Tech mogul and co-founder of Paystack, Shola Akinlade, has established a football club, Sporting Lagos Football Club, as part of a community project that he believes will nurture the next generation of Nigerian sporting talent. The club’s governing body will be led by Ekene Agu, a Paystack employee, Colin Udoh, a former Super Eagles media officer, and Fola Olatunji-David, an early stage investor and Former Google employee.
The Lagos-based side will also play its first game in the Nigerian National League second division on Feb. 12 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Lagos, Nigeria.
With famous names like Godwin Enakhena, CEO of Global Media, who will serve as the club’s chairman, and Uzo Okonkwo, involved, the club’s governing body will be led by Ekene Agu, a Paystack employee, Colin Udoh, a former Super Eagles media officer, and Fola Olatunji-David, an early stage investor and Former Google employee.
Speaking on the establishment of the Sporting Lagos Football Club, Akinlade explained that the platform aligns with the movement to harness football’s transformative power to bring together people from all walks of life and create economic opportunities on a large scale.
According to him, “in the last few years, several platforms have emerged to provide opportunities for young Nigerians to perform at the highest level of excellence. Young Nigerians came together to turn technology, music, and cinema into hugely successful industries that command global attention, and we’ve built flourishing ecosystems around these platforms that benefit millions of people. In sports as well, we have a long history of individual Nigerians using football – and sports in general – as a platform to ascend to global recognition.”
Akinlade added that he would remain fully focused on Paystack and building payments infrastructure for Africa. “I’ll provide most of the financial investment necessary to get this off the ground and will entrust the full-time team to realise our bold ambitions,” he said.
Speaking on the club’s ambition, Enakhena said the team’s spell in the Nigerian second division would not be more than a season before joining the top teams in the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL).
“I don’t see myself as someone that wants to run an NNL team, we tried our best to get an NPFL team, but it didn’t work out. We are an NNL team for now, but we will not spend more than one season in the second division,” he said.
The Lagos-based side is set to play its first game in the Nigerian National League second division on Feb. 12 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium in Lagos, Nigeria, with ambitions to advance to the national league’s first division in the coming years. The club has also invited the general public to support the establishment by becoming Founding Members at a one-time fee of NGN 50,000 (or ~$100).
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
Since being acquired by the American Stripe in October 2020 for little over $200 million, Paystack ’s ambition has been to extend its expertise across the continent’s 54 nations, with the Ivory Coast being the second African hub — after South Africa — to be affected by this expansionist desire. The Nigerian fintech, wants to begin operations there this year, according to Henri Huet, the company’s growth manager.
“In 2021, we want to get into all African hubs: East Africa, North Africa and West Africa. That’s why we’re here in Abidjan to start with the Ivory Coast, ”he said.
Paystack is the first innovative fintech in the Federal Republic of Nigeria to get funding from Y Combinator, one of the world’s most efficient startup accelerators. Paystack’s aim is to enable merchants and enterprises accept online payments and transfer money. It was co-founded by Nigerian Shola Akinlade. She began her efforts in Nigeria in 2016, and they were a success. Henri Huet appreciates the fact that half of all online transactions in this country of more than 200 million people now go through Paystack, indicating that e-commerce prospects are expanding.
The company moved to Ghana in 2018, and subsequently to South Africa in May 2021. Paystack is currently attempting to win the Ivorian market as part of its international growth.
“We are very excited about the Ivory Coast. It is a growing market: 7% of GDP on average over the last ten years,” explained Henri Huet, before asserting that this country — where 90% of e-commerce transactions are paid on delivery and in cash — has “great potential for online payments”.
Then he added:
“It means that the impact we can have on the market is really huge. We see growth, potential, we also see the beginnings of what happened in Nigeria five years ago; and it can all really speed up. “
Paystack wants to impact online payment by providing more “fluid with fewer friction” solutions. “Consumers, on the other side, need to have greater faith in these solutions and be more willing to pay online,” Henri Huet said. Paystack’s history “may also comfort consumers that the payment they make online is safe and will not be an issue for them,” according to him.
Paystack has received funding from Visa and Tencent, a Chinese internet and mobile services firm that owns the WeChat messaging platform, in addition to Stripe.
Paystack Cote D’ivoire Paystack Cote D’ivoire
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
Paystack, the Nigerian fintech startup that was acquired by American payments company Stripe for over $200m last year, doesn’t look like it will be left out of the ongoing waves of expansion sweeping across startups in Africa. The startup is headed for South Africa, out of its home country Nigeria, which has been disemboweling startups with unfavourable regulations in recent times. The South African expansion comes on the heels of a six-month pilot phase in the country.
