#Africa Uganda’s SolarNow raises $9m debt financing

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The Uganda-based off-grid solar company SolarNow has closed its largest financing facility to date through SunFunder, with Oikocredit and responsAbility contributing to a US$9M debt funding round.

The facility is the third structured asset finance instrument arranged for SolarNow by the Nairobi-based SunFunder, after previous ones in 2016 and 2017, and will enable the company to deploy 17,500 new off-grid solar systems to customers in Uganda, along with a range of appliances.

“This syndication and the SAFI structure allow us to minimise the fundraising burden and to focus on our business instead. By selecting the right clients and treating them well, our credit portfolio remains healthy and we create a strong foundation for sustainable growth,” said SolarNow chief executive officer (CEO) Willem Nolens.

The new systems will amount to around 2.5 MW of new installed off-grid solar capacity. Among the expected impacts, the company estimates more than 70,000 women will gain improved energy access in Uganda.

“We have just had our five-year anniversary working with SolarNow, and this takes us to US$19 million in investments that we’ve arranged or made directly in the company. We are proud to have backed SolarNow’s growth, delivering top quality solar systems and appliances throughout Uganda,” said SunFunder’s director of investments Surabhi Visser.

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#Africa How SA payments startup Slide corners both P2P, corporate markets

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South African startup Slide is hoping to establish a competitive advantage in the busy payments space by offering solutions fit for both individual and corporate customers.

Founded in 2017, Slide is, in essence, a P2P payments app that allows users to send money to friends and family using their mobile number or email.

Yet, unlike similar companies in a busy space, it is also targeting corporate customers, with its flexible payment APIs allowing companies to build all of the app’s functionality directly into their own apps.

“In this way, Slide is facilitating mobile payments for individual and companies. We believe easier mobile payments help grow the African sharing economy and lead to increased financial inclusion,” founder Alon Stern told Disrupt Africa.

For reasons of scale, the startup is focused most heavily on its corporate product, Slide Link, which consists of a system of digital wallets which are integrated to payment channels. This system can be built into other apps, since it is accessible via API. Stern explains its value.

“For example, if a startup is setting up a ridesharing company, they will need a system that allows them to take money from their users’ credit cards, keep track of how much each user has using digital wallets, route money from the customer’s wallet to the driver’s wallet while taking some money out as fees, hold the money in escrow until the drive is complete, and allow the driver to withdraw their money to their bank account,” he said.

“The Slide Link system provides the payment system to do all of the above, and will allow the company to launch their app much more rapidly.”

This, then, is how Slide differentiates from its competitors in South Africa, which has a number of payment gateways allowing a company to take money from a user’s credit card.

“In order to build a ride sharing app using a traditional payment gateway, the company would need to develop their own system of digital wallets and would need to integrate with another company doing programmable EFTs to pay their drivers,” said Stern.

“Slide Link differs from payment gateways in that we have a digital wallet system which is already integrated to a payment gateway and programmable EFTs.”

Before starting Slide, Stern and co-founder Terence Goldberg were living in the United States. Upon their return to South Africa, they had spotted the lack of  P2P payments apps available, and set out to build one. Customer demand persuaded them to also focus on businesses.

“After we launched the Slide app, we received a constant stream of requests from companies who wanted to build our payment mechanism into their own apps. We then realised that there was an even bigger opportunity to provide out-the-box payment solutions for companies launching exciting new apps that require sophisticated payments,” Stern said.

The bootstrapped startup took part in the US-based Boost VC accelerator in 2017, from which it received pre-seed investment, but otherwise has been totally self-funded. Its P2P app is entirely free, and does not generate any revenue, with Slide Link charging transaction and user fees.

“Slide has had great traction to date. We have thousands of downloads and have processed millions of rands through our system,” said Stern. “We are currently only in South Africa. We would like to expand into other Africa countries in the next few years.”

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#Africa flab Accelerator seeking Ghanaian female-led tech startups

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Applications are open to the Innohub flab Accelerator, seeking female-led tech startups to join the six-month Ghana-based programme.

The fLab programme seeks to promote innovative technology entrepreneurship among women, by providing female-owned tech startups with product development and business development support.

