How Afropolitan Raises $2.1 Million to Build Africa’s Digital Nation

The ambitious startup that aims to build a digital nation for Africans recently raised pre-seed funding of $2.1 million, according to its co-founder, Eche Emole. The startup which was founded in 2016 by Eche Emole and Chika Uwazie started out as an organisation that organised parties, events, and festivals for the African diaspora.

But in 2019, it made a name for itself after it organised parties for international travellers who had visited Ghana to attend the Year of Return event. That year, the number of international travellers peaked at 1.13 million, from 960,000 in 2018, which helped contribute an additional $1.9 billion to the Ghanaian economy.

Afropolitan

However, the startup suffered a hiccup when while planning gib for another edition of its party in Beyond the Return in 2020, the global pandemic broke out and countries went into lockdown and physical events ceased. But the traction it had gained in 2019 helped it pivot to the media. It got on the audio platform, Clubhouse, and built a community of 50,000 black people.

Read also Nigerian B2B Marketplace Betastore Raises $2.5M To Help Informal Businesses With Stock-Outs, Funding

The company said that its journey into this digital nation was inspired by an article written by the former CTO of Coinbase, Balaji Srinivasan, in April 2021, titled “How to start a new country” in the 21st century. Srinivasan envisions that this new country, the “network state,” he calls it, will be ”built on the cloud first.   “Our idea is to proceed to the cloud first, land last. Rather than starting with the physical territory, we start with the digital community. We recruit online for a group of people interested in founding a new virtual social network, a new city, and eventually a new country,” he writes.

Srinivasan conceives a network state as a digital nation built without the historical constraints of a physical nation, and that presents citizens with a fresh stab at societal and financial freedom.

“A network state is a social network with an agreed-upon leader, an integrated cryptocurrency, a definite purpose, a sense of national consciousness, and a plan to crowdfund territory,” Balaji writes in another article.

Alongside Srinivasan who later invested in the startup, there are over 25 other angel investors including Iyinoluwa Aboyeji of Future Africa, Olugbenga Agboola of Flutterwave, Elizabeth Yin of Hustle Fund, Shola Akinlade of Paystack, Ian Lee of Syndicate, Walter Baddoo of 4DX Ventures, Jason Njoku of IROKOtv, Tobenna Arodiogbu of CloudTrucks, Ngozi Dozie of Carbon, and Dare Obasanjo, Senior Product Manager at Meta. Hashed, Atlantica Ventures, RallyCap Ventures, Microtraction, and Cultur3 Capital are among the venture capital firms that participated in this round.

Read also Greenage Tech Secures $500K To Boost Solar Capacity In Nigeria’s South East

Emole is convinced that Africa has the most need for a digital nation because of the numerous failed states on the continent. He explained that lingering poverty (which sees that 9 of the 10 countries with the highest poverty rates are African), coups d’etat, civil wars and self-imposed autocratic leaders have starved Africa of viable socio-economic opportunities. Emole also said that #EndSARS, a 2-week protest against police brutality in his home country, Nigeria, made him realise that his country had competent people and yet that doesn’t translate to good governance. “It doesn’t matter how well the standards are doing when the bad governance shows up. It affects everything around it. We’ve tried engineering our way out of these problems, and it’s not working,” Emole said.

Emole said that Afropolitan wants to solve the problem of scarcity that black people face globally, which manifests in an inability to access institutions, money, jobs, and quality living by creating a digital nation that can enable black people worldwide to build abundant lives.

Emole envisions a digital nation as Facebook—the biggest social media platform in the world with over almost 3 billion users—filled with people with shared values and governed by a single cryptocurrency,

Read also South African Payments Startup Talk360 Raises $4M Seed Funding Round

Afropolitan’s digital nation will be built in 4 phases. In the first phase, it will admit people into its community or decentralised autonomous organisation (DAO), with NFTs serving as digital passports. In the second phase, it will build a super app that will allow people to monitor their holdings, send money to anyone across borders, earn by contributing to the DAO, and buy goods and services from one another. The next phase is what is called a “minimum viable state” which will allow it to offer some government services—case in point, help Africans stuck in the Russian-Ukraine crisis. Afterwards, it intends to push for full-scale sovereignty and acquire physical lands in cities across the world. “Think a ‘Chinatown/Afropolitan Town’ in every city in the world where our members can establish a physical presence to create economic opportunities. Our network state will serve as the capital that governs these enclaves that will serve as embassies,” Afropolitan said in a statement.

