African App Launchpad, the competition set up by the Egyptian government through the ministry of Information Technology Industry Development Agency (ITIDA) has announced the winners of the second edition of its African App Launchpad competition. The prize money totaled $72,000 was given out to startups from across the continent. ITIDA first held the African App Launchpad competition last year, with six startups eventually sharing a total of US$60,000 in cash prizes.
The second edition of the competition had been extended to startups from 21 African countries, awarding US$72,000 in prize money. Startups were invited to apply in one of two categories – Game Development or App Development. The winners have now been announced, with Egypt’s FitBot winning the gaming track and Nigeria’s Healthbotics coming out on top of the app track. Each secured US$12,000, while Microsoft is sponsoring a go-to-market programme for each.Various second and third placed startups banked US$8,000 and US$4,000 respectively. The rest of the finalists each got US$1,000.
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
The coronavirus-infested 2020 has finally gone, but its fears still linger. Apart from defining that year in terms of the pandemic, it would also go down in history as the only year that really tested the resilience and elasticity of the continent’s nascent startup ecosystem. With prolonged lockdowns and official declarations against physical meetings, the continent’s startups were denied access to their critical markets as well as funding. Many died. Many are yet to recover. But while the continent’s startup founders ponder over these memories, the new year — 2021 — however, would most likely present some of the biggest opportunities for the startup ecosystem yet.
What Should African Startups Expect From The Year?
Coronavirus, Insistent; Or A Related Pandemic?
The world is not entirely healed from the coronavirus pandemic, and so there is every reason to still prepare for the worst. African startups should, therefore, not jubilate yet. However, the proliferations of curative medicine for the virus has restored some hope, although speculations remain rife as to how soon African countries will have access to enough vaccine doses to cater to the continent’s 1.2 billion people. Take for instance, the People’s Vaccine Alliance — a coalition of campaign organisations including Oxfam, Amnesty International and Global Justice Now — has condemned rich countries for “hoarding” vaccine doses to the detriment of poorer nations.
“Canada tops the chart with enough vaccines to vaccinate each Canadian five times. Updated data shows that rich nations representing just 14 per cent of the world’s population have bought up 53 per cent of all the most promising vaccines so far,” the alliance said in a statement.
Founders should, therefore, still stay on high alert. Check out our prediction on how the coronavirus would affect access to venture capital for African startups in 2020. If you are a founder, how has Sequoia Capital’s early warning message for surviving the pandemic helped you?
A Year of the Startup Act
Undoubtedly, 2021 may be the best year yet to found a startup in most African countries. For instance, founders in Tunisia — Africa’s first country to pass a Startup Act — would most likely have increased access to funding under the country’s Startup Act. Recall that Smart Capital, a Tunisian organisation in charge of administering the country’s Startup Act had announced new waves of funding commitments in support of the country’s startup ecosystem. Tunisian startups should, therefore, expect, apart from being given “startup labels”, the possibility of being directly funded, courtesy of the Startup Act.
This is also the case for startups in Algeria. The year 2021 will be great for them in terms of taxation and promotion of their ventures. First, the country’s recent decree creating a national committee for the labelling of startups, incubators and innovative projects is a big game changer. Consequently, as a result of the decree, from 2021, labelled startups in the north African country will pay zero tax on their corporate profits, VAT and professional services. The country has also, recently launched a national fund for startups. And with the 27-year-old startup minister, Oualid El-Mahdi Yacine, still at the helms of affairs in the country, a lot of positive developments might also be recorded.
For startups in other countries like, Ghana, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Kenya, (Mali), Congo and others, 2021 would most likely be that year they land a life-changing legislation on how they operate. Startup Acts (in Tunisia and Senegal) have made a lot of difference for the countries’ burgeoning startup ecosystems.
A Single Market Opportunity Under AfCFTA
2021 will also be a great year for African startups in terms of the market opportunities presented by the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA). The operational phase of AfCFTA which will enter into force today, the 1st of January, 2021, will cover a market of 1.2 billion people and a combined gross domestic product of $2.5 trillion — making Africa the world’s largest free trade area since the formation of the World Trade Organization seven decades ago. AfCFTA will greatly assist startups in Africa in their quests for international expansion, by reducing the regulatory and financial costs of such expansion. With AfCFTA, Twiga Foods in Kenya, for instance, can easily move agricultural produce across African borders with less tariffs and customs duties than it was previously used to. Startups that will benefit greatly from the agreement are those in the logistics and transport sectors, who do logistics across borders. Find out more on how the agreement may help your startup in 2021 here.
Increase In Local Venture Capital Funds
This would most likely be one of the greatest features of the year 2021. With Paystack’s $200m acquisition by payments company Stripe, increasing interests by influential figures around the world on the continent’s startup ecosystem as well as the continuing democratization of access to funding through the setting up of micro funds by local startups themselves, more locally founded venture capital funds may most likely sprout across Africa in 2021. With this, comes access to funding to most startups in Africa.
In any case, 2021 would, also, most likely see the highest investment deals ever, especially as most investors may unleash cash hoarded as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
Locally made funds are necessary in Africa because according to African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association 2019 VC report, North American investors represented 42% of the total number of investors that participated in VC investments on the continent between 2014 and 2019, followed by European based investors at 23%. African based investors accounted for only 20%, followed by Asia-Pacific (8%) and investors based in the Middle East (6%). This, perhaps, shows why the continent lags behind other continents in terms of funding available to its startups ecosystem.
Funding Predictions?