The accelerator is currently seeking 20 entrepreneurs with innovative, high-growth, social impact ventures looking for support to refine their offering and scale.

Participants will receive help from a team of mentors and coaches with product development and testing, as well as with refining their business and customers strategies.  Co-working space complete with a tech lab to test ideas will also be available to the chosen entrepreneurs.

To be eligible, startups must have a two or three-member female-led team; be aged between 20 and 30 years old; have an innovative technology solution in its idea or early stage with potential for growth; and be willing to commit the six month intensive programme.

Applications are open here, until January 15.

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#Africa Why students could yet prove a happy hunting ground for African startups

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The ed-tech space in general has had mixed levels of success in Africa, but signs are that it is on the move. Solutions targeting students, moreover, are becoming more commonplace.

Last year saw more ed-tech startups raise funding than any year on record, according to forthcoming data to be released by Disrupt Africa, helped by the presence of a dedicated incubator, while the space saw a major exit with the acquisition of South Africa’s GetSmarter in 2017.

Startups targeting mature learners and learning institutions are increasingly common, with find-a-tutor platforms especially prevalent, but thus far startups have tended to avoid a large, but potentially hazardous, market – the continent’s students.

This is starting to change, for good reason. One startup with students in mind is South Africa’s DigsConnect, an accommodation finding platform. Founded by students, for students, the startup is targeting a vast potential market – with 2.3 million students in South Africa alone. Who said targeting students could not be potentially lucrative?

“In terms of accommodation – prices vary wildly for rent depending on city and location within the city,” said Alexandria Procter, co-founder of DigsConnect.

“We work on a rough average rental of ZAR3,500 (US$250) nationally. Minus in the number of beds at university residences, the number of students living at home, and we’re left with around ZAR75 billion (US$5.4 billion) being spent on off-campus student housing annually.”

Furthermore, she says the student population is a great market in which to test a product, as they are happy early adopters of new solutions.

“Students also generally have a great sense of humour and are very forgiving of product mishaps – so you can develop your product in collaboration with them, and don’t have to fear getting it wrong the first few times,” Procter said.

Securing the future

There is also sense in brands getting to potential customers early. Cecil Nutakor, chief executive officer (CEO) of Ghanaian learning platform eCampus, uses the phrase “catch then young and they shall be yours forever”.

“Students, and for that matter the youth, are the heartbeat of Africa’s youthful societies. Brands that are able to engage and win their trust have the opportunity to become market leaders and household names,” he said.

This is a view shared by Hertzy Kabeya, managing director of South Africa’s The Student Hub, which offers a range of services to students, such as course and placement discovery options. He believes the student market represents a big long-term opportunity for forward thinking companies.

“Very few companies have managed to adjust their product offering and business models to win this market. The current student market is the future workforce, therefore winning them now is definitely a big opportunity for brands,” he said.

What makes this market exciting, according to Kabeya, is the fact that almost all industries have to start from zero to win it.

“The ground is levelled for small companies to overtake big companies, because big companies will not effortlessly inherit this market. This market belongs to nobody yet,” he said.

“They are no longer loyal to brands and products, but rather they are buying experiences and remain very loyal to great experiences, even if it is offered by a new player in the market. They are eager to try new things as long as it follows this narrative. so the number of years in operations doesn’t matter anymore. It is no longer a competitive edge.”

Where is the money?

Yet how to startups targeting students get paid. Kabeya admits that students lack the ability to spend on non core expenses such as entertainment, communication, transport and fashion.

“That is why companies such as ShowMax and Uber make very little from the student market. Students generally don’t have any income, therefore they rely on monthly allowances that tend to go directly to core needs such as food and accommodation,” he said.

Therefore companies in this space need to target these needs. The Student Hub focuses on helping students find courses and work, and gets paid from elsewhere. DigsConnect focuses on accommodation, and will monetise by taking a cut. Yet Bola Lawal, CEO of Nigerian startup ScholarX, thinks students have more spending power than people imagine.

