Africa is not poor by the way. Your media and elementary school is deceiving you. The problem is corrupt leadership. It's even far more better to see africa as one of those asian third world countries than allowing poverty to be the first to come to your mind each time you think about Africa
@@mlionea You really hate white people don't you? Every video I see you comment in you are either bashing the West or white people. Which makes me wonder why you are using their technology in the first place.
One area many Africans are lacking is lack of computer labs in schools, I am in Somalia and there is no computers to learn basic IT, coding etc and that makes hard to get talent to build next tech innovations. We hope those big tech companies help schools get basic IT equipment across Africa particularly Somalia.
You're right. We Europeans have kind of lost hope in positive changes, sorry for that. It's not personal, it's part of a wider nihilism and pessimism towards everything in the world. Show us we're wrong!
@@ViriatoII -Nihilism, pessimism, and absolute misery. You're right about that. That's all I see in the West and add to that violence in America in spite of Westerners being surrounded by trappings of "wealth". So sad,
I can't remember the last time I handled physical cash - thanks to MPESA. I am glad to see Bloomberg showing Africa's startup scene, more of this visibility will solve the problem.
I see great potentials in Africa, and it can accelerate faster with Nigeria and Kenya tech hubs collaborating (more), then helping South Africa and Egypt get on board to cover to cover and support the four regional markets. Nothing can get Africa to one currency and single market faster than unified tech hubs platform
@@shangothunder1055 Africa usually votes in the international stage as one bloc. I'll go one step further - what is a nation? The concept of a nation is made up. It is whatever the entity that some group of people recognise they are part of. Sure, Africa has dozens of countries - mostly artificially drawn by European Imperial past. But it's important to know that it is exactly only that. What Africa is - whether it's a nation or regions or states or whatever is up to people living in Africa, and we should not try to use our westernised concepts to condescend them into telling them they are what we think they are rather than what they decide to be. Also, even if we do take the western definitions (the borders are there like it or not) much rather like none of any individual nations in European Union has any influence or presence in international stage, but European Union does, you can say the same about Africa (as a bloc). Africa could be considered an entity as they behave as such. So spare us your condescension. I think the more interesting question is can Africa do it and if so - how?
In Nigeria this is so true... I worked for a bank in Nigeria as an enterprise network engineer, between 2020 and 2022, Nigeria has suffered the biggest brain drain problem in Africa, virtually everyone I know is leaving to either Canada or UK... Cos our government is full of idiots.
you need to adopt to the evolbing development. brain drain is nolonger an issue in 2024. the glob has become one and one can work anywhere in the world. where you brain is needed is your field for working you are adding value to humanity but if allowed, your school of thought is that you will not serve the world because the opotunity to serve the glob is not originating in you home country! outdated school of thought.
Last time I went to Kenya it was pretty trippy going from the pastorlist areas of the Turkana then driving down into Nairobi and seeing thick glasses wearing hipsters in cafes. And MPesa is EVERYWHERE. Even the Maasai use it!
Soft tech.. Africa has to concentrate on the hardctech as well. Making instruments, electrical devices, computer chips, mechanical things, chemicals sewing them a together in a meaningfull yet noncompetitive way for Africa's mothers and daughters to live better lives.
people dont know that egyptians are in kenya and sudan,kenya has great thinking capacity,people have ideas that need investments and given opportunity they have a wired brain that will awaken and make ideas never thought before,nigeria and zambia have great minds too
Love this esp how Nigeria gave Kenya a run for its money. As a Kenyan, I am ashamed but as an African very proud of our bggest and important economy, Nigeria. Kudos Africa.
Why will you be ashamed of being Kenya.... In terms of corruption, no African country has it bad than Nigeria, Nigeria has some of the most talented and enterprising young people in the Continent but corruption has continued to stifle business here in.... As long as we are surviving it and making something out of it, be proud of who you are or where you come from.... I am Nigerian by the way.
LoL. It's like saying china gave Philippine a run for its money. It's the other way round, bro. Nigeria has more unicorns than Kenya and more tech talents.
Go Kenya. Biggest threat to investment in many African countries for private investors (as opposed to state sponsored investors from you know where) is political instability and corruption. What we don’t want is another software startup in Africa. Let start solving real issues of poverty such as shortage of education, water and energy and housing that can be used everywhere in the world. The most important being higher mass education. Unfortunately external investors want to make money in the short term which is not necessarily aligns with what the country needs for the long term. Go Kenya.