2021 would most likely see fintechs retaining the largest investment percentage within the African startup investment ecosystem. However, a successful and hitch-free AfCFTA may see increased investments in logistics and transport startups. Increased adoption of 5G network may also further enhance the democratisation of internet access and speed on the continent’s major cities, with startups in the ecommerce, video-on-demand or entertainment sectors greatly benefiting. Investors may, most likely, also look in the direction of healthcare startups, especially as most African governments are increasing their 2021 budget amounts to that sector (see Nigeria, etc). In any case, if Kenya insists on its mulled plans for regulating off-grid companies, off-grid startups in the east African country may witness a major lull in investment.
A Seamless Journey
As 2021 sets in, Afrikan Heroes wishes African startups and founders seamless journeys throughout the 12 months of the year. And although the world would still spend much of the new year extricating itself from the fangs of the coronavirus, there is still a huge hope for both the continent’s founders and startups.
All we wish for are less failure, more access to funding (especially to women founders) as well as less strangulating legislations that saw the deaths and unsavoury turns of events for so many startups on the continent in the year gone.
A Very Happy and Profitable New New Year!!!
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
The UNDP has announced that 28 startups have been selected for the 2nd edition of its Growth Stage Impact Ventures (GSIV) competition. Among them are 9 African startups that are revolutionizing the fields of health, energy and waste management.
The 9 startups from Africa include: OneWattSolar — GosolarAfrica (Nigeria), BrightGreen Renewable Energy (Kenya), Easy Solar (Sierra Leone) ), Powerstove (Nigeria), Coliba (Côte D’Ivoire), ColdHubs (Nigeria), mPharma (Ghana), Vula Mobile (South Africa) and Kea Medicals (Benin).
The first 4 are in the health sector, the next 2 in energy, and the last 3 in waste management. Launched jointly by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne (EPFL), Orange and the German company SAP, the competition aims to identify and promote entrepreneurs in developing countries, committed to the Sustainable Development Goals.
The UNDP press release specifies that the call for nominations was dedicated to companies that have completed their first round of funding. These were to deliver products and services that contribute to reducing gender inequalities, provide the poorest with access solutions to quality health and clean and affordable energy, reduce and recycle waste.
The selected start-ups will be studied by a committee of experts and representatives of the United Nations, to choose 12 finalists. The selected entrepreneurs will be invited to the SDG Finance Geneva Summit scheduled for May 2021, where they will have the opportunity to present their products to potential partners and investors.
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
While funding accruing to the African startup ecosystem from venture capital firms is increasing year-on-year, the number of startups involved in the funding are relatively small compared to available data about the number of startups in Africa. In 2019, for example, while a platform like VC4A listed a total of 13,500 startups in Africa, only about 427 startups raised over $2 billion in funding. This means that if you are a startup in Africa, you are only about 3% more likely to raise funds from venture capital firms. Again, this possibility increasingly varies depending on which African country your startup has its headquarters or is operating in. According to a recent report, between 2014 to 2019, venture capital investors preferred to invest more in startups in Southern Africa (mostly South Africa, etc.), with the region getting about 25% of all VC deals; followed by East Africa — Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda , etc. — (23%); and West Africa (21%) — Nigeria, Ghana,etc. While other African countries shared the remaining 31%, Egypt, and other North African countries are also proving to be good destinations for startups in terms of funding.
Why then are many startups still left out in the whole funding bubble? An attempt will be made to provide answers to this.
Poor Understanding of How Venture Capital Funding Works
This is a foundational challenge that confronts most startup founders across Africa. There is an overwhelming disconnect among many founders about what venture capital, and not investors generally speaking, really means. The ability to know the difference between venture capital and angel investors, bank loans, funds from family and friends, or grants is what makes the whole difference between founders who have raised funds for their startups through VCs and those who have not.
Prior knowledge of venture capital, even before setting up a startup company, is very vital for startups desiring to raise funds from VC investors in the future. At the earliest stage, such knowledge would not only assist them in choosing their business ideas, but would also help them in properly structuring their business entities so as to suit the structures usually prefered by VC investors.
Fundamentally speaking, unlike banks that give you only loan and expect interest payment and repayment of the capital sum after a period of time without desiring a stake in your company through the loans, a traditional venture capital company usually takes up ownership stake (shares) in your company, while providing you with the desired capital to run your business, in anticipation of future returns on its investments (usually, also, at an agreed percentage). Venture capital is also different from grants because grants are free money to businesses while venture capital is not.
Knowing these differences will therefore assist startups in choosing what type of business idea to pursue (since VCs are mostly interested in high-growth startups with long-term growth potential); and what structure of business to adopt (since VCs are also interested in taking up shares in the business, or even sitting on its board).
Thus with this explanation, it may be more difficult for a small business which was not structured as a company and which sells fabrics on a small scale to secure venture capital than for another business structured as a company, and which runs a piggery, and has a plan of leveraging technology to expand its market, or which, even though does not leverage technology, has such potential as to so quickly grow and expand across locations and to different markets.
“VC is relevant for high-growth companies. Taking money from VCs and then not growing very fast is the source of many headaches and grey hairs,” says Jean-Claude Homawoo, co-founder and chief product officer at Lori Systems, one of Africa’s bigger fundraising success stories.
“When you take on that money, that money needs returns, and it is a big responsibility. You have to scale the company,” Etop Ikpe, CEO of Nigerian company Cars45, another startup that has successfully raised funds, adds.