The ScholarX app allows users to select parameters and scroll through lists of available scholarships that match their requirements. Scholarships are available for undergraduate, masters and PhD students. The startup, which expanded to Ghana in March 2017, has also rolled out Village, which allows students to create fund requests to help with costs such as school fees, accommodation, books and exam fees.

Lawal sats students are in fact big spenders.

“They have access to their parents’ funds, and they are more emotional when it comes to spending. Though in certain parts of the world where poverty runs high the spending of students is lower, still they are a huge part of retail buying in any country,” he said.

Getting the marketing right

That said, persuading students to buy good and services on your platform can be a challenge. All are agreed that specifically-targeted marketing is required.

Nutakor said students get bored very easily.

“You can’t keep them focused on your brand by doing the same things. In most cases you have to find out from them how they want to engage with your brand and do just that for them,” he said.

DigsConnect has often resorted to stunts to keep itself in the forefront of student minds, and Procter said the startup has focused on the fun. But it is not just about having a laugh, and varies from university to university, and student to student.

“Our experience in the student market has challenged us to think differently, to push boundaries, to value each student we interact with, and to do it all simultaneously,” she said. “In our experience, marketing to millennials isn’t a one size fits all. It’s about carefully constructing a brand identity and marketing to young people in different ways to appeal to each one uniquely… a journey more than a destination.”

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#Africa Investment fund launched for African diaspora entrepreneurs

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Non-profit organisation RemitFund has launched an investment fund for African diaspora-led impact businesses.

RemitFund aims to leverage remittances flows for greater social impact on the continent, by enabling Africans in the diaspora to donate a percentage of their remittances to an investment fund.

The African Diaspora Investment Fund (ADIF) will provide investment for African and African diaspora-led businesses that work for the continent’s advancement in SDG-aligned sectors such as agribusiness and clean energy.

“Remittances in the traditional sense are a form of diaspora-driven development and provide a huge safety net for many families,” said RemitFund’s founder and executive director Grace Camara.

“However, without the prospect of sustainable and growing economies, remittances in their current form will not provide sufficient investment to curb the “brain drain” of skilled Africans who struggle to find employment and so look for opportunities abroad. If we do not start creating employment opportunities for Africa’s youth, dysfunctional migration will reach unprecedented levels. We must act now.”

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#Africa 5 agri-tech startups join Senegal Startup Accelerator

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Five agri-tech startups have been selected to join the Senegal Startup Accelerator run by Kosmos Innovation Centre and Reach for Change; receiving six months’ incubation and US$2,000 seed funding.

The Senegal Startup Accelerator aims to support young Senegalese entrepreneurs with innovative ideas tackling the challenges facing the agriculture sector using technology.

The programme – run by  run by the Kosmos Innovation Centre and Reach for Change – helps selected entrepreneurs to develop their commercial solutions and maximize their impact, through a six month schedule of intensive and expert training, as well as organised visits to established businesses for market research and professional mentoring. The chosen startups also receive US$2,000 each in seed funding, with the chance to secure additional funding upon completion of the programme.

Five Senegalese ventures have been selected to join the accelerator, which kicks off this month.

The cohort comprises Jappandil – a platform that connects farmers to qualified agricultural experts, service providers and materials needed to improve farming practices and access the latest innovations; Tool Bi, which works to facilitate irrigation with an electronic innovation and improve agricultural yields; Fraisen/Waalu Ma Aagri – an efficient way of producing organic strawberries locally in Senegal at an affordable cost; Sigle:Senphytomed Suarl, working in the conservation of medicinal plants; and food waste solution GIE Senbioagro Corporation.

“Through this accelerator programme, we’re delighted to do our part to ensure young, promising entrepreneurs have the skills and support needed to help turn their innovative business ideas into reality. Each winner will be guided through the process of developing a product that is ready for market and meets a real market need, contributing to the creation of a healthy and competitive agricultural sector in Senegal. Look out for five exciting new products coming to the market in just six months’ time,” says Mamadou Mar Faye, external affairs and corporate social responsibility (CSR) manager at Kosmos Energy.

The post 5 agri-tech startups join Senegal Startup Accelerator appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

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#Africa Nigeria’s SonoCare scaling its mobile diagnostics solution at speed

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“I will never forget her. Her name was Hope.”

