#Africa 10 startups chosen for #Africa4Future accelerator programme

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Ten African tech startups have been selected to take part in the #Africa4Future accelerator programme, which helps aerospace startups speed up their innovation and scale.

Disrupt Africa reported in November on the launch of #Africa4Future, which is an initiative of global aerospace accelerator Airbus BizLab, GIZ’s Make-IT in Africa and the Meltwater Entrepreneurial School of Technology (MEST).

The programme aims to assist talented African entrepreneurs using innovative aerospace based solutions to tackle the continent’s most pressing challenges such as transportation, agriculture and healthcare.

After 314 entries were received from companies representing 19 African countries, 10 have been chosen to take part. They include three from Kenya – drone company Astral Aerial, environmental monitoring solution Lentera, and water monitoring solution MobiTech Water Solutions – and two from South Africa – smart manufacturing company Elemental Numerics, and wireless charging solution WiPo Wireless Power.

The rest of the cohort is made up of drone companies Cote d’Ivoire drone (Ivory Coast) and Maisha ICT Tech (Ethiopia), health supplies delivery platform MamaBird (Malawi), urban mapping solution Map Action (Mali), and construction project management tool Track Your Build (Nigeria).

#Africa4Future begins with an intensive six-month business incubation and accelerator programme involving technical, commercial and mentorship activities in France, Germany and South Africa. This includes workshops and coaching sessions with Airbus experts as well as Make-IT in Africa, MEST and Innocircle coaches.

The programme will culminate with demo day events at the biennial Paris International Airshow and a special event in Germany from June 19-26, when finalists will launch their products, define their collaboration with Airbus and announce their investment commitments in front of representatives from across the aerospace industry.

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#Africa Ivory Coast VoD startup StarNews Mobile quietly hits big numbers

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The African video on demand (VoD) space has been much-hyped for years, but there is little evidence of any tangible successes.

Nigeria’s iROKOtv is the flagship “local” startup, competing against the likes of Netflix and Showmax, but the recent sale of iflix operations in Africa spoke to the major challenges associated with building VoD platforms on the continent.

One startup, however, believes it has cracked it, and the numbers certainly speak to that. Ivory Coast-based startup StarNews Mobile launched in July 2017, targeting the mass market with a network of over 50 mobile channels offering celebrity-based content priced at low daily subscription rates.

“StarNews Mobile works with local and international celebrities such as Davido, Fally Ipupa or Sauti Sol to create dedicated mobile channels where celebrities publish exclusive short videos,” founder Guy Kamgaing told Disrupt Africa.

It deployed in Ivory Coast in partnership with operators MTN and Moov, and broke the one million subscriber mark back in April 2018. Since then it has launched in Cameroon and the Republic of Congo, and is targeting 20 extra markets in total through its MTN partnership.

Users can subscribe to their favorite celebrities’ channel through their operator for as low as US$0.10 per day. Once subscribed, they receive a video link via SMS to watch exclusive videos daily. The revenue generated from the subscription fee is then shared between the operator, the content provider and StarNews Mobile.

“Basically we have found a way to adapt SnapChat, or Instagram Stories, to the African context,” Kamgaing said.

Africa is the fastest growing mobile market in the world, and the number of smartphone users is set to reach 690 million in 2025. The continent’s young, social media savvy population is hungry for locally-relevant content to consume on their mobile phones, but Kamgaing said exploiting this opportunity, finding the right content, and monetising it has been a challenge.

“In the past few years dozens of OTT platforms have launched on the continent and many have failed, because of technical limitations and costs of data and content licensing versus low disposable income levels,” he said.

“Others such as Showmax and iROKOtv are heavily funded and holding on, but the truth is that user acquisition is extremely hard in Africa. Free platforms such as YouTube or Instagram are popular but generate little to no revenue for content providers. Mobile operators also have their own mobile video stores, but they don’t always get the content right.”

Kamgaing believes StarNews Mobile has managed to find solutions to all these problems.

