Category Archives: VC 4 Africa

VC4Africa and the emergence of an African startup culture

Want to know more about VC4Africa and our work to support starting entrepreneurs? Here is a presentation we recently recorded. I outline some of the recent trends and developments we are witnessing in the space and some of our thinking on how we can do more to support the emergence of an African startup culture.

VC4Africa Infographic, 2012 the year of Entrepreneurship in Africa

VC4A 2012 Infographic

We have been wanting to produce some visuals for some time now and it was fun to see this project come together for the start of the new year. Instead of some card with a bunch of happy faces we thought we would visualize a trend we strongly believe in. We witness and champion a general shift of attention that we hope will see more focus placed on the continent’s entrepreneurs. Really the most underrated change agent if you ask me.

The infographic starts with some background on VC4Africa and where the community is at in terms of its development. We then follow the introduction with statistics that give a strong indication of just how fast things are actually changing on a fundamental level. We highlight the challenges we still need to face concerning some of the resource constraints (human and capital) and answer this challenge with our peer-to-peer driven network approach we feel is a viable way to start filling the gaps.

This graphic was done in partnership with our designer Joppe Rovers. Check out his website. Also see a higher quality version of the VC4A Infographic – 2012 the year of the Entrepreneur (280KB).

VC4Africa reflects on progress made in 2011

I think it is fair to say that 2011 was a good year for the VC4Africa community. What originally started as a Linkedin group has now grown into a thriving and productive network. This year we closed the old website and started a new chapter on VC4Africa.biz, the next step in our continued mission to champion the continent’s greatest entrepreneurs.

We now have more than 4.300 members who have opened personal profile pages on the new site and over 200 entrepreneurs stepped forward to crunch their venture online. There are promising businesses making progress in over 30 African countries and we have seen members in Cameroon, South Africa, the United States, Kenya, Nigeria, the Netherlands and Somaliland establish partnerships, investments and joint ventures. Increasingly, VC4Africa featured entrepreneurs are being picked up by global media channels like Forbes and BBC World. We have opened a new thread where members are starting to share their successes as their continued progress remains our bottom line – as a community and organization.

In the past months we have launched a number of new programs and resources VC4A entrepreneurs can tap into for support. For example, entrepreneurs are now calling in on Free Feedback Fridays. These are sessions hosted by business experts and are useful for working through challenges faced in the business development process. We also hosted several Business Modeling Workshops and worked with entrepreneurs to practice and film their elevator pitches. More recently, we launched the VC4Africa Mentorship Program that connects members for peer-to-peer coaching with some early successes already on the books. We also gave a facelift to the venture profiles and entrepreneurs can now post their video pitches online, one of the reasons ventures like Njorku are top ranked all time. They are personal and you immediately get a sense for the entrepreneur and their vision behind their project. In the year ahead we will be doing even more to support our entrepreneurs as they champion their ventures.

Our team is constantly working to introduce new tools and services that further improve the VC4A networking experience. To foster more effective network building we launched our own ‘dating widget’ that matches members on the basis of complimentary skill sets and forwards recommended connections. How do you tap into a global network spread across 159 countries? This past year saw the release of Questions & Answers as a tool for crowdsourcing knowledge from across the member base. There are now 68 open threads and 128 responses. We also launched dedicated groups that allow members to come together around a specific country or theme. Some notable groups we look forward to growing in 2012 include Green Entrepreneurship, the Social Entrepreneur, VC4Africa Mentors and VC4A Woman Entrepreneurs.

Far and away, one of the greatest projects we launched this past year was VC4A Badges. Building great companies and an effective network of contacts is a lot of hard work, but it’s also a lot of fun. With great looking badges we look to recognize your milestones and contributions along the way. For example, when you establish a partnership, support VC4A entrepreneurs as a mentor or attend your first VC4Africa meetup. And they are pretty useful too. Want to know who has organized a VC4Africa meetup in the past? Want to know which VC4A entrepreneurs have been profiled with a featured article on the homepage? Maybe you want to know which entrepeneurs received funding or the ‘on fire’ badge for being picked up by mainstream media? And I encourage everyone to check out the members who are part of the VC4Africa Officers Program and help shape the community and grow the effort. See an overview of all of the badges and keep your eye out for new ones :)

We will continue to listen to your feedback and build the tools that enrich your time spent with VC4A.