The Products/Services And Their Sectors Matter
This is another fundamental problem hindering many startups in Africa from accessing funds from VCs. Indeed, VCs are also business people who, like startups, are out to make money. There may be VCs whose guiding investment values support promotion of social or environmental projects or causes, but a majority of VCs get their funds from other investors, such as pension funds and high net-worth individuals, and therefore, are expected to be accountable and make profit on their investments.
Indeed, acquainting oneself with knowledge of which sectors have attracted VC funding most in Africa in the past should form one of the earliest guiding principles in choosing which startup idea to pursue, although 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.
Again, 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.
“It is really pattern recognition; they see the kind of deals that have happened in the past and they try to mimic that,” says Homawoo. “They (investors) look for the same makeup over and over again. So for founders that don’t look like those that have raised in the past there is a hurdle. That’s something that we have to break.’’
As an instance, until now, much of the investment on the African startup space has gone more to other sectors than healthcare. 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 (fintechs), at 41%, received the lion’s share of the whole investment sum. The set of data below further paints this picture better. From the data, healthcare startups in Africa have managed to secure only about 4% of the total funding raised by African startups in the past four years, compared to the increasing interests shown by investors in other sectors, such as fin-tech (which, at 28% has netted the highest percentage of funding coming to African startups) or enterprise and eCommerce( 27% of the total funding accruing to African startups).
Also worrisome is the fact that investors, until the descent of the coronavirus, had not shown much interests in the African healthcare startup ecosystem compared to others . This perhaps explains the fact that in the past three years (2017–2019), healthcare startups in Africa only closed 27 deals (a majority of them being follow-on or new rounds of investments, as against investment in entirely new healthcare ventures). 27 deals is so meager compared to what fin-tech or enterprise and eCommerce (at 136 and 195 deals respectively) got within the same period.
The worst fact about investment in the African healthcare startup space is however yet to come: out of a jaw-breaking $4.1 billion received by African startups in total in four years (2016–2019), healthcare startups only boast of a meagre $237.1 million.
This is far behind what sectors such as fintech or enterprise and ecommerce ( at $1.4bn and $1.07bn respectively) secured during the said period. (For fuller version of all the sectors and how VCs have invested in them click here.)
Therefore, it is recommended that African startup founders, desirous of securing funds from venture capital firms, first study the investment patterns, over the years, of Africa-focused VCs in order to get an insights into how their startups may be affected.
Team Is Everything
Startup founders should not underestimate investors’ bias about who the team members are. In most instances, the choice by VCs, of which team to work with has always, from practical experience and from facts, been influenced by such things as age, gender, race, class, educational background, previous experience founding a startup, nationality or even social networks.
However, while we may not change our individual identities to attract investors, it pays to be strategic. For instance, even though a startup’s founding team may entirely be constituted by persons who are newbies to the startup environment or who have not had any previous experience founding successful startup companies, it pays to have a strong team of advisors/board members, or persons of influence projected prominently behind the team. Investors are more tended to finance who they can trust; who has strong credibility and integrity and who knows their mettle about the sectors they are playing in. The more dense the team, in terms of character, value or influence, the chances of the startups securing funding any time soon. Below is a table of some African startup founders and their pedigree.
B.B.A (Howard) MBA (Harvard); One year experience before co-founding Jumia.
2
Iyinoluwa Aboyeji
Andela
20-30
B.A., Legal Studies (Waterloo); Two years experience before co-founding Andela.
3.
Xavier Helgesen
Zola Electric
30-40
MBA Oxford; Previous CEO and 8 years previous experience.
4
Fara Ashiru Jituboh
Okra
20-30
B.A (North Carolina); Previous 9 years IT experience.
5
Yinka Adewale
Kudi
30-40
B.SC (Ife, Nigeria); 4 years previous IT experience.
6
Obi Ozor
Kobo360
30-40
B.A (Pennyslavia); 6 years previous experience, including at Uber and J.P Morgan.
7
Franklin Peter
Bitfxt
20-30
B.Sc (Nsukka, Nigera); at least one year previous experience.
8
Elia Timotheo
East Africa Fruits
30-40
B.A (Mzumbe, Tanzania); 8 years previous working experience.
9
Aretha Gonyora
Payitup
30-40
B.A (Zimbabwe); 3 years previous experience.
10
Aisha Pandour
SweepSouth
40-50
P.HD (Cape Town, South Africa); 8 years previous experience.
11
Adegoke Olubusi
Helium Health
20-35
B.Sc. (Maryland, USA); 3 years previous experience, including at eBay, Paypal, Goldman Sachs)
12
Adetayo Bamiduro
Max.ng
30-40
MBA (MIT, USA); Over 10 years previous experience.
13
Gregory Rockson
mPharma
30-40
B.A (Westminster, UK); Over 10 years previous experience, including WEF Global Shaper.
14
Trevor Gosling
Lulalend
35-45
B.A (Pretoria, South Africa); 10 years previous experience, including at Goldman Sachs, Rand Merchant bank.
15
Rapa Ricky Thomson
Safeboda
30-50
No education history; Natural entrepreneur with previous experience in transport.
16
Onyeka Akuma
Farmcrowdy
30-40
B.Sc (Sikkim Manipal, India); Over ten years previous experience.
17
Ahmed Wadi
MoneyFellows
40-50
B.Sc (Stuttgart); 5 years previous experience, including at National Bank of Kuwait.
18
Abraham Cambridge
Sun Exchange
40-50
B.Sc (Sussex); Over 10 years previous experience.
19
Deji Oduntan
Gokada
30-40
MBA (Cornell, USA); Over six years previous experience, including at GTB Bank, Jumia.