Innovation (which Startups fall under) can help with all that. You cannot expect to get ahead as a country if you are always depending on another country to innovate the technology you need. You can do both at the same time.
what's wrong with having another software company? It's not an "either or" situation. You can have software companies and still have those other startups working on hardware products that solve everyday problems.
Quite encouraging with the upsurge in unicorns but I am still worried that Africa is still not benefiting enough as the many external multinationals who provide the startup investments or funding do not allow a return-on-investments to close Africa's widening inequality gap.
Nice to see the African startup scene. I wish they move more and more into Asian economies like India, China , Bangladesh and ASEAN . And Asian startups should start infusing capital in the budding startups of Africa . 👍👍😃
@@asternoah5534 Isn't the earth in the solar system...isn't that in the galaxy so on n so fourth whats your point Noah? having a brain doen't make you smart man from the ark..Its a continent not a country...we specify when mentioning European countries and in the states we specify which city and state so come correct when you talking about the wealth generator of the world...the gem,the goldmine of music culture cobald diamonds you name it....every country is amazing and unique in its right...specify that Cobalt is from The DRC not from Africa...so on n so fourth peace punk.
It's interesting how this historiography of African start-ups centres on companies that tapped into foreign funding. It's the only reason why you'd think Nigeria came to tech start-ups late. Companies like interswitch (one of the four unicorns referenced in the story) and ValuCard (now UPS) started as JVs of Nigerian banks from the late 90s/early 2000s. By 2003/4, ValuCard became first African fintech (that term wasn't common then) to receive direct investment in an EMV company.
What you are saying is true but to be honest, it was not until Mpesa was invented in Kenya in 2007 that the world took notice of Africa's tech space. Mpesa and other similar mobile money products took Africa by storm and led to the formation of the hundreds of fintechs that we see today. Landing of the fibre optic cable also helped boost Africa's tech space.
@@tkk3852 What dies it matter if the 'world' didn't take notice of our own development model? My point exactly is that we need to question narratives that centre western intervention. The fact is that the growth of the digital space in Nigeria is not some fluke, but a legacy close to three decades of tech ecosystem building. Just as it's entertainment is beneficiary of 60years of tv production. These things are not flukes.
These investment aim in just one industry that what surprises me. They all look for tech industry and not the others for us who aim for other industry we are left behind. I think we need to give these other industry start ups another eye.
Look at Canada, Tech and Real Estate is driving the wave. EV will be the next big industry. Africa should actually ramp up Tech education/growth, it is the 4th industrial revolution and we shouldn't miss on this.
And this is why we have built daba finance. We want to make it easy for anyone to be able to tap in the most exciting economic region of the world: Africa!
African startup founder here. Not sure if it’s weird to look for seed investors in TH-cam comments 😅 If you’re interested in a pitch you can reach out 🙏🏾 this is kind of a Hail Mary so, sorry for the abruptness
Flutterwave sorta reminds me of SWIFT, although in a fledgling form. I'd suggest they expand and fully integrate themselves all over the continent first before entering western markets.
Exactly they should expand into the Caribbean and South america first also. Flutterwave solves the issue of multiple currencies, which is something that exist in the Caribbean and South america more than in the USA or European Union.
I was with you up until the women only nonsense. People who want to invest in something only care that it is going to make them money. It has nothing to do with what whoever is running looks like or identifies as because people only really care about whether it will earn them money. In fact I can see all the "women owned", "black owned", etc. branding as being detrimental as it inherently implies that that aspect of the business is significant when it is only really significant to marketing to a particular clientele.
Africa as a continent is larger than USA, China and India combined. Can’t we have identity the countries in the continent and not the continent as a whole?
nah because the continent is growing as a whole plus due to AFCTA the largest trade agreement on earth Africa now acts as a single market under the law.
i think its beneficial to Africa to move trade & brand globally as a block (AfCFTA is great), but you can't really say that the reality of tech founders living in the leafy suburbs of Cape Town is similar to a start-up founder looking for funding in CAR or DRC. By grouping the continent, we may be doing a disservice & increasing gaps further
what are you saying bro?😂 Amazon is currently building their African headquarters in Cape Town South Africa so i dont know what you are bragging about.