These developments aside, VC4Africa had a great year because we have such great members. People who believe in the continent’s potential and want to see its best entrepreneurs succeed. As a community we share and learn from each others experiences and support one another along the way. It is remarkable to see more than 30 VC4Africa meetups organized by members from around the world. We already have great events online for 2012 starting with Accra, Oslo and London. More are on the way. Certainly Africa is a great business opportunity and we all agree the time to make it happen is NOW.

The best part about all of this? We’re just getting started :)

Fast Moving Targets: Africa as promising investment frontier

Here is an interview I did last week with Fast Moving Targets, a new series dedicated to showcasing innovation in media, technology and communications. They are very much tapping into Amsterdam as a creative media lab and the beginnings of a promising startup culture here in the city. Importantly, they ask the question, ‘what’s going on, what does that mean for whom and how do you actually get new trends and technologies to succeed?’

It’s great to see initiatives like this come online. It adds to The Next Web (many people do not know they are based in Amsterdam) and Hackers and Founders Meetups as important platforms for engaging the community, identifying key developments and highlighting protagonists in the space. Fast Moving Targets is an initiative of ‘The Crowds‘ and hosted by Erwin Blom and Roeland Stekelenburg. They have a great production team and it was nice of Johan Schaap, the founder of Probaton, to make the connection.

The show is filmed live which gives it an interesting character and streamed via the site. They film the chit chat before and after the actual show (so be aware:) and take questions from people watching via Twitter. The show has an interactive and relaxed feel to it. Mostly because of the Palm beer. It was also great practice for my Dutch!:) Here is the description as posted on the site: ‘Ben White van VC4Africa probeert werelden bij elkaar te brengen. Investeerders en ondernemers. Europa en Afrika. Omdat hij ziet hoe groot het talent in laatstgenoemd werelddeel is, omdat hij overtuigd is van het zakenlijk potentieel, maar ook omdat hij een idealist is die van Afrika houdt. VC4Africa gaat over geld, maar nog veel meer over netwerken. Met al duizenden aan boord. Een aflevering van Top Names van Fast Moving Targets.’

The Rise of a Startup Culture in Africa [Video Presentation]

Technology + Entrepreneurs + A vision = Startups in Africa in need of Venture Capital.

This is a one line summary of the presentation I recently gave at the 1% Event in Amsterdam, the Netherlands. In the presentation I talk about the rise of the techprenuer in Africa and the cheetah Generation that is now empowered with the knowledge and tools they need to change the world. This presentation builds on a lot of the ethnographic research I did in Kampala, Uganda and my experiences working on the ICT Entrepreneurship program at Hivos. I also talk about AfriLabs as a network organization connecting technology incubators in Africa and VC4Africa (Venture Capital for Africa) as a platform for crowdsourcing network, information and capital via the web.

VC4Africa pitches for the Accenture Innovation Award

hehe, nice photo:)

Accenture published the nominations for their annual Innovation Awards. I think its great our community was selected out of hundreds of applications to continue to the final round. Now the winner will be decided by the public and this means you!

The project that collects the most votes will win the coveted Blue Tulip. I encourage everyone to review our video pitch and to show your support for the community by adding your email address on the top right corner. Once you have voted you will receive an e-mail notification and will need to confirm your vote by clicking on the confirmation link. Every vote counts….

If you can, please share this news with friends and colleagues as we build support for our concept on a global stage. We are using the following link to promote our application [http://shar.es/bb0nB].

Vote now!

