A USD 2,500 cash prize, an all-expenses-paid trip to a prestigious International Women’s Forum, and online courses from one of the most respected international universities.
APO Group, the leading media relations consultancy, and press release distribution service in Africa and the Middle East presents the inaugural APO Group African Women in Media Award set to recognize, celebrate and empower African women journalists who support female entrepreneurship in Africa.
The Award will be bestowed to the winner at the 5th Africa Women Innovation and Entrepreneurship Forum’s (AWIEF) Conference, Exhibition and Awards hosted at the Cape Town International Convention Centre (CTICC), 29-30 October 2019, with the theme‘Enhancing impact: digitalization, investment, and intra-African trade’.
AWIEF’s prestigious annual event is a platform that sees global thought leaders, industry experts, policymakers, academics, development organizations, and investors gather to dialogue, connect, network, share, collaborate and transact in a combined effort to boost Africa’s entrepreneurship ecosystem for women.
Lionel Reina, CEO of APO Group said, “We are extremely excited for the opportunity to highlight the work of female journalists sharing the stories of women entrepreneurs in Africa. The APO Group African Women in Media Award is part of our commitment to supporting the development of journalism on the continent. We are delighted to present this award with AWIEF in Cape Town as we celebrate women in journalism and entrepreneurship.”
Entries for APO Group African Women in Media Award must offer valuable insights into African female entrepreneurs while appealing to a global audience.
The award is open to African woman journalists and bloggers, whether directly employed or freelancers, working in the continent of Africa who have produced a story that has been broadcast or published in English, French, Portuguese or Arabic in the form of a printed publication, a television feature, a radio story, a website or a blog whose primary audience is based in Africa.
Stories must have been broadcast or published between 1st January and 15th September 2019.
Stories are judged on content, writing, analysis, creativity, human interest, and community impact.
All stories must be submitted in electronic format:
– Print: upload the scan(s) of the published article; – Radio: upload the SoundCloud link; – Website: upload the URL; and/or – TV: upload the YouTube link.
TV material must first be uploaded to YouTube (www.YouTube.com) and radio material to SoundCloud(SoundCloud.com). If one is not a member of these sites, one will need to sign up in order to upload the video or radio material. Once one has obtained the link, one must enter it in this online entry form when inputting one’s story details.
The deadline for entries is 15th September 2019. The finalists will be announced on 1st October 2019 while the winner will be announced on Wednesday, 30 October 2019.
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.
Women entrepreneurs in East Africa now get investment as high as $3 million in their businesses as Invest2Impact has just been launched. Invest2Impact is access to funding and women-led business development initiative sponsored by the development finance institutions (DFIs) of Canada, the UK, France, and the United States, in partnership with the MasterCard Foundation.
“There is no mountain that is too high for the African woman.” ~ H.E Graca Machel
“Success is to overcome your fears & insecurities and the courage to move forward. Celebrating the breaking of barriers and to prove it can be done.” — H.E Graça Machel, Founder & Patron @G_MachelTrustgiving her key note address at the official launch of #invest2impact
The current project focus is East Africa, specifically:
Ethiopia
Kenya
Rwanda
Tanzania and;
Uganda.
A total of 100 women participants will be chosen from all competition entrants to participate in one of the following four tracks. Each track will aim to include (subject to sufficient applicants who meet the criteria) 5 women participants from each of the participating countries. The competition will be open only to majority women-owned businesses, and detailed entry criteria will be on the competition website from the launch date.
The Four Tracks Include:
2Xcelerate
SDG-aligned growth funding above $3 million
Business competition open to women-led business in the participating countries with preference given to those that support or are aligned to the UN Sustainable Development Goals. 25 Finalists will compete for cash prizes of $85,000 recognition at a gala winners’ event and participation in the invest2impact funding readiness program to maximize your chances of funding. This track is designed for revenue-positive businesses seeking sizeable investment usually greater than $3 million to scale
2Xcapital
Tailored SME growth funding access support
25 SMEs selected from the invest2impact applicants will benefit from a funding access program, including funding readiness assessments and customized assistance with building an investment case to access funding from funders other than the invest2impact sponsors. This track is designed for smaller businesses suitable for less than $3 million in funding.
2Xcrowd
Go global with a guided crowdfunding campaign
Another 25 social enterprise and innovation-focused businesses will receive customized tailored support and mentorship to implement an Africa/global crowdfunding strategy to fuel their growth using this platform-based approach. The program will include crowd-funding strategy development platform fees and ongoing funding campaign content and communication support to achieve an agreed funding target.
2XCatalyse
Network and be seen at major industry events.
Go to the heart of Africa’s energy, health, technology, agriculture and tourism sectors, catch up on the latest trends and build your network and a client base 25 women entrepreneurs will be selected, based on their own motivation to attend a major international expo, experience or event in their industry sector with sponsored travel, attendance fees and promotional material.
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 3rd Women in Africa Annual Summit which took place on Marrakech from June 27th and 28th, 2019, attracted delegates from over 80 countries with a mandate to African women to rise to the need to take a leading role in defining how they want to develop business with the rest of the world.
According to Hafsat Abiola, President of Women In Africa, “together we are and we will change the centuries’ old story of Africa through the magic of women from all part of Africa, from Asia, the Middle East, and America and from the few men who have understood that we are changing Africa for the greater good of all of us”.