“We’ve got content that young people are passionate about, the videos are short and delivered seamlessly by our operator partners so the service just works, and users pay small amounts they can afford through their pre-paid data,” he said.

Bootstrapped to its current six-figure US dollar gross monthly revenue, StarNews Mobile is now looking for external funding to support rapid expansion.

“We’ve self-funded the business in the first 18 months but the company also started generated sizeable revenues soon after launch in the summer of 2017, so we’ve been able to bootstrap our way so far,” Kamgaing said.

“In October we signed a group deal with MTN to launch in an additional 20 countries in the next two to three years, so this means a steep ramp up. We’re now raising our first seed raise to fuel this growth.”

It did take some trial and error to find the right product-market fit, however, and Kamgaing said StarNews Mobile was fortunate it had previous experience working with mobile operators, a process he said can “break” many small companies. Other challenges included building the right technology to fit into a telecom environment, which Kamgaing said the startup is still struggling, and selling this unique business model to an audience of local content providers.

“But when it started taking off, it just kept growing, and we knew we had something. Now our challenge is about scaling from three to 20 countries, which means rethinking and rebuilding our technical platform in order to be able to sustain this rapid growth,” he said.

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#Africa 10 startups selected to Pitch Live at Africa Startup Summit

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Ten companies from across the continent have been selected to pitch on stage to investors, corporates, media and other stakeholders at the Africa Startup Summit in Kigali, Rwanda next month.

The inaugural Africa Startup Summit, one of three summits taking place at Africa Tech Summit Kigali, will bring together stakeholders in the tech startup space across the continent on February 14 -15 to explore the opportunities and challenges within the ecosystem, while showcasing Africa’s abundant entrepreneurial talent.

The focus will be on encouraging collaboration, and creating connections between investors, corporates, stakeholders and startups. As part of this mission, the organisers opened applications to Pitch Live at the Africa Startup Summit, with chosen startups earning the chance to pitch before an audience of over 400 investors, corporate partners, accelerators and media.

More than 100 applications were received from startups across the continent for the opportunity to take part. These have now been narrowed down to the chosen 10, which hail from seven African countries and are active in sectors as diverse as fintech, e-health, agri-tech and mobility.

Here is the full list of companies selected to Pitch Live at Africa Startup Summit:

7keema (Egypt): an on-demand home nursing services platform using mobile, AI, VR and telehealth technologies to ensure peace of mind for patients and higher incomes for nurses;

Appy Saude (Angola): the largest digital health portal of Angola, allowing users to identify and book healthcare service providers;

Complete Farmer (Ghana): a crowd-farming platform that enables users to own agricultural land and manage it remotely from their devices;

DéMars (Mauritius): a next generation mobile phone payments network for small micro payments built using the latest blockchain technology;

Exuus (Rwanda): leverages the power of collective saving and adequate credit scoring model to achieve financial inclusion;

Jetstream Africa (Ghana): a data-driven supply chain platform that enables food companies to buy agricultural products directly from African smallholder farmers and processors;

Leaf (Rwanda): provides financial services to the stateless and excluded by creating a virtual bank with blockchain technology;

Moja Ride (Ivory Coast): a Mobility-as-a-Service platform integrating local payment solutions and modes of transportation to help users find, book and pay for transport in their city;

OZÉ (Ghana): a mobile platform that empowers small business owners to make data-driven decisions to improve their performance and access capital;

RideSafe (Kenya): an emergency response service that utilises a micro-insurance financing model running on a decentralised blockchain application.

The selected startups will also have the opportunity to attend the rest of the event, which features three Summits, and take part in the wide variety of workshops, discussions and networking sessions taking place over the three days.

“We were delighted by both the quality and quantity of applications to Pitch Live at the Africa Startup Summit, and picking the final 10 was not an easy job. However, we are confident the businesses we have selected to take part are a strong representation of the high levels of innovation and entrepreneurial spirit within the African tech space, and look forward to showcasing them to potential partners and investors at the event,” said Gabriella Mulligan, co-founder of Disrupt Africa.

