Nigerian Restaurant Management Platform Orda Raises $3.3M In Seed Funding Round

chief executive officer Guy Futi

Orda, a Nigerian food tech platform that offers a cloud-based restaurant operating system to help small, independent eateries overcome these problems, has announced a $3.4 million seed investment. This January, the two-year-old startup raised $1.1 million in pre-seed capital, bringing its total funding this year to $4.5 million.

Quona Capital, an emerging market investor, co-led the round with New York-based FinTech Collective. Existing investors such as LoftyInc Capital, Enza Capital, and the Norrsken Foundation, as well as new venture capital firms such as Outside VC and Far Out Ventures, are among the others.

orda chief executive officer Guy Futi
Orda CEO Guy Futi

One of the food tech’s goals with this fresh investment is to build and scale its payments capability. Others include growing its restaurant network and pursuing pan-African expansion (into South Africa and much later, Ivory Coast). It has strengthened its leadership team in this regard, bringing in Afua Ahwoi, head of operations and strategy (ex-Goldman Sachs), and Modesola Osasomi, head of growth (ex-Barclays Bank), for its next phase of growth.

Why The Investors Invested

Since its inception, the firm has gained significant traction. Futi claims that Orda has seen tremendous adoption among small restaurants in its two markets, Nigeria and Kenya, and that the startup has already achieved product-market fit. His conviction stems from the number of vendors it has attracted, approximately 600, and the speed with which the food tech has onboarded them, in less than a year.

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Orda expects to service more than 1,000 eateries by the end of Q1 2022, according to the CEO, and there are “hundreds more” in the pipeline. Orda’s trades have increased as well. It now processes over 50,000 orders every week for its vendors, which is five times what it did in January, with its gross merchandise value (GMV) increasing by 30% month on month. “We’re witnessing rapid growth in Nigeria and Kenya, with retention rates above 95%,” Futi said.

“When a restaurant owner moves from pen and paper to a fully automated digital platform, it’s incredibly empowering. Suddenly they have insights available to them that can improve their productivity and margins, enabling them to grow their businesses. A solution like Orda can have an outsized impact on small and medium-sized restaurants and the livelihoods of those who operate them,” Kofoworola Agbaje, senior investment associate at Quona Capital said.

A Look At What The Startup Does

Founded in 2020, Orda’s clients are mostly small and medium-sized restaurants. With limited access to technology, these restaurants typically resort to using offline methods, including pen and paper, for things like manual reconciliation and inventory management. Orda’s operating system allows these businesses to handle these parts of their business online, as well as get access to other features, including kitchen display systems, accounting software and integrations with food aggregators such as YC-backed Chowdeck, Bolt Food and Glovo.

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“We take an interesting approach to software and helping restaurant owners set up,” chief executive officer Guy Futi said. “Our software digitizes the process of those who write things in hand and helps them figure out their inventory management and recipe yields.”

Orda’s pricing model allows restaurants to choose between three payment plans: N1,000 ($1.54), N5,000 ($7.69), and N20,000 ($30.76) to gain access to various parts of the software, such as order management and an omnichannel, as well as integrations with food aggregators and delivery platforms and setup personnel. According to Futi, revenue has surged as a result, increasing 30% month on month.

Despite this expansion, developing solutions for these African eateries has been fraught with difficulties, particularly given the absence of a playbook. Orda, for example, has had to configure its cloud-based solution to work offline and allow restaurants to continue logging data when internet access is limited.

Meanwhile, Orda plans to expand the platform’s functionality, notably around financial items, as it seeks to enable lending and payments for its consumers. According to Futi, the platform already processes payments for 10% of its vendors and may begin a big rollout in Q2 of next year.

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When asked if Orda plans to expand into these other categories, Futi said that such a business decision would be unwise because it would divert the startup’s focus away from software development.

“Globally, you see that Sysco isn’t in the same vertical as Toast,” said the founder who launched the startup with Fikayo Akinwale, Mark Edomwande, Kunle Ogungbamila and Namir El-Khouri. “If there’s some sort of collaboration with other players, we’ll be open to that. But from our position, building the right software takes you deep down the rabbit hole and that requires focus.”

Orda restaurant Orda restaurant

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

Restaurant Management Startup, Orda Mulls Africa Expansion

Orda, the Nigerian restaurant management startup has raised a US$1.1 million pre-seed funding round to speed its growth and expand across the continent. The startup was launched in 2020, Orda is a cloud-based restaurant management system provider that hopes to provide one operating system to power African restaurants. Since its launch, the Lagos-based startup has worked with several well-known African and global restaurants including Barcelos, Eric Kayser, Johnny Rockets and Ofadaboy.

Team orda
Team Orda

This pre-seed round was led by Lofty Inc Capital Management, with participation from Techstars – Boulder, Magic Fund, Hustle Fund, Norrsken Foundation, Microtraction, DFS Labs, Oxford Seed Fund, Enza Capital and Agrolay Advisors, as well as Ire Aderinokun, Jesse Ovia, Ademola Adesina and other angel investors. 