It is time to move to VC4Africa.biz

The time has come to close VC4Africa.com. Originally constrained by Linkedin, the VC4Africa.com site really gave our community the chance to grow. We saw the number of members increase and many discussions come online. Members shared an incredible amount of content and we met in person at over 26 meetups around the world. Here are some of statistics reflecting some of the progress we achieved with the community so far.

We registered 4589 members and saw visitors to the website from 208 countries. The exceptions were Chad, Turkmenistan, Western Sahara, French Guiana and North Korea. I think it is fair to say the business interest in the African continent is very much a global one :) We served 1,327,433 page views and facilitated 364 active forum discussions, promoted 157 events focused on business in Africa, hosted 38 Incubators and generated 886 blog postings.

Top African countries were South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria. A ranking that reflects number of internet users, significance of economy, geographic location and the promising future prospects for each country. These countries were followed by Ghana, Senegal and Uganda. Without surprise, the most popular article published on VC4Africa.com was the, ‘Time to Invest in Africa’ with 2,486 reads. Clearly there is a growing interest in networking as a community of Entrepreneurs and Investors and together we are better able to organize the network, knowledge and capital needed to realize opportunities on the continent. We take this mission forward with the new website VC4Africa.biz.

Over the past year we have run a number of surveys, opened discussion groups and spoken to many members (both entrepreneurs and investors) and countless experts from a variety of backgrounds. We have collected everyone’s feedback and done our best to process the collected ideas. Most importantly we recognize the need for a more robust and secure platform that facilitates targeted interactions i.e. if you are interested in solar energy solutions for West Africa than you should be able to connect with the members and content most relevant to you. In this way we are working to tailor VC4A so you only get what you want.

We have also introduced new privacy controls that only allow members to contact you if you have approved them as a contact first. It is a challenge to foster our vision for an open community, where members openly share with the network and help other members regardless of their status, while keeping the interactions meaningful. We feel we are making great progress in these areas and continue to seek the community’s feedback. We have also added new social networking tools, a ventures section for posting projects, matchmaking capabilities and premium content to our offering. There is much more on the way and we invite you to join VC4Africa as we take the next step forward.

A special thanks goes out to Bill, Valery, Fua and all of the crew at ActivSpaces who have worked so hard to make this next step possible. Cameroon continues to lead the way!

Indeed. It is time to move to VC4Africa.biz

Join the 2nd VC4Africa Meetup Kampala

The first VC4Africa meetup was organized in Kampala, Uganda @ Katch the Sun. This was already in June of 2008 and it’s exciting to see similar meetups have already been organized in 26 cities around the world. In true VC4Africa fashion, local members have taken it upon themselves to carry the meetup idea forward. Yvonne was one of the entrepreneurs who attended the first event and now she is working with Reinier Battenberg and others to organize a follow up event which I think is great.

This time we will change location to Palms and Crocs (in Nakasero) in the Downtown area. The meetup is on the 26th of October between 6:00 PM and 9:00 PM. As with all meetups, there is no agenda, no fee or speakers. Just good old fashioned networking And remember, Yvonne and Reinier are helping host the event but each member is responsible for paying their own tab.

Want to sign up for this free event?

Making SME finance work in Africa

Last week I presented at the Making Finance Work in Africa conference in Addis Ababa. This was a unique opportunity for the African financial community to come together and discuss ways forward.

Specifically, taking a step back to review what has been achieved the past few years, to outline challenges that remain to be tackled and to identify areas still in need of attention. Also to get a handle on the possible strategies that can be employed in the efforts to address them. If anything, it was made clear that there are no prescriptions and anything but a one size fits all approach. Its about thinking local, taking a careful look at the context and the solutions that might address specific needs.

Thorsten Beck, the author of Financing Africa through the Financial Crisis, put forth the argument that, ‘In the industrialized countries of North America and Western Europe, financial innovation has acquired a bad connotation after the recent crisis, being associated with CDO, CDS and other three-letter abbreviations, which few understand.’ He continued, ‘ However, innovation is more than that and comprises numerous new products, new processes and new organizational forms. Innovation can be an enormously positive force, even in the financial system and especially in Africa. However, in order to reap the benefits of more innovation, a different regulatory approach is needed than currently present in most African countries.’