“Taking top African startups and giving them the chance to showcase their products and services on stage is a big part of what Africa Startup Summit is about. All of these companies will arrive in Kigali looking for ways to scale their businesses, and we will do all we can to help them succeed,” said Tom Jackson, co-founder of Disrupt Africa.

Tickets to attend Africa Startup Summit, including a 10 per cent discount for all Disrupt Africa readers, are currently on sale here.

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#Africa Seedstars seeks solutions addressing African healthcare supply chain challenges

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Seedstars has partnered the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to launch a call to identify innovative solutions to vaccine delivery and malaria supply chain challenges across low-resource settings in Africa.

Seedstars has already picked African winners in Egypt, Tunisia, Zimbabwe, Morocco, Ghana, Rwanda, Libya, Uganda, Senegal, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Kenya, Mozambique, Guinea Bissau, Angola, Nigeria, Cameroon, Botswana, South Africa, The Gambia and Tanzania.

These winners will gather alongside others from the rest of the world at the Seedstars Summit in Switzerland in April, where a host of prizes are up for grabs alongside the US$1 million in equity investment for the overall winner.

One of these will be a challenge supported by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation which looks to identify innovative solutions to Vaccine Delivery and Malaria supply chain challenges across Africa. The call is aimed at all e-health startups working on vaccine delivery and malaria supply chains, as well as other startups working on existing solutions that could be reoriented to the challenge.

Two winning startups will be awarded US$10,000 each at the event, and will also receive one-on-one mentorship, have the opportunity to meet with investors, and participate in expert workshop sessions.

”The Seedstars platform presents a novel platform for drawing out and recognising not only talent, but also viable solutions to these complex health challenges. We’re excited to see the range of people and organizations that choose to participate,” said Andrew Buhayar, programme officer for vaccine delivery at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Applications for both challenges are open until February 20.

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#Africa How SA’s DataProphet is making global manufacturing more efficient

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South African startup DataProphet is collecting customers from all over the world with its artificial intelligence (AI) platform that makes manufacturing firms more efficient.

DataProphet was formed in 2014 when two friends at the University of Cape Town, Frans Cronje and Daniel Schwartzkopff, decided to use their knowledge of AI to start their own business.

The pair started off working as consultants within various sectors, before identifying manufacturing as a primary target.

“Over the years, manufacturing businesses have amassed a lot of data which is underutilised, in some cases, only collected for compliance purposes. Most manufacturers are still using traditional approaches to analyse their data, which were not built to handle the amount of data being collected nowadays, therefore sub-optimal,” Cronje told Disrupt Africa.

“Much investment has gone into setting up of infrastructure for the acquisition and storage of such data, with very little advanced analytics happening on it. You’ll, therefore, find that manufacturers are sitting on a lot of insights into their process within that data and the potential for a return on their investment.”  

This presented Cronje and Schwartzkopff with an opportunity to develop a system specifically for manufacturing, that would detect defects and scrap in the manufacturing process, save on waste, and increase yields. This it did with its flagship product – OMNI.

AI is on the rise across Africa, and Cronje said DataProphet has been riding the crest of a wave.

“More and more industries are getting their feet wet when it comes to AI, and more budgets are being made available,” he said.

That said, AI projects are still seen as innovation projects, as most organisations are not sure of the results.

“Currently, AI is used to optimise processes – make them more efficient – but it does require the process to be in place. This will, however,  gradually change as processes are built with AI in mind; rather than AI attached. So we will see a move from a manufacturer improved by AI, to a manufacturer built around AI,” said Cronje.

For now, DataProphet is being used by a large variety of clients, from foundries to car manufacturers such as Mercedes-Benz and BMW. These clients are based in South Africa, the United States (US), South America and parts of Europe, with further expansion underway after the startup raised further funding last year.

“We were initially funded by a private investor, then secured VC funding in 2016 from Yellowoods Capital, before a further round, led by Knife Capital, was raised in 2018 to help us scale our operations globally,” Cronje said.

