis,” said Schmedding.

“Our revenues are seasonal as the perceived need for refrigeration increases in warmer months – between January and May. In these months, we’ve seen significant uptake as produce spoils rapidly.”

FreshBox’s most likely customers are retailers between the ages of 25 and 35 selling high-value produce like berries, kiwis, and mushrooms. Schmedding said this segmentation at the retail level targeted young adults who have experienced refrigeration and readily understand the economic impact of cooling services.

“We have had some trouble reaching older population segments who aren’t as familiar with the benefits of refrigeration,” he said.

“We’ve noticed significant ROIs for some of our customers though. For example, one of our best customers now has earned an extra US$500 in revenue for mushrooms that would’ve spoiled without us over the past six months.”

Urban settings define the startup’s revenue stream – FreshBox charges on a subscription basis – at this point, but Schmedding said the food value chain is long and lack of cold storage was not unique to urban settings.

“Targeting peri-urban aggregators, transporters, and farmers for post-harvest loss are all planned revenue streams. We also plan to eventually provide refrigeration and cold storage services in the fish, dairy, meat, and flower industries,” he said.

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#Africa 12 SA scale-ups chosen for 4th Grindstone Accelerator

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VC firm Knife Capital has announced the 12 South African scale-ups chosen to take part in its fourth Grindstone Accelerator programme, which helps businesses become more investable, sustainable and exit-ready.

Launched by Knife Capital in 2013, Grindstone engineers growth for South African innovation-driven entrepreneurs, with previous cohorts including the likes of ticketing solutions provider Quicket, augmented reality animation and gaming company SeaMonster, and transport data company WhereIsMyTransport.

Twelve businesses have been selected to take part in the fourth cohort, with Knife Capital taking them through an intensive review of their strategies to provide them with the insights and tools to build a foundation for growth.

The selected scale-ups include NFC-enabled cashless payments platform Allxs, warehousing management service Cradle Technology Services, insurtech startup Ctrl, AI-based recruitment platform Digger App, business assessment and due diligence tool Kudos Africa, and online personal shopping assistant OneCart.

Multi-brand sports group Old School Group, smart security platform Sentian, staff performance and incentive management platform Sparkfolios, data solutions company Suritec, P2P storage marketplace Sxuirrel, and AI-based lending service Vizibiliti Insight complete the list.

“Each one of these companies is at a tipping point, with many strategic options to pursue. During Grindstone the entrepreneurs are given the opportunity to validate their growth assumptions and check these against the company’s ability to execute,” said Andrea Bӧhmert, Knife Capital investment partner.

Over the last three intakes, the interventions of the year-long programme resulted in the participating companies experiencing an average of 56 per cent year-on-year increase in revenue while mastering business fundamentals.

“Grindstone is about measurable growth, about building a foundation that can handle both challenges and opportunities. It is about being prepared, as interesting things happen to companies that are ready and able to act on short notice,” Bӧhmert said.

Grindstone collaborates with other incubator and accelerator programmes to augment the learning experience and continue the growth journey, drawing on various speakers, mentors and corporates to assist in supporting these high-growth SMEs. This year it is partnering with the likes of FNB, Webber Wentzel, Creative CFO, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft 4Afrika.

Knife Capital said it is also currently in partnership discussions to launch a Johannesburg-based Grindstone programme in 2019.

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