Several years ago, Dr Moses Owoicho Enokela tried desperately to stop Hope Okoro dying on the delivery bed of a rural hospital.

“We couldn’t save her. She died along with her unborn infant and she died because nobody knew her placenta was obstructing her birth passage. She never had an ultrasound examination in the entire course of her pregnancy, and she never had one because she couldn’t afford it or the associated costs,” Enokela told Disrupt Africa.

This is a problem across Africa, and why 99 per cent of maternal deaths occur in rural communities in developing countries like Nigeria.

“Like Hope, hundreds of thousands of women will continue to lose their lives every year to preventable pregnancy complications if nothing is done. This is our motivation and what inspired SonoCare,” Enokela said.

Founded in 2015, SonoCare is a last-mile mobile diagnostic medical imaging solution delivering conveniently accessible and low-cost life-saving diagnostic imaging interventions, such as ultrasound sonograms and echocardiograms, at point of care that can help detect pregnancy complications conveniently and affordably.

“We found the main reasons behind the problem were accessibility and affordability. Hospitals and available solutions were not readily accessible, and even when they were they were still very expensive,” said Enokela.

SonoCare 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, the startup 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.

So far, it has screened over 26,000 women from 17 rural communities, and detected over 15,000 high-risk pregnancies. In November, the startup 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.

“SonoCare targets the entire Sub-Saharan Africa market. However, we currently operate in the Nigerian market with plans for expansion across West Africa and the wider Sub-Saharan Africa in the nearest future,” Enokela said.

The post Nigeria’s SonoCare scaling its mobile diagnostics solution at speed appeared first on Disrupt Africa.

from Disrupt Africa http://bit.ly/2CUthGU

#Africa Last chance to Pitch Live at Africa Startup Summit

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Startups from around Africa have one week left to apply to Pitch Live at the Africa Startup Summit in Kigali in February, with 10 startups to be given the chance to take to the stage before an audience of over 400 investors, corporate partners, accelerators and media.

The Africa Startup Summit will bring together stakeholders in the tech startup space across the continent in Kigali, Rwanda, on February 14 -15, to explore the opportunities and challenges within the ecosystem, while showcasing Africa’s abundant entrepreneurial talent.

The focus of the Summit will be on encouraging collaboration, and creating connections between investors, corporates, stakeholders and startups.

Disrupt Africa announced in December the main stage of the event will be opened up to the top 10 startups from around Africa, who will be given the chance to pitch their businesses to the audience of over 400 local and international decision-makers.

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 have seen a huge volume of great applications from startups around Africa, and there are now only a couple of spaces left to Pitch Live on the main stage at Africa Startup Summit in February.  We’re pleased to extend this last chance to any late applicants – we look forward to hearing from you,” says Gabriella Mulligan, co-founder at Disrupt Africa.

“The first Africa Startup Summit promises to bring together the continent’s ecosystem with a good number of entrepreneurs, investors, corporate and regulatory speakers and attendees already confirmed.  We’re pleased to include Pitch Live as a key feature of the event line-up, and encourage applicants and attendees to secure their spaces now,” said Tom Jackson, co-founder at Disrupt Africa.

Applications are open to African tech-enabled startups operating in any field. Startups applying must also be less than five years old; have at least an MVP, ideally with existing traction; have raised less than US$1 million in external funding; and have a current “ask”.

Startups must be able to attend the Summit in Kigali in person. Applications are open here, until January 11, with applications to be reviewed on a rolling basis.  Tickets to attend are currently on sale here.

For more information or for sponsorship and expo enquiries please visit https://www.africatechsummit.com/kigali/africa-startup-summit/ or email Gabriella on gabriella@disrupt-africa.com, or Tom on tom@disrupt-africa.com.

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#Africa US expansion a major focus for SA’s Aerobotics in 2019

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South African agri-tech startup Aerobotics is focusing heavily on expanding its operations in the United States (US) in 2019, which is one of 11 markets in which the company operates.