20
Karl Westvig
Retail Capital
50-60
B.Sc (Cape Town, South Africa); Over 20 years experience.
21
Femi Adeyemo
Arnergy
40-50
M.Sc (Stockholm, Sweden); Over 10 years experience in the IT space, including at Huawei.
22
Meshack Alloys
Sendy
30-40
M.Sc (Nairobi, Kenya); Over 7 years experience in the IT sector.
23
Tosin Eniolorunda
TeamApt
30-40
B.Sc (Ife, Nigeria); Over 8 years previous experience, including at Interswitch,
24
Gilbert Blankson-Afful
Sumundi
30-40
B.Sc (Ghana); Founded Sumundi immediately after education.
25
Adan Mohammed
Ecodudu
30-40
B.Sc (Kenyatta, Kenya); Founded Ecodudu immediately after education.
26
Prince Kwame Agabata
Coliba
30-40
B.Tech (Ghana); Founded Ecodudu immediately after education.
27
Belal El Borno
Yumamia
35-45
B.Sc (AASTMT, Egypt); Over 10 years previous experience, including at Kuwait Food Company.
28
Mohammed Youssef ElBaz
Zedny
50-Above
MBA (Arizona, USA); Over 10 years of previous experience.
29
Neto Ikpeme
WellaHealth
35-45
MBBS (Dublin, Ireland); Over 5 years previous experience.
30
Benji Meltzer
Aerobotics
30-40
B.Sc (Cape Town, South Africa); At least 5 years previous experience, including at Uber.
31
Timothy Mwangi
Amitruck
35-45
B.Sc (MIT, USA); Over 9 years previous experience, including at Oracle, USA.
32
Mostafa Kandil
Swvl
30-40
B.Sc (Cairo, Egypt); At least 2 years previous experience, including at Careem.
33
Temidayo Isaiah Oniosun
Space In Africa
20-30
B.Tech (Akure, Nigeria); At least 3 years previous experience.
34
Waleed Abdl El Rahman
Mumm
35-45
B.A (Cairo, Egypt); Over 10 years previous experience, including at Procter & Gamble, Lebanon.
35
Geoffrey Mulei
Tanda
20-30
B.A (Malaysia); 2 years previous experience at former startup.
36
Stone Atwine
Eversend
40-50
B.Sc (Mbarara, Uganda); Over 10 years previous experience, including at Alliance Francaise.
37
Fatoumata BA
Janngo
30-40
M.A (Toulouse, France); Over 8 years previous experience, including at Jumia.
*Data are based on the public profiles of the founders. In most cases, the number of years of experience and respective age brackets of founders are based on estimates.
It should be noted, however, that a majority of the founders listed above, whose startups have secured VC funding, represent a tiny portion of the entire ecosystem of startup founders in Africa. It should also be noted that all extra information as provided, even though may be of some considerable importance to some VCs, may not be to others.
True entrepreneurship is not bestowed solely on the basis of educational qualifications or age, as can be found above. Of course, there are thousands of entrepreneurs and startup founders scattered across Africa (most of whom are running successful businesses) who may not fit into the qualifications above. What is only stated here is that, given that there are not many VC firms operating on the continent, like it is obtainable elsewhere in the world, it only pays to be strategic enough, through a strong team, to be able to access the limited ones available.
From experience, most startup founders, in a bid to protect their intellectual property, often hide relevant information from investors. In as much as it pays to protect one’s intellectual property, it also pays to determine what information is material enough to be excluded from investor’s early scrutiny. “You can’t keep trade secrets from your investors,’’ says Barry Schuler, managing director at DFJ Growth, one of the first venture firms to focus on growth as a specific practice and an investor in Twitter and Tesla. “The number-one sign of complete transparency is an entrepreneur who says, “I don’t know the answer to that question, but I will get it to you.”Barry adds.
Generally, at a glance, a good startup pitch deck should, among other things, have a strong value proposition, and must give a sufficient clue about how the startup intends to utilise the proceeds of the investment it seeks to secure from the investor.
“People come to me and say they are playing in whatever market,”says Andrea Böhmert, co-managing partner of South African VC firm Knife Capital, “but when we really drill down, their value proposition puts them in a different market. You need to be able to define your value proposition. And then based on that your market. And then understand your numbers and how big that market is.”
Apart from constructing a precise value proposition, a pitch deck must also provide an in-depth guide on how the startup can make returns on the investor’s funds. No investor would be willing to commit hard-earned currencies into a project that has no clear plan on how to spend the money.
“Sweat the financial details,” says Victoria Fram co-founder and managing director of VilCap Investments. “ You need to show an awareness that one of your jobs is to not run out of cash. You need to speak intelligently on dilution and valuation. Say why you’re raising a given amount, what milestones that money will allow you to achieve, and what milestones come next.”
However it goes, always remember to keep your deck concise enough. Whether it is Venture Capitalists or Angel Investors that you are pitching to, keep your deck focused. As VC Iskender Dirik notes, “The attention span of a VC is even shorter than you might think. Be as striking, simple and short as possible.” (source). Similarly, Angel Investor Jordan Rothstein says that one of the key factors in creating a great pitch deck is keeping it “clear and concise” (source, Angel investor).
And finally be transparent with your disclosures when you have established a fair confidence in the investors. To learn how to bounce back from a failed pitch effort click here.
Pitching The Wrong Investors
Nothing could be so frustrating as pitching the wrong investor. Consider the waste of time and resources!