The ‘greater good’ was symbolized by the exceptional presence of Alaa Salah, the 22-year-old Sudanese student, now known throughout the world as the Lady Liberty of Sudan after she spoke up in a demonstration demanding the installation of a democratic and civilian government in her country. As she did last April, she reminded the audience the poem she read, standing fearless on top of a car: “It is not the bullet that kills; What kills is the silence of people.”
The 550 women and men leaders, representing the economic, governmental, cultural and civil society from more than 80 countries never kept silent during the Women In Africa third annual summit and the parallel WIA54 program dedicated to laureate women entrepreneurs coming from every African country but one.
Under the High Patronage of his Majesty King Mohammed VI, the Women in Africa annual conference welcomed for the first-time official delegations from the United States, the Middle East, and Asia. Together, they worked on the theme: “How African Women Engage the World and Create a New Paradigm.”
“If you get the right people together and get them engaged on subjects, great things happen,” said the Kuwaiti Princess Intisar Al Sabah who attended the conference along with a delegation from her home country. “From the opening speech, the whole subject was: ‘let us collaborate for a better Africa and a better world.’ This set everyone’s mood to engage and collaborate with one another.”
Three specific sessions addressed how Africa can revisit its business relationships with America, Asia, and Europe. “We have to stop thinking ‘charity’ when we talk about women of Africa,” said Aude de Thuin founder of Women in Africa and of the Women’s Forum for the Economy & Society. “The only message is, ‘women in the economy are at the same level as men,'” de Thuin added.
If Africa has done a lot of work in terms of empowering its population to be able to scale up and create a wealthy continent, there remains a gap in how the rest of the world understands the kind of development Africa is going through.
The presence of Africa and of African women in the media around the world appeared to be one of the two key paths toward creating a new paradigm. As American television anchor and lawyer Star Jones explained, it is urgent that Africa and especially African women write their own narrative. “In other words, you do not want to allow the news media to dictate how the world sees you,” Jones said. “You write your own narrative and you tell the world who you are.” “Africa is capable of producing its own images and telling its own stories,” added Denise Epoté, Regional Director for TV5 in Africa. The other path to a new paradigm is to take the lead of professional investment prospection in Asia, beyond India and China through a demanding process that includes transparency and positive social impact.
Acknowledging the growing diversity of African-Asian economic exchange, delegates agreed that Europeans need to revisit their own business relationships with African countries and corporations to remain competitive.
The new African paradigm was also implemented at Women in Africa by the 53 women entrepreneur laureates of WIA54 2019, an initiative launched by WIA Philanthropy Foundation and aimed at high-potential African women entrepreneurs who are creating tomorrow’s Africa. They all participated in a two-day series of training workshops to guide them on the fundamentals of a startup at the crucial moments of its development.
“Africa is the only region in the world where more women than men choose an entrepreneurial career, a reality that underscores the work of Women in Africa Philanthropy, which we are proud to sponsor for the second consecutive year,” said Société Générale CEO Frédéric Oudéa in the closing of the summit. “Opening a field of possibilities to the feminine dynamic will have a certain impact on the future of the African continent.”
“The 53 Women Entrepreneurs represent every country of Africa but Eritrea,” explained its program manager Seynabou Thiam. “They were selected among 1,800 applicants, which confirms the force of women entrepreneurship in Africa,” Thiam explained.
“These young women entrepreneurs represent the future of not only their countries but the future of Africa and the world,” said WIA54 Godmother Ann Walker Marchant, founder of The Walker Marchant Group in Washington D.C. and a former White House Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton. “They are innovative, creative and fierce. They are breaking glass ceilings and changing the perception of business in Africa. These fresh faces are the future.”
Seven of the 53 WIA54 2019 were also honored and their projects distinguished on seven different themes during a ceremony that started and concluded with a spontaneous enthusiastic and emotional party:
* Ley Zoussi (Republic of Congo) in agriculture for Complete Farmer and her community agriculture platform; * Gladys Nelly Kimani (Kenya) on digital for Class Teacher Network and her application that digitizes the school path; * Fadzayi Chiwandire (South Africa) in education for DIV: A Initiative, her NGO that teaches young girls how to code; * Ehiaghe Aigiomawu (Nigeria) in fintech, for Vesicash and her instant escrow technology; * Corine Maurice Ouattara (Ivory Coast) in health, for her Mousso Health Pass, the digital medical record on connected bracelets; * Mariam Sherif (Egypt) in the environment, for Reform Studio, her eco-friendly design products; * Grace Camara (Sierra Leone) for social innovation, with RemitFund, which transforms the African diaspora funds’ transfers into social investments.
Roland Berger and Women In Africa published on this occasion their third study on African Women Entrepreneurs. Although Africa has more women entrepreneurs than any of the other continents (24% of women are entrepreneurs), African businesswomen could make their startup companies more sustainable and profitable if access to professional training, support, telecommunications, and banking structures were developed.
Other personalities such as Awa Ndiaye Seck (UN Women), Cathia Lawson Hall (Société Générale), Viviane Onano (Leading Light Initiative), Swaady Martin (Yswara), Alyse Nelson (President of Vital Voices), Rokia Traoré (singer-songwriter and cultural entrepreneur), Aïssata Diakité (Zabaan Holding), Francine Ntoumi, Oby Ezekwesili (#BringBackOurGirls) and Veronica Colondam (YCAB Foundation) participated in conversations that spanned from financial inclusion, women in science, arts & culture, the impact of climate change, development of women’s leadership, investing in the new generation of young digital innovators, facilitating women’s access to finance and agriculture markets, corruption and, gender among others.
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.