Founded in Cape Town in 2014, Aerobotics uses aerial imagery from drones and satellites, and blends them with machine learning algorithms to provide early problem detection services to tree and wine farmers and optimise crop performance.

The startup’s cloud-based application Aeroview provides farmers with insights, scout mapping and other tools to mitigate damage to tree and vine crops from pest and disease.

“Aerobotics can identify a tree or vine that is experiencing stress down to the individual tree canopy level. The technology also measures tree height and canopy volume and can track these metrics on each individual tree and vine over time,” the startup’s chief executive officer (CEO) James Paterson, who grew up in a farming family in the Western Cape, told Disrupt Africa.

“Information about stressed trees is inputted into Aeroview, an application that provides plant level data to farmers to analyse their crops, on a plant by plant basis. Aerobotics’ technology can then automatically generate a scout map for farmers, instruct drones to scout problem trees and identify what pest or disease is causing stress on a tree. This helps each farmer make a fast, accurate and informed decision about mitigating damage on the farm.”

The startups recently launched a batch of new products, with Paterson saying its potential impact is huge.

“In a rapidly changing climate and increasingly competitive environment, farmers are faced with uncertainty and challenges that are both old and new. Output can take drastic hits depending on weather cycles, the introduction and spread of new problems, pests and diseases and a variety of other challenges,” he said.

“Before Aerobotics, pest and disease detection technology had not been quick or accurate enough to have much real-world impacts for farmers. And with global competition disrupting markets anywhere and at any time, farmers are searching everywhere for solutions that can help them mitigate loss and increase yields on their farms to ensure profitability and sustainability.”

Though there are a handful of companies working on different aspects of the value chain, from drone hardware and mapping to pest and disease image analysis, Paterson said he is not aware of any company other than Aerobotics that can deliver the level of details on individual trees and vines along with an easy to use interface at the price point Aerobotics offers.

Given this, it is hardly surprising the startup – which operates a subscription model – has been backed by investors to expand across the world. The company has raised two funding rounds totalling US$2.6 million from investors such as Nedbank, AgFunder, 4Di Capital and Savannah Fund, took part in Google’s Launchpad Accelerator, and is now active in 11 markets globally, including South Africa, the US, the United Kingdom (UK) and Australia.

“At this point, most of Aerobotics customers are based in South Africa,” Paterson said. “Aerobotics is currently providing its cutting-edge technology to 40 per cent of the macadamia nut market and 20 per cent of the citrus market in South Africa. Aerobotics is also helping wine, apples, blueberry, peach, avocado and various other farmers in South Africa and around the world.

He said there is also interest from industry partners such as lenders, insurers and co-operatives, with the startup’s primary focus for 2019 being expansion in the US.

“Aerobotics is for any tree and vine farmer that is interested in utilising the latest precision agriculture technology to mitigate pest and disease damage on the farm, save costs, increase efficiency and yields and produce a more balanced crop,” said Paterson.

“Aerobotics recently announced that it has processed its 10 millionth tree in its database and expects that number to grow quickly. The more trees Aerobotics processes in its software, the stronger and more accurate Aerobotics’ artificial intelligence becomes.”

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from Disrupt Africa http://bit.ly/2BYQshN

#Africa Egypt’s MINT incubator seeking spring cohort

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Applications are open to the third round of Egypt’s MINT incubator, offering startups support in growing their business to the next level and becoming investment ready.

Disrupt Africa reported in January last year, Cairo Angels – which invests in and supports startups across the Middle East and Africa – and EGBank had partnered to launch the three-month equity-free MINT Incubator.

The incubator aims to help startups with an existing product grow their business to the next level, and become more attractive to investors.  The programme features a series of mentoring sessions and workshops covering topics such as finance, sales and marketing, growth hacking, accounting basics, legal and governance, attracting and retaining talent, and branding.  Participants also receive free co-working space.

The incubator culminates in a Demo Day, with participating startups pitching live to an audience of the top angel and venture capital investors in the region.

Ten startups graduated the first edition of the programme in July last year; while a further 11 graduated the Fall programme at a Demo Day held in December.

Applications are now open to the Spring 2019 cycle here, until January 20.

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