African startup founders usually make the mistake of assuming that most VCs are sector-agnostic. The fact is that while some VCs would prefer to invest in exceptionally ground-breaking solutions that are outside their sectors of focus, the opportunity to do so don’t always present themselves. It therefore behoves on startup founders to first research on active investors in their sectors of focus. This will assist them not only in reducing the time and resources spent scouting for investors, but will increase their chances of landing funding anytime soon.
“Lots of first time entrepreneurs don’t take the time to put together their thoughts,” says Ian Lessem, managing partner of South African investment and advisory firm HAVAÍC.
“If you want to attract VC funding from the US you must understand that companies involved are servicing much bigger businesses serving much bigger markets. If you have no plans to scale outside of South Africa, you would be naive to think a US VC would be interested.”
For African startups playing in the healthcare industry, this link will lead you to a list of active investors in that industry.
Gain Traction
In as much as a recent report says that nearly one third (32%) of the total number of early-stage investments reported in Africa between 2014 and 2019 were seed stage deals, these deals, however, accounted for only 5% of the total deal value, showing that while more investors were investing at the seed stage than at any other stages, they weren’t pouring in more in monetary sums into the startups compared to the amount invested at other stages.
One more way to stand out as an African startup is, therefore, to gain traction. The African market is often referred to as an emerging market because it has not entirely shed its traditional economic focus that relied more on agriculture and the export of raw materials. Hence, investors often regard such markets as highly risky, and therefore deplore greater caution in their investment strategies when investing in them.
“Traction: It’s what investors everywhere are looking for in order to determine whether to anoint your startup,’’ writes Mike Belsito in his book Startup Seed Funding for the Rest of Us: How to Raise $1 Million for Your Startup — Even Outside of Silicon Valley.“the next big thing” and inject the cold, hard cash needed to accelerate your business. If you can’t find traction, forget raising capital — your business will struggle just to stay alive. Find traction, and raising capital will never be an issue for you. It’s important, however, to understand what traction really is — and what it isn’t.”
This writer wishes you great success and luck in your fund-raising journey. The journey may be hard, but always remember that patience, almost always, pays; plus you are always one pitch away from getting a signed term sheet.
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.
Chinese investors are not notorious for investing in African startups, although they invest in other startup ecosystems in world. However, China’s venture capital (VC) investment in the Indian startup ecosystem grew five times at $5.6 billion in 2018 compared to a $668 million in 2016.
In India alone, Chinese investors have clearly been betting big on startups with their funding surpassing their American and Japanese counterparts in 2018. In fact, Chinese funds flowing into India have seen exponential growth over the last couple of years. China’s venture capital (VC) investment in the Indian startup ecosystem grew five times at $5.6 billion in 2018, compared to a mere $668 million in 2016, according to research and analytics platform Tracxn. In 2017, the number stood at $3 billion.
Given their interest in investing in startups, most founders here would give an arm and a leg to have a cheat-sheet to the dos and don’ts while meeting Chinese investors.
During a panel discussion at the fourth edition of the TiE Global Summit in New Delhi on Friday, Damien Zhang from CDH Investments and Jeffrey Yam from Integrated Capital gave a sneak-peek into the mind of a Chinese VC. CDH Investments is a Beijing-based alternative asset management firm while Integrated Capital is a Hong Kong-based multi-strategy private investment office. Both entities have investments in Indian startups.
The Dos
“We are casual about meeting founders, so feel free to meet for drinks. And reach out for karaoke if you’re in China,” Damien says.
According to Jeffrey, as an Indian startup founder, even if you don’t fit a Chinese investor’s mandate, be “proactive”.
“Their advice could help a lot. Once you’ve developed a personal relationship, it’s easier to get an investor on board once they know your journey rather than just seeing a deck. You want investors that you actually enjoy hanging out with and vice versa,” he adds.
Never exaggerate your numbers and do not under-report your competitors, says Damien.
“Every Chinese investor does a very thorough cross-checking and if you understate your competition or there is something amiss about your numbers, they will just go past you,” he says.
Jeffrey concurs, and adds that trust is the key.
“On the numbers, you would want to be absolutely transparent. And you want potential investors to have trust in you,” he says.
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Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is 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 organizations 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
Egypt-based travel startup Tripdizer has secured $300,000 in seed funding led by 500 Startups (500 Falcons).
“The Middle East is the fastest-growing outbound travel market in the world and we are seeing a high rate of internet and technology adoption. It is expected that over the next 2 years that 50% of the travel bookings will be made online and we want to be at the forefront of such a wave in the region. There has never been a better time for a solution like Tripdizer, not only because it fills a gap in the travel ecosystem but also because the demand is growing for online travel booking services,” Ziad Eladawy, the founder and CEO of Tripdizer said on the occasion.
Here Is The Deal
Joining this round of financing are Innoventures and an angel investor Jamal El Dabal.
However, there is still speculative as to whether the entire investment that Tripdizer had received is fresh capital or also includes the $150,000 the startup had received from 500 Startups while participating in MENA Dojo.
The Egyptian startup plans to use the investment to further develop its product and expand its regional footprint.
Tripdizer was part of 500 Startups’ Series A program MENA Dojo earlier this year.
Why The Investors Invested
According to Sharif El-Badawi, Managing Partner at 500 Startups MENA
“In the MENA region, there has been significant growth in online travel market, as tech-savvy consumers are now looking for an overall travel booking experience where they want to plan and book their accommodation, tickets, tours/activities all on one common platform. In such a market, Tripdizer is strategically positioned to change complicated and intricate travel plans into an exciting, comfortable and memorable travel experience.”
