#Africa Goodwell invests $2m in Kenyan e-commerce platform Copia

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Impact investing firm Goodwell Investments has invested US$2 million into Kenyan e-commerce venture Copia, which specialises in supplying products and services to underserved consumers in rural Kenya.

Launched in 2013, Copia combines technology and local agents to offer a broad product offering and efficient, reliable delivery to “base of the pyramid” consumers.

The service enables rural households to access goods that would otherwise be difficult to obtain without travelling to a major city. Pre-paid orders take on average only two to three days to be fulfilled.

Goodwell acquired an undisclosed stake in the company for US$2 million through its uMunthu fund, which invests up to 50 per cent of its funds in inclusive businesses operating in sectors other than financial inclusion. The uMunthu fund targets companies providing services that matter to low income households, either because they spend much of their income or time in these sectors, or because these offer the best opportunities to improve livelihoods.

With Copia’s service currently covering around 28 per cent of Kenya, Goodwell said there is room for strong growth both within the country, and down the line in several emerging markets in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Asia.

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#Africa Cape Town’s Future Females launches 5-day startup launch programme

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Future Females, a Cape Town-based initiative dedicated to empowering female entrepreneurs, has launched its “5 Days to Start” programme, which will help 2,000 people turn their ideas into real businesses.

Disrupt Africa reported last year on the launch of the Future Females Business School, a three-month virtual incubator supporting 50 female entrepreneurs in transforming their ideas into proven, profitable businesses.

The initiative is now scaling its impact with the launch of the free ‘5 Days to Start challenge, to support 2,000 entrepreneurs in taking five active steps towards turning their ideas into a real business.

The challenge will take place online, with a video tutorial released each day, accompanied by a workbook for members to put their new knowledge to use and finally get started on bringing their ideas to life. Members will also have access to a private Facebook Group, where they can share their progress and keep up to date with what the other members are doing.

“Our 5 Days to Start challenge will support these entrepreneurs to overcome their internal mindset hurdles and take action to launch their business, with the support of the Future Females team and global community,” said co-founder Lauren Dallas.

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#Africa This Nigerian startup uses analytics to monitor student performance

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Nigerian ed-tech startup Insight Africa is using its Studylab product to allow teachers and schools to monitor the progress of their students across each subject, while providing video tutorials to help fill gaps.

Studylab is a continuous assessment, feedback, and analytics system for schools, who can sign up on a per-student subscription basis for the platform, which works both online and offline.

Students work on questions provided on Studylab, with the system collecting data on their work and providing visualised reports on the progress of each student across each topic.

“This can allow a teacher, a parent or the student herself to understand areas she is great at, and areas she needs more practice and help to improve. Think business intelligence for education,” co-founder Habeeb Kolade told Disrupt Africa.

“Through this, teachers can be precise in how they help students, and be more judicious with their time, while students get the right attention in the right areas.”

Schools have improved mathematics scores by up to 40 per cent using Studylab, which was launched in its current format in 2017. Kolade said it has been built to assist teachers in adequately helping all students in their care within their limited time.

“Teachers usually have to cater for 30-90 students in a school. What Studylab does is enable teachers to understand areas of strengths and weakness of students, thus enabling them to provide attention to each student in a more precise manner. Thus, we make the work of the teacher more efficient while ensuring no child is left behind in the classroom,” he said.

The self-funded startup has won a host of prizes, including the Etisalat Innovation Prize, and is seeing slow but steady uptake of its product. It is close to releasing version two of its product, for which it has more than 70 schools on a waiting list.

“Schools who already use Studylab have had nothing but great feedback for us, while schools who are just getting to understand the impact of analytics as a tool for precision education towards academic excellence have required a little more patience from us to convert,” said Kolade.

“We understand how this can be and are improving our adoption process to enable us to onboard both schools who embrace new technologies faster and schools who need a bit more time on the learning curve. We are also employing partnerships to help us reach more schools faster.”

Insight Africa is focusing on the Nigerian market for now.

“Our current expansion plan includes taking most of the Nigerian market by expanding across and beyond the states that use our solution. So far, we are represented in about four states. West Africa will be the next stop after this,” Kolade said.

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#Africa Africa Startup Summit announces Queen’s Young Leaders Programme as Gold Sponsor

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The Queen’s Young Leaders Programme has been announced as Gold Sponsor of next month’s Africa Startup Summit, set to facilitate a host of pitching and acceleration opportunities at the flagship event in Kigali, Rwanda.