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#Africa Ethiopian startup behind ZayRide taxi app secures seed funding

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Ethiopian startup Zaytech IT Solutions, the developer of taxi-hailing product ZayRide, has secured a seed funding round from local and international investors in order to roll out new products and enter new markets.

Founded in 2016, Zaytech provides technology and transportation solutions under its brand name ZayRide, which has an expansive network of vetted, safe and trained taxi drivers across Addis Ababa for both corporate and individual customers.

It recently added delivery services to its platform and will be adding ambulance services in 2019. It also plans to launch new products and expanding its tech outsourcing team following the investment.

The company said the funding would provide it with the necessary financing to get started with its ambitious growth plans, enabling it to launch additional complementary products in Ethiopia, expand market penetration and increase its talent pool significantly as it plans to roll out further products and enter new markets in the coming months.

“I am very pleased to welcome our new investors who have a wealth of experience in launching and scaling up tech companies globally and know the Ethiopian market very well as they guide us in our growth strategy,” said Habtamu Tadesse, founder and chief executive officer (CEO) of Zaytech.

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#Africa Ashoka opens applications for 11-month health accelerator

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Social entrepreneurship network Ashoka and pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim have launched 11-month accelerator programme Making More Health (MMH).

The structured accelerator will bring together the best experience in social innovation and global healthcare to improve healthcare access for people, animals and their communities around the world.

Participants will be provided with tailored access to expertise and capacity building to unlock their next phase of growth. A unique feature of the programme is its co-creation approach, which involves entrepreneurs working with Boehringer Ingelheim employees to collaboratively design and implement relevant interventions.

At the end of the accelerator, social entrepreneurs with successful interventions will have the opportunity to present their solutions to Boehringer Ingelheim’s leadership team as well as social investors to attract further investment.   
The programme is looking for well-established, post-revenue startups operating in Kenya, Ghana or Nigeria. Applications are open here until February 15, with the programme beginning in April.

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#Africa African startups tapping the huge potential of insurtech models

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The “African insurance market” is barely worthy of the name, such are the low levels of penetration of all types of insurance across the continent. Yet insurtech startups innovating in areas such as the distribution and management of insurance are creating a win-win scenario for everyone involved.

The insurtech market in Africa is a new one. When Disrupt Africa released its Finnovating for Africa report on the continent’s fintech space in 2017, it tracked only 18 insurtech startups, accounting for just six per cent of Africa’s fintech startups.

That figure now stands at over 50. Back then, investment in insurtech startups was also low, with such businesses raising only 8.8 per cent of total funds raised in the fintech space. Impressive rounds for the likes of Click2Sure, Naked, Simply and Bismart last year mean this level is now far higher.

The appeal is that these startups are innovating in a market that has remained largely undisrupted, if indeed there is anything to disrupt at all. Continental insurance leader South Africa has an insurance penetration rate of only 13 percent, while elsewhere the figures are much lower. In Kenya it is three per cent, in Nigeria 0.3.

Nick Evans is chief executive officer (CEO) of South African insurtech startup wiCover, which builds highly configurable distribution platforms for insurance companies. He said the sector suffers from lack of access, lack of education, and lack of innovation, all things startups are trying to provide.

“Insurance products that protect income, lives, families, businesses or assets requires an increase in education and an increase in access to banking services. Low cost or micro-insurance products require innovation on the types of products that are available, how they are consumed and how they accessed,” Evans said.

Distribution, he said, is a key issue that needs to be solved for companies to be able to sell micro-insurance products at scale.

“The current distribution models increase the cost of accessing markets and drives the cost of product. Accurate data is also a hindrance to progress. There is also a trust issue at the insurance moment of truth. Claims are not paid always quickly, fairly or correctly. It’s a huge pain point that can also lead to an increase in fraud,” said Evans.  

“Payment and collections is another key issue that needs be addressed for customers, with low levels of financial services requiring a new look at how premium is paid, how often it is paid and how claims are paid.”

Many problems that need tackling, then, but as ever, the way insurance businesses operate means, like most corporates, they struggle to innovate. Adelaide Odhiambo, CEO of Kenyan insurance product distribution platform Blue Wave, believes insurance companies require an “extensive change management exercise” as corporate culture and infrastructure does not support innovation.