“Since its inception, Tripdizer has been growing steadily at 30% month-on-month, successfully increasing the customer base to thousands of travelers. We are pleased to have led this funding round and look forward to working closely with this remarkable team as they advance to the forefront of the travel industry,” he added.
What TripDizer Does
Founded in 2017 by Ziad El Adawy, Yara Yehia, Sameh Saleh (who also co-founded Harmonica, the dating startup that was acquired by Match Group earlier this year), Hatem Ayoub and Mohamed Mostafa, Tripdizer enables travelers (mainly millennials) in Egypt to plan and book international (holiday) trips by learning about their preferences including purpose, budget, and the kind of activities they’re interested in.
Once the user submits this information, they’re provided with flight and accommodation options to choose from instantly on Tripdizer’s website. We could not confirm but it appears that the transaction happens offline. Tripdizer apparently after receiving these details gets in touch with the customer to confirm and book their trip after receiving the payment offline.
“We have experienced a tremendous increase in demand for personalized trips in recent years and we are proud that we are well-positioned to meet this ever-growing demand for unique and innovative travel experience and itineraries. We would like to thank our investors in believing in our team and our efforts to establish as the leader in the travel tech industry,” Ziad Eladawy said.
One remarkable thing for Egypt’s startups this year is that virtually all sectors of the startup ecosystem has recorded some appreciable amount of investment from investors, unlike other Africa countries that saw major investments in logistics, transport, cleantech or fintech. Tripdizer has just added to the list of this diversity in investment areas.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is 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 organizations 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
The startup ecosystem in Eswatini still seems far off.
With roughly about 1.4 million people, Eswatini (formerly Swaziland) is nearly 70 times lesser in size than South Africa. However, comparison of countries by size may sometimes be misleading. For instance, even though Eswatini is about 24 times bigger in size than Singapore (a South East Asian country), Singapore’s economy (in GDP terms) is by far larger than Eswatini’s (about 74 times). This is even as both countries don’t have key export commodities such as oil.
Comparing both countries’ startup ecosystems further leaves less than desired. The most recent Startup Genome’s 2019 Global Startup Ecosystem Report rates Singapore as the #14 global startup ecosystem in the world and identifies Local Connectedness as one of its strongest traits. Apart from ranking 4th in the world, highlights from the report include that Singapore’s startup ecosystem has an estimated value of $25 billion, far exceeding the global average of $5 billion. The ecosystem ranks #5 on the Global Startup Ecosystem’s Fintech sub-sector. Early-stage funding per startup in Singapore is $202,000. Output Growth Index of startups in Singapore is 8 out of 10, indicating meaningful growth in total startup creation, calculated in an annualized growth rate.
Part of the reasons why Singapore’s startup ecosystem has succeeded is because the Singaporean government supports young startups with its Startup Tax Exemption Scheme. The scheme exempts 75% of a company’s first $73,000 in income. Additionally, Singapore raised tax deductions for IP registration fees from 100% to 200% and qualifying expenses incurred on Research &Development from 150% to 250% in 2018. Thus, Singapore startups are able to put off paying taxes until they are larger and more established.
Below we examine why the startup ecosystem in Eswatini is yet to come of age.
Poor Ease of Doing Business
The latest World Bank’s Ease of Doing Business report ranks Eswatini as number 117 out of 190 countries in terms of ease of doing business .
Founders desiring to register a business as a Private Limited Liability Company in the country must pass through each of the following procedures: Preregistration (for example, name verification or reservation, notarization); Registration in the economy’s largest business city; Postregistration (for example, social security registration, company seal); Obtaining approval from spouse to start a business or to leave the home to register the company; Obtaining any gender specific document for company registration and operation or national identification card.
Each of these procedures starts on a separate day (2 procedures cannot start on the same day). Approximately, it takes about 12 days to obtain a trading license in Eswatini. However, a company might need more than one trading license if it does more than one activity. Each activity has a different license fee. For instance, if the company produces and sells its goods to the public.
No Noticeable Legislation Incentivising Startups
Eswatini has no legislated law granting incentives to its startup ecosystem or newly formed businesses. Although companies may be issued with a Development Approval Order (of up to a 10-year period) enabling them to pay only 10% as corporate tax instead of the standard flat rate of 27.5% applicable to all corporate entities, only Eswatini’s Minister of Finance is authorised by law to exercise such powers. The grant of a development approval order is also only applicable to approved new investment, business or development enterprises in manufacturing, mining, international services and tourism and which will not unfairly compete with existing Swazi companies. Swaziland and foreign investors are eligible to apply for this incentive but the application must be made by a company incorporated in Swaziland.
By concentrating the incentive only in the manufacturing, mining, international services and tourism sectors, and by placing the stringent requirement of Ministerial approval, the scheme may have deprived startups still struggling with raising initial starting capital from the opportunity of being granted such order.
Again, Eswatini’s National Policy on the Development of SMEs defines small enterprises as having assets of E50,000 to E2m (US$6500- 260,000), 4 -10 employees, and sales of up to E3 million (US$395,000). Medium enterprises have assets valued at E2–5m (US$260,000–650,000), up to 50 employees, and sales of up to E8 million (US$1,040,000). (E = symbol of Swaziland’s currency Lilangeni (SZL).
The purpose of this classification is not to provide support in terms of seed capital but to give exaggerated focus on the startup ecosystem — more or less pretending that a lot is being done for startups.