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Following the raise, Orda is looking to increase its rate of growth and expansion across the continent. The startup has developed a full-stack approach to integrating local payments, logistic companies while building inventory management, and business analytics for small to medium-sized food businesses. It says it is the only technology solution on the continent that allows restaurants to accept and process all their in-store, website, social media, WhatsApp, Jumia Food, Glovo and Bolt Food orders from one easy-to-use interface.

The startup’s cloud-based solution is currently available for restaurants in Nigeria and Kenya. Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) has been growing at more than 15 per cent week-on-week as Orda now processes thousands of weekly transactions.

Speaking on the inspiration behind the technology, Guy Futi, the startup’s CEO, said the team had kept trying to address the real pain points of chefs, caterers and small restaurants.

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“From that Orda grew. Before Orda, a small food business owner could spend up to four hours a day reconciling transactions while trying to figure out losses. We looked to alleviate that burden. In the process we noticed that food business owners were not fully integrated with local payment solutions, online sales channels, and logistic providers. This made their operations even more difficult,” he said.

Orda was built from a near 18 months of a collaborative customer feedback loop. We listened to everything, from how African restaurants reconcile inventory, how customers pay, to how they handle logistics and more. We can confidently say that no one has done as much work as we have to build an end-to-end solution for our food business owners. We are excited to usher in much needed digitisation to the sector,” said CTO Fikayo Akinwale.

Idris Ayodeji Bello, managing partner of LoftyInc Capital Management, said his team invested in Orda because it was building the core digital infrastructure for restaurants across Africa.

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“The team has done the hard work of figuring out the core problems that African restaurant owners are facing and is building a solution that can revolutionise the food business across the continent. LoftyInc is excited to back a solution-focused team like Orda,” he said.

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

Nigerian Investors Back Restaurant Management Platform Orda In $1.1m Pre-seed Round

Orda

Orda, formerly known as StarKitchens, has raised $1.1 million in a pre-seed round to help it scale its software across Africa. LoftyInc Capital (Nigeria), a pan-African investor, led the round for the startup, which defines itself as a “cloud-based restaurant operating system created for African chefs and food business owners.”

Techstars Boulder (USA), Magic Fund (Nigeria), Hustle Fund (California, USA), Norrsken Foundation (Sweden), Microtraction (Nigeria), DFS Labs (Seattle, USA), Oxford Seed Fund (UK), Enza Capital (Kenya), Agrolay Advisors (Nigeria), and angel investors such as Buycoins’ Ire Aderinokun, Jesse Ovia, and Ademola Adesina are among the other investors in this round.

“There are two kinds of restaurants where the majority of our focus is on — the bukkas [local restaurants] and the small restaurants, for instance,” Orda co-founder and CEO Guy Futi said in a statement.

“These are the restaurants that have been using paper and pen and then that spend three to four hours on reconciliation. They don’t have access to software that does analytics and inventory management right off the gate. So, we decided to build a cloud-based restaurant software tailor-made for Africa’s massive chefs and restaurant industry.”

With the funding, Orda will expand its financial products, particularly in loans, and move into restaurant payment processing. The startup is also relying on the latest investment to expand into South Africa by the end of this year. 

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Why The Investors Invested

The startup has generated considerable traction since was founded. Orda noted in a statement that its gross merchandise value (GMV) increases by 15% week over week while processing up to 10,000 transactions per week.

“We loved investing in Orda because it is building the core digital infrastructure for restaurants across Africa. The team has done the hard work of figuring out the core problems that African restaurant owners are facing and is building a solution that can revolutionise the food business across the continent,” Idris Ayo Bello, the managing partner of lead investor LoftyInc Capital, said. 

Orda
Credits: Orda

A Look At What The Startup Does

The startup was founded in 2020 by Guy Futi, alongside CTO Fikayo Akinwale, Mark Edomwande, Kunle Ogungbamila, and Namir El-Khouri

Orda’s full-stack and end-to-end strategy enables restaurants to conduct online deliveries while also integrating local payments, logistics, inventory management, and business analytics tools, according to CTO Fikayo Akinwale.

“Orda was built from a near 18 months of a collaborative customer feedback loop. We listened to everything, from how African restaurants reconcile inventory, how customers pay, to how they handle logistics and more. We can confidently say that no one has done as much work as we have to build an end-to-end solution for our food business owners.”, said the CTO in a statement.

Restaurants who utilize the management platform also have access to a dashboard that allows them to take and process orders from meal delivery services such as Jumia Food, Glovo, and Bolt Food, as well as in-store, online, and through social media platforms such as WhatsApp.

No other company in Orda’s industry, according to the company, has made such integrations. These integrations, which include an ePos solution that allows restaurants to operate in remote places with limited or no internet access, give Orda a competitive advantage, according to Futi.

Futi further stated that restaurant adoption has been “extremely frictionless” in the markets where it operates (Nigeria and Kenya), and that the cloud-based software doubles its growth rate every three weeks.

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Orda currently charges restaurants $5 (2,500) to $50 (30,000) each month to use its software.

“We want to become like the Toast of Africa,” expressed the chief executive, adding that Orda would also double down on its white-label mobile applications (similar to Toast Takeout) for restaurants that leverage its cloud-based infrastructure to operate.

Orda restaurant Orda restaurant

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