S. Kal Wajid, the Division Chief of Africa at the IMF, recognized the role of innovation and technology as key components in furthering financial sector development. At the same time he cautioned the attendees to carefully evaluate the risks and to not lost sight of the macro economic agenda. Thorsten agreed but expanded, ‘We can’t lose our focus on the macro economic agenda. At the same time we can look at innovative options for financial sector reform and to consider more activistic approaches.’ He highlighted one opportunity in which banks could share a common payments system that would reduce infrastructure costs, help expedite payments and thereby lower transaction costs. But again, what might serve as a ‘fast gain’ solution for one country could be less relevant for another.

Finding ways to better serve SMEs was also raised as a top priority. Gaiv Tata, the Director of Finance and Private Sector Development at the World Bank, highlighted the issue when he explained that 50% of SMEs in Malawi still rank access to finance as the leading challenge in their ability to realize potential. In Ivory Coast it’s 60% and in Benin the numbers approach 70% of SMEs that identify access to capital as a key constraint. Jason Wendle of Dalberg added, ‘the biggest challenge facing SMEs is collateral. Banks see the SME market as an attractive segment but still have difficulty assessing the risks.’ Leveraging technology, psychoanalytic testing and smart due diligence processes were offered as positive sector developments that combined could start to address this issue.

Still it was clear, Banks don’t necessarily appreciate the business of small scale entrepreneurs. Their products are limited and do not always offer the terms an entrepreneur requires to really grow their business. For example a big order that comes in and the business in need of a fast loan so they can scale production and service the contract. Difficult circumstances arise when the entrepreneur has to still wait months before the financing is organized on often unreasonable terms.

But there is much optimism. SMEs consistently show good returns and finding businesses that can generate a profit is really not the issue. The focus is instead on identifying smart and effective ways that better connect financial services with the entrepreneurs that can really put money to work. It’s connecting the dots that will see more SMEs creating jobs, paying taxes and building the sustainable businesses for the future.

Technology Entrepreneurs Champion a Digital Future for Ethiopia

The VC4Africa team just returned from an amazing trip to Ethiopia where we presented at the Making Finance Work in Africa conference, hosted a VC4Africa meetup and ran a workshop on business modeling at ICE Ethiopia, the country’s first real technology incubator. See a video on a similar trip we made recently to Cameroon and the work we did there with ActivSpaces. We also did video pitches with the entrepreneurs and many said it was the first time this was ever done in the country. Can you imagine that? The country is just incredibly inspiring. 85 million people and by 2050 the population could double. The market potential for mobile/web services is immense and waiting to be unlocked.

To some dismay, France Telecom runs the only telco. Ironic when you buy a simcard and receive the message, ‘welcome and thank you for choosing our service.’ The Seacom cable has been connected and prices have dropped 80% in the past three months, yet the real impact seems yet to come. Connecting with TEAMS could further increase access, but without a terrestial backbone in place access remains limited. Although only 400.000 people might have access to internet the enthusiasm for social networking is confirmed when 75% of these users can be found on Facebook. The country counts no more than maybe 20 bloggers although these numbers are sure to change fast.

Local techpreneurs know they want to be early and are looking at numerous ways to build services for the market. Advanced mobile services are not yet relevant given low smartphone penetration. Mobile banking and SMS information based services were the most talked about. Setting up locally is quite difficult and often entrepreneurs are connecting with Diaspora in the US. Often the businesses register in the US, get funding from the US and/or share in development. Also a VC network from Germany are looking at Ethiopia as a potential market to engage early and building on the significant German presence in Addis.

The barcamp starting today (after a party last night) will follow last year’s success. And where the first barcamp saw some 300 participants this year’s event will possibly see 700 people come together. There is clearly a growing enthusiasm for a digital future in Ethiopia.