The inaugural Africa Startup Summit takes place at the Kigali Convention Centre on February 14-15, via a partnership between tech startup ecosystem news and research platform, Disrupt Africa, and the continent’s leading tech conference, Africa Tech Summit Kigali.

Showcasing Africa’s vibrant startup ecosystem and bringing together stakeholders from across the continent to explore the opportunities and challenges within the ecosystem, the Summit is one of three running concurrently, which will involve around 100 speakers and over 400 attendees.

The Queen’s Young Leaders Programme has now been confirmed as Gold Sponsor of the Summit. Launched in 2014, the Programme discovers, celebrates and supports exceptional young people from across the Commonwealth via its Queen’s Young Leaders Awards and grant funding.

The partnership between the Queen’s Young Leaders Programme and Africa Startup Summit will see the levels of support and opportunities offered to startups attending the event multiplied; both for startups that are part of the Queen’s Young Leaders Programme and those attending the event.

It will power a condensed startup accelerator programme for any interested startup on day two of the event, to be run by the Zambia-based tech and innovation hub BongoHive.

BongoHive is Zambia’s first technology and innovation hub, that aims to improve access to local technology and the startup industry. With a grant from the Queen’s Young Leaders programme, BongoHive has been able to support more than 470 startups in Zambia.

At the Summit, BongoHive will condense its “Discover” and “Launch” startup support programmes into a powerful four-hour workshop, which will provide entrepreneurs with practical advice on how they can build and grow a startup in Africa.

A selection of entrepreneurs supported by the Queen’s Young Leaders Programme will also have the chance to pitch on stage at the Africa Startup Summit, in front of investors, corporates, policymakers and media. This session, which will provide these exciting young businesses with valuable exposure and aims to facilitate funding and partnership opportunities, will run in addition to the Pitch Live event, which will see a further 10 innovative African tech startups pitch at the event.

“The Africa Tech Summit is set to once again provide insight, networking and business opportunities tech leaders in Africa and across the world. The Queen’s Young Leaders are remarkable individuals who are at the forefront of innovating through technology to improve the lives of people across Africa. We are delighted that the Africa Startup Summit will provide them with a unique opportunity to share their inspiring stories and build new partnerships,” said Dr Astrid Bonfield CBE, chief executive of the Queen Elizabeth Diamond Jubilee Trust, which set up the Queen’s Young Leaders Programme in partnership with Comic Relief, the Royal Commonwealth Society and the University of Cambridge’s Institute for Continuing Education in 2015.

“The goal of the Africa Startup Summit is to play a proactive role in connecting innovative young founders with potential investors, partners and customers, as well as the knowledge and networks for growing their businesses. This partnership with the Queen’s Young Leaders Programme will go a long way to fulfilling that aim, and we are delighted to welcome them on board. We are also excited about the value being provided to other startups attending the event through the BongoHive workshop,” said Gabriella Mulligan, Disrupt Africa co-founder.

To learn more about the Africa Startup Summit, please visit https://www.africatechsummit.com/kigali/africa-startup-summit/. If you are interested in attending, you can get a 10% discount on the ticket price here.

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#Africa Black-owned Cape Town SMEs invited to apply for growth programme

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The Innovator Trust, an enterprise development organisation, and the Cape Innovation and Technology Initiative (CiTi) have invited Cape Town-based growth-stage ICT entrepreneurs to join an intensive two-year enterprise development programme.

The Innovator Trust programme, co-developed and run by CiTi at the Woodstock Bandwidth Barn and remotely in Cape Town, aims to help businesses increase annual turnover and profitability, and gain the necessary accreditation to remove red tape.

It features monthly training, mentorship sessions with industry experts, and a strong focus on technical improvements, and is open to South African businesses that are at least 51 per cent black-owned and have been in operation for more than two years.

“Once the entrepreneurs who take part in our enterprise development programmes become more established, they turn their focus to growth. This accelerator is especially for entrepreneurs who’ve created businesses with high-growth potential and provides them with the skills to scale at speed and responsibly,” said Tashline Jooste, chief executive officer (CEO) of the Innovator Trust.Interested parties can apply here by February 22. Selected candidates will be announced on March 4.