At policy level, the SME Unit in Eswatini’s Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Trade is responsible for researching and proposing changes to existing policy or developing new policy related to SMEs in such areas as finance and training.
Eswatini’s Small Enterprise Development Company (SEDCO) also provides business development services such as training on business management and registration of start-up ventures. SEDCO operates nine small industry estates and rents workshops to small business owners.
The SME Development Unit / Domestic Investment Department in Swaziland’s Investment Promotion Authority also provides extensive support to SMEs as well as operating a linkages programme to help establish business relationship between SMEs and larger enterprises.
However, no matter the extent of such policies, nothing could be more powerful as spread tax incentives, which small businesses or startups can access no matter how remotely located they are, as is the case with Singapore’s Startup Tax Exemption Scheme or South Africa’s Section 12J. Most of the times, only a handful of businesses may be selected for such trainings or linkages programmes.
The direct implication of the absence of these incentives is lack of appetite for equity investments by venture capital or private equity firms in Eswatini ’s startup ecosystem.
One of the enablers of economic growth in modern times is the degree of adoption of technological innovations by locals of a geographical territory. For instance today, the eight most valuable companies in the world are all tech companies. As at 2007, only one tech business, Microsoft, was among the 10 biggest companies in the world. Increasingly, globalisation has meant that many of these brands have significantly captured larger chunk of the global economy.
A 2014 statistic indicated that South Africa’s ICT fuelled by technological revolution contributed 2.7% to South Africa’s overall GDP, a statistic which is larger than agriculture, but slightly shy of tourism’s contribution of 3.1%. In other words, for every R100 that the South African economy produced in 2014, R2.70 was due to activities related to ICT. In Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, the Information and Communications Technology’s (ICT) contribution to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) stands at 13.8% as at September, 2019, a figure which may more than double Nigeria’s Oil and Gas contribution of 8.8% in two years.
Having noted the significance of technology in the growth of a country’s economy and by extension its startup ecosystem, the rate of internet penetration in Swaziland is still very low. As at 2018, only about 446,051 people in the country, representing a meagre 27.8 % of the entire Swaziland’s population have access to the internet. Compared to the East African country of Mauritius, these statistics are abysmally poor. Even though Eswatini is about 9 times larger than Mauritius in size (and even has more people than Mauritius), there are about 803,896 internet users as at Dec/2018 in Mauritius, representing about 63.2% of the Mauritian population. Unarguably, this is why the Mauritian ICT industry made a GDP contribution of 5.6% in 2017 for Mauritius. The implication of this is that so many activities are going on in the sector, and invariably the Mauritian startup ecosystem.
A major factor that explains this low rate of technology adoption in Mauritius is the poverty gap in the country. The socially and economically marginalised — particularly those at the intersections of class, gender, race or ethnicity — are unable to harness the Internet to enhance their social and economic well-being. Although the internet sector in Swaziland has since been open to competition with four licensed Internet Service Providers (ISPs), prices have however remained high and market penetration relatively low. Much of this is attributable to the country’s landlocked nature. As a result of this, the country depends on neighbouring countries for international fibre bandwidth. This meant that access pricing was high for many years, though prices have fallen more recently in line with greater bandwidth availability resulting from several new submarine fibre optic cable systems that have reached the region in recent years. Invariably, the startup ecosystem in Eswatini is also affected by lack of abundance of this.
Low Number of Tech Hubs And Incubators
Unlike other African countries with appreciably large presence of tech hubs, incubators and accelerators, Eswatini boasts only of a few.
In Southern Africa, for instance, where Eswatini is regionally located, Zimbabwe and Zambia recorded remarkable growth respectively doubling and tripling their number of active tech hubs in eighteen months in 2018 (13 vs 6 in Zimbabwe; 6 vs 2 in Zambia). However, there is only about one hub in Swaziland, out of over 420 hubs present in Africa. The Mbabane Hub is made up of young people in their own right, working together to promote technological innovations around the Mbabane city region— the capital and largest city in Eswatini.
Although the Swaziland government has, in 2012, initiated the Royal Science and Technology Park (RSTP), a parastatal under the Swaziland Investment Promotion Authority (SIPA), very much still remains to be done. The Biotechnology Park which falls under The Royal Science and Technology Park (RSTP) is situated at Nokwane and is a “one stop facility” that creates an enabling environment to investors wishing to settle within the Royal Science and Technology Park. RSTP hopes to foster the conception of inventions and facilitate their patenting and to help knit various elements of the Research & Development (R&D) cluster together. By 2022, RSTP hopes to have trained Swazis with new, innovative skills, providing them with the environment to experiment on new technologies. RSTP also hopes to inculcate a culture of entrepreneurship among Swazi graduates and to facilitate specially promoted research in response to national priorities and develop strategies for the development of human resources in Swaziland.
The importance of tech hubs, incubators or accelerators in the development of Eswatini ‘s startup ecosystem, for instance, can never be over-emphasized. Tech hubs can create an environment specifically targeted at helping young technology companies thrive by encouraging experimentation, not demonizing failure, and helping firms network with other like-minded individuals and enterprises. They can also make it easier for firms to meet investors in order to get their project funded.
Bottom Line
Eswatini still has a long way to go in terms of its startup ecosystem growth. However, it has a bright future on the flip-side. The country has a median age of 20.5 years, although with a life expectancy of just 31.88 years, the lowest documented life expectancy in the world and less than half the world average (largely because of large prevalence of several health issues, including HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis). With increasing accessibility to the country’s economy by foreign investors, most of whom are from South Africa, there may still be some hope on the horizon.