“As for the customers, the products available do not necessarily address their immediate needs, as most insurance products available are off the shelf and not easily customisable. We are working to resolve this,” she said.

As are many startups, and with good reason. The huge lack of access is a huge opportunity, as is the entry of millennials with different expectations into the market. At last, insurance companies are ready to listen. A PwC report in 2017 found more than 50 per cent of insurers are putting disruption at the centre of their strategies, and seeking partnerships with insurtech startups.

This makes sense for everyone involved. Startups can access a potential customer base of the size they could never have dreamed of, insurance firms access innovative new ways of distribution, and customers can more easily access better products.

“Startups with no legacy systems have the opportunity to design and deliver a truly digital customer experience, resulting in convenient – and quick – customer engagements, while lowering costs significantly through automation,” said Ernest North, co-founder at South African artificial intelligence (AI)-driven car insurance provider Naked Insurance.

Sam Wanekeya is CEO of Kenya’s Kakbima, an online Software-as-a-service (SaaS) insurance manager. He said African insurtech startups are better placed than larger, often international firms to deliver insurance products geared towards the need of the customer.

“The African insurance market it very different from the Americas or the European market. You cannot pick a product in Europe and bring it to a country like Kenya and expect it to work,” he said.

“Traditional insurance companies need to really change. A continent having the highest population of young people selling insurance the old fashioned way will not last for long. The customer is changing very fast, and if they don’t change then they’ll end up losing.”

The signs are that they are changing, however, and that is good news for everyone. Anthony Miller co-founded South African startup Simply, which designs and sells simple life insurance products. He believes insurtech will leapfrog traditional insurance in same the way mobile has leapfrogged fixed-line and mobile payments have leapfrogged traditional banking.

“Done well, insurance is a valuable enabler of effective societies. Africa is a huge continent with a fast growing population and strong economic growth. There’s no question insurance is a big part of its future and technology is what will get it there,” he said.

“These opportunities have the potential to be very lucrative for insurtech companies, traditional insurance companies, and investors alike. In 20 years’ time, insurance in Africa will be worth hundreds of billions of dollars.”

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#Africa How your tech startup can collaborate with the Gates Foundation

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Emerging market fintech investor and accelerator DFS Lab will host a bootcamp in Tanzania in April designed to assist startups in building on the Mojaloop infrastructure created by the Gates Foundation.

The recent announcement of the MTN/Orange Mowali partnership is the first public deployment of Mojaloop, which was built to create interoperable payments systems for mobile-first emerging markets.

DFS Lab is offering a group of leading technology and financial service companies an opportunity to work with the Gates Foundation team behind the Mojaloop platform in a closed-door session in Dar es Salaam to explore how Mojaloop can be used.

The five-day event will offer participants an in-depth look at the Mojaloop stack, an opportunity to build solutions in collaboration with the Mojaloop platform developers, and the opportunity to prototype products and features built on the Mojaloop stack.

Applications are open here.

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#Africa Togolese startups invited to apply for Djanta Tech Hub support

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Togolese tech startups have been invited to apply for assistance from the newly-established Djanta Tech Hub in the heart of the capital city Lomé.

The first technology campus in Togo, the 3,000m2 Djanta Tech Hub aims to be a West African centre of excellence and a key location for supporting tech entrepreneurship.

It is designed to promote entrepreneurship, creativity and economic development through digital technology, innovation and research, and will support the development of solutions for key sectors of the Togolese economy, such as education, agriculture, health and financial inclusion.

Startups in the tech space looking for an environment in which to develop their ideas and grow their businesses are now being invited to apply to relocate to Djanta Tech Hub via this online form.

Djanta Tech Hub includes digital training centre Djanta Academy), a FabLab, and co-working space Djanta Space. Its NanaTech space is dedicated to female entrepreneurship, while it also host an incubator, an accelerator, a connected café area, and meeting and conference rooms.

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