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#Africa Kenyan AI startup SuperFluid Labs raises funding from GreenTec

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Kenyan startup SuperFluid Labs, a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) provider of data analytics and artificial intelligence (AI) solutions, has secured funding from the Germany-based GreenTec Capital to expand its product offering.

Founded in 2015, SuperFluid has developed a comprehensive data analytics platform that can assess credit scores and provide business intelligence more effectively through big data and AI.

The platform mines customer transactional data to automatically reveal customer behaviours and trends, such as credit risk and defaults, as well as helping institutions to enhance engagement, reduce churn risk, and increase overall profitability.

SuperFluid has already established a successful consulting business providing its analytics services to microfinance institutions (MFIs) such as responsAbility and traditional banks like Ghana’s Fidelity Bank and Kenya’s NIC Bank.

With the help of the funding from GreenTec Capital it plans to expand its offerings to the e-commerce space, helping businesses to offer their own credit services to qualified customers.

“Capturing transactional data from multiple sources will further allow SuperFluid to develop robust market-focused credit scoring models. This will provide the company with a competitive advantage over international agencies which do not have models customised for African markets and over Africa-based scoring companies that are limited by their regional presence,” GreenTec said.

“Through providing bespoke analytics to banks, e-commerce platforms, and MFIs the company plans to offer a pan-African credit scoring solution to help expand financial inclusion to millions of Africans as well as empower African businesses to harness the power of big data to improve their business decisions.”

GreenTec has been an active backer of African tech startups of late, also investing in Nigerian logistics startup Parcel-it, Kenyan insurtech platform Bismart, Namibian CPU producer PEBL, and Kenyan recruitment platform Netwookie.

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#Africa Applications open for $25k Baobab Network accelerator

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Applications have opened for the Baobab Network’s 2019 accelerator, which offers selected startups the chance to receive US$25,000 in funding and a platform for scaling.

Since launching in 2016, the Baobab Network has worked with 27 startups from Ghana, Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Zambia and South Africa.

It creates a tailor-made accelerator programme for each company, starting with a week of consulting from global business and industry experts, before each startup is assigned a dedicated Baobab Venture Partner for 24 months to help speed its growth and get it market and investor ready.

Every successful applicant receives US$25,000 in funding and access to an investor network of over 100 venture capital and impact funds, while a network of global partners are on hand to offer their assistance and explore early commercial partnerships, such as Amazon, Accenture, L’Oréal, Unilever and Johnson & Johnson.

“The goal of our new look accelerator is to raise follow on funding for every startup within 18 months, leveraging the Baobab Network’s global community of VCs, angels and corporates,” said Rich Sears, head of ventures at the Baobab Network.
Applications for the accelerator are open now, with startups to be accepted on a rolling basis. The first programme of the year kicks off in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on January 28.

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#Africa Cape Town’s LÜLA helps corporate commuters save time and money

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In an African mobility space that is getting more crowded and attracting serious investor interest, Cape Town-based startup LÜLA has carved out a niche for itself with its app that connects corporate commuters to private shuttles on their way to work.

LÜLA aims to save commuters time and money, and allows them to request, track and pay for rides. It provides its solutions to individuals as well as corporates themselves, who want to shuttle their staff to work and back on a scheduled basis. Cape Town corporates using its shuttle service for employees include Aurecon, V&A Waterfront, RCS and Old Mutual.

The startup began life as a side project in 2014 when co-founders Velani Mboweni and Xabiso Nodada were students at the University of Cape Town, becoming a legal entity in 2016 with the goal of making transport accessible, convenient and safe for people in emerging markets by using big data, mobile ticketing and shared infrastructure.

“Underpinning this mission was the idea that without access to transport, you can’t access economic opportunities, without which, you can’t solve poverty and social injustice,” Mboweni told Disrupt Africa.

While taking part in the Startupbootcamp AfriTech accelerator in Cape Town in the second half of last year, LÜLA settled on its current model of connecting corporate commuters with private shuttles, to save them money and free up time. Essentially, it is an alternative to the likes of Uber and Taxify.

“We realised there was a gap in the market to provide a service that was cheaper than driving and taking e-hailing services on a daily basis, which is significantly expensive, as well as one that is more reliable, safer and convenient than public transport,” Mboweni said.

“Moreover, we knew that to do something like this at scale it would rely on private stakeholders making choices at a price point where the value proposition outweighed the alternatives.”

Uptake of LÜLA has been “overwhelming” in ways both good and bad.