“South Africa is one of the continent’s most important markets, and our presence there is an important step in our mission to accelerate trade in Africa,” said Shola Akinlade, CEO of Paystack.
“We are delighted to continue to develop the financial infrastructure that empowers ambitious businesses in Africa, helps them scale and connects them to global markets,” he added.
Founded in 2015 by Shola Akinlade and Ezra Olubi, Paystack helps businesses in Africa get paid by anyone, anywhere in the world. The company is active in Nigeria and Ghana, before expanding to South Africa.
A Strategic Way Of Dodging Regulatory Bullets
Startups are on high alert. Regulators across Africa, especially in Nigeria, are not smiling any more.
Nigeria’s central bank recently blocked banks in the country from hosting accounts associated with cryptocurrency trading. It has also stopped fintech startups from receiving remittances into Nigeria. The country’s Lagos state government has also banned bike-hailing activities on its major highways, a singular act that has put so many investments in bike-hailing startups in the West African country at risks of failure.
Shooting sporadic shots of expansion into other African countries is therefore a strategic way of diversifying regulatory risks.
Paystack’s fellow country startup, Flutterwave, apart from headquartering in the United States, also maintains legal presence in countries where it is currently in operations. This strategy was crucial in assisting the startup to achieve a unicorn status.
Before Paystack is a host of other startups, some of which are listed below.
S/N
AFRICAN STARTUP
SECTOR
BASE COUNTRY OF OPERATIONS
COUNTRY EXPANDED INTO IN 2021 (AS AT MAY 7TH)
1
mPharma
Healthtech
Ghana
Ethiopia
2
Aza Finance
Fintech
Kenya
South Africa
3
Gozem
Ride-hailing
Togo
Gabon
4
Andela
Edtech
New York, USA
Latin, South America
5
SWVL
Ride-hailing
Egypt
Saudi Arabia
6
GOMYCODE
Edtech
Tunisia
Morocco; Senegal
7
FairMoney
Fintech
Nigeria
India
8
Autochek
Car listing
Nigeria
Ghana
9
Daystar Power
Solar energy
Nigeria
Togo
10
ZeePay
Fintech
Ghana
Zambia
11
Catch
Ride-hailing
Ethiopia
Kenya
12
AURA
Security
South Africa
Kenya
13
Paystack
Fintech
Nigeria
South Africa
Data not exhaustive of all expansions in the year stated
Aiming At Unicorn Status
Another way of explaining the spate of expansion among African startups is that the chase for ‘unicorn’ status is on, especially after Flutterwave became the continent’s latest startup to join the gang. The Nigerian fintech launched operations almost immediately at the time it was founded, across Ghana, Kenya, and Uganda (and later to other countries), a key factor which eventually aided it in attaining the highly coveted $1bn valuation.
Paystack South Africa Paystack South Africa
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
Nigerianfintech startup Paystack which was recently acquired by American giant Stripe has entered into a partnership with Google to empower at least 500,000 Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa, via the Google Economy Recovery Program for SMEs. Paystack in a statement posted on its official Twitter handle said that the partnership is to help the SMEs “restart, recover and digitize their businesses with new tools, financial support and training.”
According to Shola Akinlade, Founder of Paystack, the partnership with Google would enable reliability, “which would guarantee that all businesses paid via Paystack are thoroughly checked for legitimacy and credibility. In a low-trust environment like Nigeria, where many people are paying online for the first time, it’s important to deliver a safe, fraud-free experience. This is a responsibility that Paystack takes extremely seriously.”
Paystack’s partnership with Google will help SMEs to grow and digitize their businesses with new tools, financial support, training and help businesses in the selected African countries – Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa to grow and expand their country’s economy. It will further help businesses bring their ideas to market and grow their online sales, using Paystack’s collection of simple, powerful commerce tools. In 2018, Paystack partnered with other tech-based platforms like Truecaller, a smartphone application that has features of caller-identification, call-blocking, flash-messaging call-recording and more to facilitate online payments across the African continent.
The partnership with Truecaller involves using Truecaller’s database of verified phone numbers to verify payments for transactions performed on their platform. Paystack and Google share a lot in common, especially their dedication to helping businesses in Africa find growth by leveraging technology to provide them with the essential tools needed to find more customers and grow online sales.
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
When Ezra Olubi set out to build a little known payments startup in 2015, alongside his university school mate, Shola Akinlade, he never knew that it would five years later be bought for $200 million. But that has happened!