Nigeria’s Co-Creation Hub (CcHub) which recently acquired Kenya’s largest technology hub, iHub in a landmark deal has announced it is raising US$60 million for its Growth Capital investment arm to boost startups across Africa.
Here Is All You Need To Know
According to the Chief executive officer (CEO)of CcHub Bosun Tijani, the fund was currently in the process of raising US$60 million, which he hoped would be completed within the next 12 months.
CcHub’s Growth Capital is a social innovation fund that supports high potential, early-stage businesses building next generation infrastructure. Its pilot fund has made six investments, in Nigerian startups Taeillo, LifeBank, Riby, Edves, Delivery Science and DrugStoc.
This new, bigger Growth Capital fund will make investments in startups across the continent.
The hub has previously invested in about 25 startups directly through its angel fund and in-house incubation programme.
Startups in Rwanda and Kenya will be among the beneficiaries of the enlarged Growth Capital fund, as will those from other African countries. The fund also sees iHub indirectly fulfil a pledge made in December 2016, when it said it planned to raise a pan-African investment vehicle of its own.
About CcHub
CcHub has been expanding of late, launching a Rwandan hub in February and just last week announcing the acquisition of the Nairobi iHub. The deal brought two of Africa’s flagship tech hubs together to form a pan-African entity focused on accelerating the growth of tech innovation and entrepreneurship.
The iHub, launched in 2010 and home to internationally-recognised companies such as BRCK and Ushahidi, will retain its name and senior management structure, with Tijani becoming CEO across both locations.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is 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 organizations 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
Airbnb has not clarified whether it has confidentially filed its S-1 IPO paperwork, which would include basic financial information for potential investors to consider. An Airbnb spokesperson declined to comment when asked whether the paperwork has been filed.
The home-sharing rental startup was last privately valued at $31 billion in September 2017, according to PitchBook.
“We have already said that we are taking the steps to be ready to go public in 2019. That doesn’t mean we will go public in 2019,” Nathan Blecharczyk, an Airbnb cofounder, told Business Insider in a March email interview.
The company hasn’t clarified how it plans to list its shares, either. Airbnb was considering a direct listing in June, Reuters reported.
A number of startups have gone public in 2019 to mixed results. Uber and Lyft went public earlier this year, and both companies have spent most of the time since trading below what they opened at. WeWork’s IPO plans — which were recently postponed until at least October — were derailed shortly after the startup publicly filed its S-1 paperwork, which raised questions about the company’s CEO, governance, spiraling losses, and unclear path to profitability.
Tech startups Zoom, Slack, PagerDuty, CloudFlare, and Pinterest went public in 2019 and are currently trading above their IPO price.
Airbnb’s initial public offering has been heavily anticipated by Wall Street. The company had revenue of over $1 billion in the third quarter of 2018, according to TechCrunch. In November, former Amazon vice president Dave Stephenson joined Airbnb, feuling the market’s hopes that the company was preparing to go public.
In March, Airbnb cofounder Nathan Blecharczyk cast doubt on whether the company would go public any time soon, but had hinted that it was taking steps towards an initial public offering.
Airbnb has already made its CEO Brian Chesky one of the richest tech founders in America, and the company’s origin story is a quintessential rags-to-riches tale of success in Silicon Valley.
Chesky, a 37-year-old former bodybuilder, founded the company with two former roommates in August 2008, which started out renting air mattresses in a room in San Francisco. The company struggled with investor support at first, but it picked up a $600,000 seed investment in 2009 and its growth quickly accelerated.
In the years that followed, Airbnb picked up venture capital investments from industry heavyweights. Its third VC round in 2011 raised $112 million from investors including Crunchfund, General Catalyst, and Jeff Bezos’ venture capital group at a $1.3 billion valuation. It picked up another $1.6 billion in venture capital in 2015 and $1 billion in 2017, and has raised a grand total of $4.4 billion to date, according to PitchBook.
The company has recently branched out beyond its primary business model. In November it announced Backyard, an initiative that will explore building new homes specifically designed to accommodate short-term rentals. Backyard was slated to test prototypes by late 2019, according to CNBC.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is 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 organizations 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
Egypt’s startup Doctoorum, a curated marketplace for medical tourism, has raised funding from the Dubai-based Numu Capital to help it grow locally and expand internationally.
Founded by Yemeni entrepreneur Begad Nasser, Doctoorum allows patients from around the world to get affordable and high quality medical treatment in Egypt, handling all other aspects such as transport and accommodation.
Begad Nasser, Founder Numu Capital
The startup graduated from the AUC Venture Lab accelerator earlier this year, at which time it secured an undisclosed investment from Numu Capital. The Dubai-based firm invests in startups to help them increase their traction and secure their next funding round, and prides itself on funding successful applicants within 30 days of the initial pitch.
“Doctoorum is a very promising venture, and Begad has a solid understanding of the industry and has built a top notch team that we believe in. We have been eyeing the medical tourism industry for a while, and we were thrilled when Begad pitched Doctoorum to us,” said Jamal Al-Mutarreb, managing director of Numu Capital.
Doctoorum is currently ramping up its growth, and plans to raise a Series A round in the next few months. With medical tourism on the rise globally, and the market expected to be worth US$180 billion by 2026, the startup is planning to expand its operations beyond Egypt and the MENA to destinations such as Turkey, India, Germany, and Thailand.
Charles Rapulu Udoh
Charles Rapulu Udoh is 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 organizations 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.