“We did not think we’d see such a high demand for our service so soon, especially from individuals, let alone companies,” Mboweni said.

He pays tribute to the team at Startupbootcamp AfriTech for helping the startup reach the next level.

“It’s wonderful to be in a meeting with a client pitching our solution, and before you’re even done they start selling it for you to their colleagues and seeing what is really possible. It gets tricky when the client wants to tackle a lot of use cases which are out of our core focus, but nonetheless most of them have been gracious enough to give it a shot and patient enough to try another use case,” said Mboweni.

LÜLA also raised small amount of funding from Startupbootcamp, to go with a seed round it raised in July, and is in the process of taking on board more investment to assist its growth. It is planning pilots in Johannesburg this year.

“We would like to explore our solution in other developing world markets. However within the next 12 months we’ll be working exclusively on Cape Town and Johannesburg to prove scalability,” Mboweni said.

The startup makes money through single trips and subscriptions, whereby users purchase weekly and monthly passes for trips, and also charges operators a commission on trips taken.

“In terms of revenue and profit, most of the trips we’ve done so far have been profitable, but the business is yet to break even. Revenues have seen about 200 per cent month-on-month growth since the pivot,” said Mboweni.

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#Africa Cape Town’s LÜLA helps corporate commuters save time and money

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In an African mobility space that is getting more crowded and attracting serious investor interest, Cape Town-based startup LÜLA has carved out a niche for itself with its app that connects corporate commuters to private shuttles on their way to work.

LÜLA aims to save commuters time and money, and allows them to request, track and pay for rides. It provides its solutions to individuals as well as corporates themselves, who want to shuttle their staff to work and back on a scheduled basis. Cape Town corporates using its shuttle service for employees include Aurecon, V&A Waterfront, RCS and Old Mutual.

The startup began life as a side project in 2014 when co-founders Velani Mboweni and Xabiso Nodada were students at the University of Cape Town, becoming a legal entity in 2016 with the goal of making transport accessible, convenient and safe for people in emerging markets by using big data, mobile ticketing and shared infrastructure.

“Underpinning this mission was the idea that without access to transport, you can’t access economic opportunities, without which, you can’t solve poverty and social injustice,” Mboweni told Disrupt Africa.

While taking part in the Startupbootcamp AfriTech accelerator in Cape Town in the second half of last year, LÜLA settled on its current model of connecting corporate commuters with private shuttles, to save them money and free up time. Essentially, it is an alternative to the likes of Uber and Taxify.

“We realised there was a gap in the market to provide a service that was cheaper than driving and taking e-hailing services on a daily basis, which is significantly expensive, as well as one that is more reliable, safer and convenient than public transport,” Mboweni said.

“Moreover, we knew that to do something like this at scale it would rely on private stakeholders making choices at a price point where the value proposition outweighed the alternatives.”

Uptake of LÜLA has been “overwhelming” in ways both good and bad.

“We did not think we’d see such a high demand for our service so soon, especially from individuals, let alone companies,” Mboweni said.

He pays tribute to the team at Startupbootcamp AfriTech for helping the startup reach the next level.

“It’s wonderful to be in a meeting with a client pitching our solution, and before you’re even done they start selling it for you to their colleagues and seeing what is really possible. It gets tricky when the client wants to tackle a lot of use cases which are out of our core focus, but nonetheless most of them have been gracious enough to give it a shot and patient enough to try another use case,” said Mboweni.

LÜLA also raised small amount of funding from Startupbootcamp, to go with a seed round it raised in July, and is in the process of taking on board more investment to assist its growth. It is planning pilots in Johannesburg this year.

“We would like to explore our solution in other developing world markets. However within the next 12 months we’ll be working exclusively on Cape Town and Johannesburg to prove scalability,” Mboweni said.

The startup makes money through single trips and subscriptions, whereby users purchase weekly and monthly passes for trips, and also charges operators a commission on trips taken.

“In terms of revenue and profit, most of the trips we’ve done so far have been profitable, but the business is yet to break even. Revenues have seen about 200 per cent month-on-month growth since the pivot,” said Mboweni.

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#Africa The hows, whens and whys of scaling your African tech startup

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Spend more than a minute or two in any co-working space, at any ecosystem event, and  you will hear mention of the pivotal word – “scaling”.