@@sykewtf9820just check from Netflix Africa, Starlink, Google, BBC, Air France, IBM, , etc are all being situated in Kenya for a reason..... Amazon is not common in East Africa and that's why it was moved to Capetown
We are Global African Indigenous people!! Love and Unity is the best key for us all together!!💯 Also Giving thanks to the Great Mother's/Goddesses and Great Father's/Gods and the Ancestors and Guardians!! Saying from Snefer aka Bashiyr!!👸🏿🤴🏿
The money is in manufacturing and farming. Software is secondary. We don't have a African computer. Invest in value addition. Tech startup are focused in urban areas we struggle with electricity and data.
Never forget that those who own the fiber cable into a country have the power to influence and without natural resources a computer, mobile phone would not exist.
MummyAfrica needs private investment and entrepreneurship so this is a more positive video than seeing 'MummyAfrica got loans from a Chinese state-owned, CPC-controlled company' which is corrupt MummyAfrican politicians taking their countries into irrational, impoverishing debt. MummyAfrica needs to gain a variety of investment means from private institutions, not state organisations❕️
Great vid Bloomberg, but remember that Kenya is not Africa, so to say investors are piling into African startups but you're only talking about Kenyan companies is just not fair. We are doing far more awesome things here in South Africa and Southern Africa as a whole but no light is being shone there, I am telling you there is massive innovation in the fintech sector and energy sector too here in South Africa.
How does it feel for once when Kenya and Nigeria get the shine? South Africa always gets the shine. For once South Africa has not been mentioned and you are up in arms. To be honest Kenya's and Nigeria's tech start up space is more vibrant than South Africa's at the moment, looking at amount of funding raised and number of start ups produced.
A lot of foreign investors still are guilty to unfair benefit sharing. Western corporations have an advantage versus African ideas as they have pressure to monetizing ideas.
We are a Kenyan consultancy ,keen on facilitating agricultural projects to source funding . As the lead project consultants, we are seeking funds for an eco-friendly apicultural community project in Gabon
Next time put the names of the speakers, so that people can be abe to contact or reach them - Great video though. As a software engineer with a startup i am looking for ways to develop relationships with people who can help
*Asia and Africa needs to trade and invest in each others market more.* Edit: I just realised yt is removing my reply to my own comment. Crazy level of censorship going on, it seems.
Africa doesn't have much to offer Asia besides arable land for food and minerals. Asia would dominate in intellectual property and destroy all these African start-ups.
@@itumo2645 American and European tech workers are being outmatched by Asians and somehow you imagine Africans can directly compete? That's not where our advantages lie.
Sad thing about Nigeria is the regulatory environment is literally stifling innovative startups and forcing them to migrate. I believe Flutterwave and Andela have already upped sticks (their HQ's at least).
This along with corruption needs to be a priority. Buddy works for GE and was telling me how much bribes play a role on wether your petition/surveys are even looked at.
You are always quick to write negativity about Nigeria yet Nigeria is clearly leading the Tech space with 4 out of the 6 unicorns in Africa and more successful start up emerging yearly from Nigeria. Irrespective of what happens in Nigeria, Nigerians thrive so you should rather focus your energy on perfect environment created in your country.
@@Freedmen-American-Reparations Sad thing is speaking without a lack of understanding. Nigeria's largest diaspora is in the U.S. and it numbers somewhere around 500,000 tops. This is a country of over 200 million folks - do the math. Nigerians are in Nigeria. And company's relocating their HQs is because they are globally minded in terms of expansion, something other Africans may want to pick up from Nigeria. Andela has sights on Latin America, and as you heard Flutterwave is positioning itself as a global company, rather than merely a national/regional company. And all this would accrue to the benefits of Nigerian pockets/economy. You view is jaundiced because of your own limitations.
Why doesn’t flutterwave focus on developing countries outside of Africa? Bases in already developed countries that already has access to that type of tech should not be the focus but what do I know.
Yup. Stay in the developed countries, they will be able to grow with those countries as their economies grow. But trying to break into Europe, America... ehhh, that seems like a genuine waste of capital. Unless they can provide something this US companies cannot. It doesn't really make sense
Potential for growth is so minimal in already developed countries. How much room do tech giants such as Amazon or Apple really have to grow compared to start ups in Africa that have potential to create a monopoly over the entire continent
I don’t really see them making that mistake. Because I watched an interview with one of the the founders, Iyin, when he revealed that one of the reasons he relocated from Canada to Lagos, Nigeria, was exactly because those Western countries were already saturated with similar technology. There was hardly any room to grow as consumers already had access to such technologies. I believe the way to go for them will be to look for markets in developing countries. Truth is, they haven’t even scratched the surface in Nigeria.
