Ghanaian Healthcare Startup mPharma Raises $17 million In New Round Of Funding To Further Expand 

chief executive officer at mPharma, Greg Rockson

mPharma, a leading health startup in Ghana and one of the most valuable health startups in Africa has secured $17 million in its latest funding round. The Accra-based company has also announced the appointment to its board of Helena Foulkes, former president of CVS Pharmacy, the largest pharmacy retail chain in the United States.

chief executive officer at mPharma, Greg Rockson
chief executive officer at mPharma, Greg Rockson

“Bringing a DFI with extensive government contacts across Africa would improve our appeal and help strengthen our corporate governance because of the ESG [environmental, social and governance] rules under which they operate,” said chief executive officer at mPharma, Greg Rockson.

Read also:Ghana Further Waives Digital Banking Transactions Fee Till June 20

Here Is All You Need To Know

  • Investors in this round of funding include the CDC Group, the UK’s development finance arm, alongside several of mPharma ’s previous investors including Dr. Daniel Vasella, ex-chief executive of Novartis, Silicon Valley investor Jim Breyer and Dompe Holdings, the family office of the Italian pharmaceutical giant.
  • According to Rockson, this round of funding was nothing short of “opportunistic” as the company had been looking for a chance to work with a development finance institution with deep roots in Africa like CDC.
  • Rockson says mPharma’s work sees it increasingly interacting with government agencies on the continent. 
  • mPharma has raised over $50 million since its seed round in 2015.
  • Last year, barely six years old, mPharma, which manages prescription drug inventory for pharmacies and their suppliers, acquired Kenya’s second-largest pharmacy chain, Haltons. With that transaction, mPharma entered the East African regional market for the first time, meaning that the young Ghanaian company would now control 20 Haltons stores spread across Kenya’s capital Nairobi and the second most populated coastal city of Mombasa.
  • Rockson said it has, however, expanded the number of outlets to 30 and seen revenue double. 

“We had mapped out a plan for expansion when we bought Haltons and soon paid off its debt and owed salaries to build trust with the staff, but the lockdown has cut our hours and slowed growth,” he said.

With this round of funding, mPharma hopes to reduce this.

Why The Investors Invested

CDC Group, the lead investor in this round has been through the Catalyst Fund been investing directly in businesses.

“The mission of mPharma to make pharmaceuticals more affordable and accessible is striking,” says Foulkes. CVS is well known in the US for its rewards loyalty program and using customer retail data to target promotions. “I’m interested in the different ways this young company can grow, they have their own chain, loyalty programs, there’s plenty of potential,” says Foulkes

Foulkes was introduced to Rockson by board member and early Facebook investor Jim Breyer. He had prior to this present role spent 25 years at CVS, before she left in February 2018 to run Hudson Bay, the North American retail group parent of Saks Fifth Avenue. She stepped down from the role in March.

A Look At What Startup mPharma Does

MPharma tracks which drugs are available at any given time and where, giving patients reliable access to medicines and — with better inventory management — more competitive pricing. Using its proprietary Vendor Management Inventory (VMI) system and QualityRx franchise model, which replicates similar features seen with co-operative retailers in the US and Europe, employing common branding, inventory systems and collective purchasing, mPharma is attempting to shake the market up a bit. Both proprietary rights are already being used in over 250 pharmacies in Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

“We processed almost 6000 prescriptions in our database… But our mission is much more complicated than just giving software. We invest in the hospitals we select. We realized that if we wanted to bring onboard health facilities we had to go beyond just thinking about software, we had to look at the whole ecosystem. So we connect hospitals and pharmacies to our network and we bundle connectivity, device and the application as a service,’’ Rockson told Startupbrics.

 

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh is a Lagos-based lawyer who has advised startups across Africa on issues such as startup funding (Venture Capital, Debt financing, private equity, angel investing etc), taxation, strategies, etc. He also has special focus on the protection of business or brands’ intellectual property rights ( such as trademark, patent or design) across Africa and other foreign jurisdictions.
He is well versed on issues of ESG (sustainability), media and entertainment law, corporate finance and governance.
He is also an award-winning writer.
He could be contacted at udohrapulu@gmail.com

Ghanaian Startup mPharma Acquires Kenyan Second-largest Pharmacy Chain

Barely six years old, Ghanaian pharmacy start-up mPharma, which manages prescription drug inventory for pharmacies and their suppliers, is sealing a deal on Kenyaan second-largest pharmacy chain, Haltons.