In a remarkable African startup exit, exciting for American investors who constituted more than 40 percent of all venture capital investments on the continent between 2014–2019, Silicon Valley-based payments and software-as-a-service company, Stripe, has acquired Olubi’s startup, Paystack, in a deal reported to be worth more than $200 million.
While this is a huge entrepreneurial respite — and of course real cash — for him, the journey to building one of Africa’s strongest fintech companies has just begun.
“I quit my job in 2015 so I could work on Paystack,” Olubi said. “My friends and family definitely weren’t surprised. They were like: ‘Oh, he’s doing another new thing again!’ I’d been working with startups for pretty much my whole career until that point anyway. I’d always chosen startups instead of jobs with high salaries at big-name companies.”
With the excitement of a major Nigerian startup acquisition still raging on, a few insights into Paystack’s success may be helpful.
Building A Local Solution With A Global Mindset
By industry stereotypes, Paystack’s founders Shola Akinlade and Ezra Olubi could easily have been dismissed as high-risk investments. Both founders studied in Nigeria, with some of the lowest ranked educational institutions, and have equally lived much of their lives in the West African country. And so there is every reason to doubt their capacity to deliver good returns on investments. Which is why both founders instantly sought to first plug the startup into the global ecosystem before deeply treading the startup path.
“After starting the company, the first thing Shola and I did was apply for Y Combinator,” said Olubi. “It seemed like a really farfetched idea. I remember thinking: ‘There’s no way we can get into this program. We’re just a couple of young guys in Nigeria.’ We got rejected the first time, but we applied again and were accepted. We were the first ever startup from Nigeria to enter the program. It was a surreal time in my life. Firstly, because I had never traveled outside of Nigeria before. Secondly, because being accepted into the program was strong validation. I knew we needed to do everything possible to make the most of this opportunity. That meant a lot of learning — fast.”
Without meaning to deter intending startup founders in Africa, it is noteworthy to point out that there is always some “herd mentality” surrounding globally validated startups. Paystack’s validation by Y Combinator was a deal breaker. It gave room for immediate funding to the startup from global giants like Tencent, Stripe, Visa, among others.
But that was 5 years ago and things have changed. In as much as Y Combinator is still glamorised, there has been a consistent rise in the number of venture capital firms and accelerator programs across Africa.
The success of Paystack’s founders, nevertheless, marks a watershed in the Nigerian startup ecosystem, for it is the first time a startup founded by purely local talents will be witnessing the biggest startup acquisition in Nigeria.
Therefore building a local solution with a global mindset is crucial.
When It Comes To The Biggest Startup Acquisitions In Africa, Investors Are Biased Towards Fintech
Paystack’s high-figure acquisition is a confirmation of investors’ bias towards fintech in Africa. Record number of fintech startups have been acquired in Africa within the shortest period of time after they were founded. From Sendwave to Beyonic, the table below captures it clearly.
“It is really pattern recognition; they see the kind of deals that have happened in the past and they try to mimic that,” said Jean-Claude Homawoo, Co-founder & Managing Partner, Lori. “They (investors) look for the same makeup over and over again. So for founders that don’t look like those…in the past there is a hurdle.’’
It is therefore relevant that startup founders acquaint themselves with the sectors that have attracted the most acquisitions in Africa in the past. Although this may be one of the earliest guiding principles in choosing which startup idea to pursue, market size, market fit and strikingly innovative solutions (check out South Africa’s SweepSouth, for instance) and overwhelming passion from founders have always dragged investors’ interests into new areas.
However, since startups are themselves largely untested territories (considering that a majority of them have not existed for an appreciable length of time nor have they been affected by policy changes or market trends), investors tend to stick more to sectors that have proven to return most highly on their investments.
Apart from recording the highest number of high-figure acquisitions in Africa, fintechs have also topped the chart for venture capital funding in Africa. In 2019 alone, out of a total of 250 deals amounting to a record-breaking $2.02 billion reported by data firm Partech, financial technology companies (fintech), at 41%, received the lion’s share of the whole investment sum.