Some startups, especially those serving lower income segments, have to do it. Many raise millions of dollars funding in order to do it. Some fail trying to do it. Either way, doing it or not, it is a key part of any startup-focused discussion.

Scaling is also fraught with hazards. Though it is easy to assume that every African startup should wish to expand into new markets, there are good reasons why it is not the right path for every business.

Not “when”, but “if”

Bernard Wright is the founder of Ugandan startup Geo Gecko, which uses tools such as Geographic Information Systems (GIS), satellite imagery, drones and cloud computing to provide evidence and insight in data-starved environments, and has acquired customers all over the world.

He says scaling a startup is not a question of “when”, but “if”.

“Scaling up should be a means to an end, rather than an end in itself. There are plenty of businesses that can’t be scaled up, like many consulting services,” Wright said.

Geo Gecko scaled slowly, with Wright saying the team wanted to see a variety of things come into play before it thought about expanding outside of its home market.

“Firstly, we see a demand in the market that is not being met. Secondly, we have developed information products that we can produce at scale to meet that demand. Thirdly, we have the internal systems, and the processes, like a salary scale, to manage that scale without losing track or compromising on company principles. Finally, we want to be first to the market with our flagship products,” he said.

Secure your home market first

Marcello Schermer heads up expansion at South African fintech startup Yoco, which raised a US$16 million Series B round last year to move into new markets and verticals. He said startups should only expand into other countries when they have a good enough grip on their home market.

“You need to make sure that your team, processes and distribution in your home market are solid enough so that you can focus on a new market while growing your home market,” he said.

This view is echoed by Schalk Nolte, chief executive officer (CEO) of South African security startup Entersekt, which has seen great success overseas. Before startups move abroad, it is key to ensure they “dominate” their home market.

“To get that right, it’s ideal that your organisation is mature enough in terms of people, product and operations to free up your best people. If founders are still part of the business, it’s preferable to involve them as they have the experience to figure out how a market works and getting it off the ground, whilst not affecting your home market,” he said.

“Having two startups to look after, by entering a new market while you are not ready, can add tremendous strain on your organisation and yourselves as founders, so avoid it if you can.”

Too early vs too late

Timing is key, and founders must get it right if they are to avoid attempting to scale too early, or even too late. Both are possible, and it is hard to find the sweet spot, said Wright.

“Too early and you risk going to market with a product that is not ready and tipping off better-funded competitors to your concept. If you need to bring in investment to scale up, you risk undervaluing your product; a potential product is valued lower than a developed one with sales,” he said.

“Too late and you’ll lose out on potential sales or someone else may make it to market first.”

The history books are littered with examples of startups that got their timing wrong, according to Marcus Swanepoel, co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange Luno, which is active in various markets across Africa, Europe and Southeast Asia.

“Too early is quite common in the US as people raise too much money before they have proper product-market fit, but often in emerging markets startups can’t raise a lot of money in the early stages so it’s less likely they scale too fast. They will often suffer from the opposite – scaling too late or too slow. Because it might take more time to raise money, they might not have access to the expertise to help scale. What essentially happens then is that competitors that can scale faster beat them before they’ve even had a chance to play,” he said.

How to choose new markets

If a startup decides it is ready to scale, and thinks it has got the timing right, then it has to decide where to scale to. Schermer said the right destination will depend on the type of business.

“You need to have a deep understanding around what market conditions drive your business and look for markets that show those market conditions. Especially in Africa, that research needs to be done on the ground as it’s the only way to really understand a market,” he said.

For Wright, new markets are chosen based on demand, but he said startups must be aware of the challenges that emerge around scaling to new markets.

“Our industry comes across as technical and complicated. It requires time and attention to clarify to a customer how these products can work for them and that they are actually quite straightforward to interact with. As we move into new markets, we have to keep working on making our products accessible to a variety of customers with different skill levels,” he said.

“We’re scaling up and moving into new markets with a low cost, high frequency product. This necessitates a change in how we work and market our work. That means less interaction with customers, and a need for incredibly clear explanations of our analysis and products, and a great user experience off the bat.”

What also changes is the team.

“When you start, the founders and first core team members step-by-step create a company culture that is largely a reflection of their own personalities and interactions. As you grow and professionalise, company culture moves into a shared understanding of what is important to the team and the company and how you want to work together to achieve your goals,” said Wright.

“To cement this, you need to be purposeful in communicating continuously and more explicitly to new hires what values the company holds and what its goals are.”

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