With this transaction, mPharma is entering the East African regional market for the first time, meaning that the young Ghanaian company will now control 20 Haltons stores spread across Kenya’s capital Nairobi and the second most populated coastal city of Mombasa. Baring any last minutes changes and subject to Kenya’s Capital Markets Authority’s approval, the deal would be sealed for a whopping a $12 million Series B funding round led by 4DX Ventures, an Accra/San Francisco venture capital firm, and Nairobi-based Novastar Ventures.

Greg Rockson of mPharma

So far, the sum of $9.7 million has been paid and the full round is expected to be completed in a couple of weeks with other investors including Unbound Ventures, the VC arm of India’s Bharti Mittal Family office, early Facebook investor Jim Breyer and former Novartis chief executive Daniel Vasella, who has joined MPharma’s board

Key Facts To Note About The Deal

  • The startup raised $6.6 million in Nov 2017 after raising a seed round of $5 million in 2015.
  • MPharma was founded by Greg Rockson to primarily improve the efficiency of pharmaceutical supply chains in African countries. 
  • Its proprietary Vendor Management Inventory (VMI) system is already being used in over 250 pharmacies in Ghana, Nigeria, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
  • Rockson said the unusual deal came about as part of conversations to market its VMI platform to the chain, but realized there was an opportunity to prove just how much the efficiencies of managing both front end and back end could help African pharmacies drive down their biggest costs: inventory.
  • The startup is taking control of Haltons from Fanisi Capital, a Mauritius-based private equity firm, but senior management at Haltons will retain a stake in the business.
  • Last year, Haltons raked in $1.5 million in revenue, Mary Ngige, Haltons’ managing director said.
  • mPharma is expected to meet a tough game in Kenya from the much bigger Goodlife Pharmacy which has 47 stores and is owned by South African investor Leapfrog Investments, which invested $22 million in 2016.
  • At one point in its history, Haltons was the biggest pharmacy chain in the whole of Kenya with more than 50 stores but slimmed down, closing unprofitable stores and working on improving its service delivery. 
  • Ngige says the aim is for its new ownership and better systems to work on methods to bring back to Haltons’ past glory.
  • Ngige also says Haltons was attracted to the deal because the pharmacy desires to improve efficiency within its supply chain using better inventory management software which ultimately aligned with Halton’s own mission to improve drug accessibility and affordability. Consequently, they hope on mPharma’s business and their technology to help Haltons fine-tune their model and improve competitively.
  • In the short term, mPharma’s team is focused on expanding its VMI and QualityRx platforms to over 14,000 community pharmacies in Ghana, Nigeria and Kenya, using those platforms to leverage more market power with pharmaceutical companies and also use its “‘just-in-time” inventory management to lower prices for its retail customers. 
  • mPharma is also preparing to partner with African governments in order to help improve drug availability through better centralized systems, in the long term.

Rockson Is Using the QualityRx Franchise Model.

Using the QualityRx franchise model, which replicates similar features seen with co-operative retailers in the US and Europe, employing common branding, inventory systems and collective purchasing, mPharma is attempting to shake the market up a bit.

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“We’ve not always been able to control the customer experience and fully address the issue of drug affordability with our pharmacy clients particularly because they manage their profit margins,” says Greg Rockson.

“Through our QualityRx service, we’re starting to invest in improving the customer experience and pricing that patients get from pharmacies. Haltons will serve as testing ground for us to develop patient-centered services we can provide to our franchise pharmacies. This way we can encourage lower margins and pass the savings on to the customers.”

Charles Rapulu Udoh

Charles Rapulu Udoh a Lagos-based Lawyer with special focus on Business Law, Intellectual Property Rights, Entertainment and Technology Law. He is also an award-winning writer. Working for notable organisations so far has exposed him to some of industry best practices in business, finance strategies, law, dispute resolution and data analytics both in Nigeria and across the world.