S/N
Name of Company
Sector
Year Founded
Year Acquired
Value of Acquisition
Acquirer
Country
1
Sendwave
Fintech
2014
2020
$500m
WorldRemit
US; Kenya
2
Beyonic
Fintech
2006
2020
Undisclosed
MFS Africa
Uganda
3
Apposit
Software Development
2017
2020
Undisclosed
Paga
Ethiopia
4
Harmonica
Online dating
2017
2019
Undisclosed
MatchGroup
Egypt
5
StarterHub
Community
2015
2019
Undisclosed
RiseUp
Egypt
6
Menabytes
Media
2017
2019
Undisclosed
RiseUp
Egypt
7
Mobisol
Off-grid energy
2011
2019
Undisclosed
Engie
Kenya
8
PayFast
Fintech
2007
2019
Undisclosed
DPO Group
South Africa
9
Paystack
Fintech
2015
2020
Over $200m
Stripe
Nigeria
10
iHub
Innovation Hub
2010
2019
Undisclosed
CcHub
Kenya
11
Surf Kenya
Wi-Fi
2015
2019
Undisclosed
BRCK
Kenya
12
Haltons
Healthcare
2013
2019
$5 million
mPharma
Kenya
13
Amplify
Fintechs
2016
2019
Undisclosed
OneFi
Nigeria
14
OLX Africa
Online Classifieds
2012
2019
Undisclosed
Jiji
Nigeria
15
Konga
Ecommerce
2012
2018
$10m (Reportedly)
Zinox
Nigeria
16
Kngine
AI
2008
2018
Undisclosed
Samsung Electronics
Egypt
17
QuickHelp
AI (chatbot)
2015
2018
Undisclosed
1001 Squared
Nigeria
18
Cape Networks
SaaS
2013
2018
Undisclosed
HP
South Africa
19
orderTalk
Foodtech
1998
2018
Undisclosed
Uber Eats
South Africa
20
TopCheck
Ecommerce
2015
2018
Undislosed
Silvertree
Nigeria
21
Careem
E-hailing
2012
2020
$3.1 Billion
Uber
Egypt
*Select African startups acquired between 2017 and 2020. Statistics are not exhaustive of all acquisitions.
Long Term Friendship With Investors Almost Always Defeats Short Term Desperation For VC Funding
Paystack’s acquisition is remarkable in that it is one of the few African startups where the investor became the buyer. In looking to build a startup therefore, getting the right investors has, again, been confirmed as the single most important thing that will determine the success of the startup in the long run.
“When we invest in startups, we’re not trying to tie them up with complicated strategic investments,” Patrick Collison, Stripe’s co-founder and CEO said. “We try to understand the broader ecosystem, and keep our eyes pointed outwards and see where we can help.”
Therefore, while there may be pressing need to raise funds now, it is equally important to look at what the startup’s relationship with its investors will look like, say, 20 years from now.
Co-Founding With Less Squabbles
In as much as it is good to be in a hurry founding startups and bridging skills gap on the team, it is important to be mindful of who makes up the starting team.
“I first met my co-founder, Shola Akinlade, back in 2002,” said Olubi, “we hit it off at a software exhibition in my first year of university and we’ve been friends ever since. We’ve been working together, on and off, for more than a decade now. While Shola was consulting for a bank, he stumbled onto an easy way of doing recurring billing. Knowing my background and interests, he came to me and said: ‘Let’s start a company together. I want you to be a part of this with me.”
In essence, business acumen with a deeper touch of friendship may help take the startup project far.
lessons from Paystack acquisition lessons from Paystack acquisition lessons from Paystack acquisition lessons from Paystack acquisitionlessons from Paystack acquisition lessons from Paystack acquisition lessons from Paystack acquisition
A Look At What Paystack Does
Founded in 2015, Paystack, based out of Lagos, Nigeria provides a quick way to integrate payments services into an online or offline transaction by way of an application-programming interface (API).
The company currently has around 60,000 customers, including small businesses, larger corporates, fintechs, educational institutions and online betting companies, and the plan will be for it to continue operating independently, the companies said.
“Back in 2007,” Olubi said, “when I was working for another company, the internet was still quite inaccessible in Nigeria, outside of workplaces and cyber cafes. People relied on their mobile phones, but it wasn’t easy to top up airtime. We were working on a solution, and created a wallet system where customers could prepay and then send a text message when they wanted more airtime.”
“I thought: ‘If people have all this money stored with us, why don’t we let them spend it all over the internet?’ I built an API around that idea and found myself in the world of online payments. Eventually, I left that company and went on to do other things, but the seed was already sown in my mind for what would later become Paystack,” he adds.
Paystack’s acquisition is the biggest acquisition to date to come out of Nigeria, as well as Stripe’s biggest acquisition to date anywhere in the world.
“There is enormous opportunity,” said Collison. “In absolute numbers, Africa may be smaller right now than other regions, but online commerce will grow about 30% every year. And even with wider global declines, online shoppers are growing twice as fast. Stripe thinks on a longer time horizon than others because we are an infrastructure company. We are thinking of what the world will look like in 2040–2050.”
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