One of the VCs that invested in Afropolitan, Shima Capital, believes that Africa’s population; macroeconomics and socioeconomic states are similar to the one that positioned the South East Asian region to capture value during the Web 2 technology boom. “We believe Africa is the next emerging economy that will significantly benefit from the technology paradigm shift from Web 2 to Web 3. For this value capture to take place, you need catalysts like Afropolitan,” Shima Capital said.

Read also Egypt’s Fintech MNT-Halan Closes $150M Securitized Bond Issuance

“The African diaspora represents roughly 150 million people, while the continent is home to nearly 1.5 billion, with 70% in sub-Saharan Africa under 30. As such, its demographics make Africa one of this century’s most compelling growth stories; yet its intellectual, creative, and cultural capital remains overlooked, underfunded, and undervalued. Afropolitan aims to change that,” Cultur3 Capital, said. It also said it believes in Afropolitan’s community approach: “Talking about ‘community’ is easy. Building it is hard. We at Cultur3 couldn’t be more excited to support Afropolitan in its mission to serve the African diaspora’s vast and deep talent. This community-first approach, combined with their unmatched network of Africa’s top entrepreneurs, artists, and creators, will be the key that unlocks the region’s vast yet underrepresented talent.”

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Afropolitan Gets $2.1 Million to Build a Digital Nation

Afropolitan, a business that seeks to create a digital nation for Africans, has raised $2.1 million in pre-seed funding.

Over 25 angel investors are involved, including Iyinoluwa Aboyeji of Future Africa, Olugbenga Agboola of Flutterwave, Elizabeth Yin of Hustle Fund, Shola Akinlade of Paystack, Ian Lee of Syndicate, Walter Baddoo of 4DX Ventures, Jason Njoku of IROKOtv, Tobenna Arodiogbu of CloudTrucks, Ngozi Dozie of Carbon. 

Afropolitan
Source: Afropolitan

Among the venture capital firms that participated in this round were Hashed, Atlantica Ventures, RallyCap Ventures, Microtraction, and Cultur3 Capital.

Read also Absa Warns That South Africa’s Manufacturing Sector is Shaken

According to Afropolitan co-founder Eche Emole, they want to solve the scarcity problem that black people face globally, which manifests in an inability to access institutions, money, jobs, and a high standard of living, by creating a digital nation that will allow black people around the world to build abundant lives.

The digital nation of Afropolitan will be constructed in four stages. It will let people into its community or decentralised autonomous organisation (DAO) in the first phase, with NFTs serving as digital passports.

In the second phase, it will create a super app that will let people to track their holdings, transmit money across borders, earn money by contributing to the DAO, and buy products and services from one another.

Read also Nigerian B2B Marketplace Betastore Raises $2.5M To Help Informal Businesses With Stock-Outs, Funding

The next stage, known as a “minimum viable state,” will allow it to provide some government services, including as assisting Africans caught up in the Russian-Ukraine situation.

Following that, it plans to push for complete sovereignty and buy actual territories in cities around the world.

Afropolitan, which debuted in 2016, offers a variety of community-led experiences for Africans and others in the diaspora through travel, events, and media. Its events arm, which is focused on Afrobeats parties, concerts, and festivals, made a statement in 2019 when it took part in Ghana’s “The Year of Return” event. The number of overseas visitors to Ghana reached that year at 1.13 million, up from slightly under 960,000 in 2018.

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer, who has several years of experience working in Africa’s burgeoning tech startup industry. He has closed multi-million dollar deals bordering on venture capital, private equity, intellectual property (trademark, patent or design, etc.), mergers and acquisitions, in countries such as in the Delaware, New York, UK, Singapore, British Virgin Islands, South Africa, Nigeria etc. He’s also a corporate governance and cross-border data privacy and tax expert. 
As an award-winning writer and researcher, he is passionate about telling the African startup story, and is one of the continent’s pioneers in this regard. You can book a session and speak with him using the link: https://insightsbyexperts.com/view_expert/charles-rapulu-udoh