My concern is that do tech startups (providing services) produce jobs? I understand software developers are needed, but how can tech startups employ young Nigerians? Because Africa's problem is the inability to turn raw materials into refined ones, which are sold at higher prices. That, to me, brings in money into the county, which can then be disseminated throughout the country. But one company creating services like a mobile banking system makes things easier but does not create jobs.
Many things can be true at one time. Plus on a macro level, tech creates opportunities (e.g., mobile banking eliminates lots of hurdles in the commerce of "market women" which in the aggregate creates greater wealth)
When people make the argument about the inequitable distribution of capital to women have any stopped to maybe think that statistics show that women start businesses at lower rates. Yes, women go into SELF EMPLOYMENT at equal rates but women go into ENTREPRENEURSHIP at 1/3 the rate of Men, especially in Africa.
We need to come up with new and creative ideas, copping the west and Chinese technologies will not help Africa grow bigger. Especially hardware startups.
India has already created ONDC and UPI api which can be used for online delivery market scene and online payment. It can be used by Africa for online ecosystem
@@qarahiyo When going about day to day, maybe acceptable. Doing a feature like this for millions to see........poor self representation and that of a Bloomberg employee. Even a shirt would have suffice. All the techies in the video and not another one having an unpressed shirt.
Are the sweet 'now comes Africa' headlines on already? Usually you wait for the summer break. Why not do a migraines story? Haven't heard one since last year
It is usually very annoying when Western media just bunch up Africa into one entity like it is a single country. Africa is diverse and the countries are very different. Begin your reports with that fact in mind.
Mpesa helps me pay my school fees from DRC. Thanks Mpesa!
Interesting. It has a far reach
Benefits of DRC joiningg the EAC
Am from Nigeria and currently in Goma DRC, and I have been thinking about using mpesa for my crypto purchases and in turn send money home....
All the best to Africa! Start-ups are pivotal for helping people grow out of poverty.
Corruption is the real problem.
it not Africa its kenya
@@mungai8482 only 4 unicorns lol 😆 USA alone has 1096 unicorns lol
Africa is not poor by the way. Your media and elementary school is deceiving you. The problem is corrupt leadership. It's even far more better to see africa as one of those asian third world countries than allowing poverty to be the first to come to your mind each time you think about Africa
Why compare the US to Africa?
That's both hilarious and pathetic.
Bloomberg have been bringing us Africa related stories. Nice 👍🏿 thanks.
*Am proud to be a Kenyan, keep on shining Africa*
So amazed to see a strong effort of tech growth in Kenya! Especially glad that Bloomberg is shining a light on this.
@@mungai8482 Yup, 100% correct. My fault.
Kudos to Bloomberg for covering Africa fairly. You do not see that with a lot of Western media outlets.
Stop thanking the devil.
@@mlioneastop believing in fairy tales as an adult. There's no devil.
@@mlionea He actually said the truth even though each media have their own objectives. Even your own local media is very well manipulated
@@dantatadangote4700 don't think that was meant for you.
@@mlionea You really hate white people don't you? Every video I see you comment in you are either bashing the West or white people. Which makes me wonder why you are using their technology in the first place.
This is absolutely amazing! I wish all of these companies the utmost success!
go Africa love from Australia. loved my visit to Kenyan nicest people ever.
Really happy to see the future of AFRICA
One area many Africans are lacking is lack of computer labs in schools, I am in Somalia and there is no computers to learn basic IT, coding etc and that makes hard to get talent to build next tech innovations. We hope those big tech companies help schools get basic IT equipment across Africa particularly Somalia.
This is so awesome to see! I hope tech brings prosperity to Africa.
M-pesa was a success even before the world realized it. I think the same energy needs to be reciprocated in our African health sector.
Love from Gabon 🇬🇦..let's go Kenya let's go Africa
This is real Africa news, not the relentless negativity and fixation on social issues you see in France24 or BBC.
You're right. We Europeans have kind of lost hope in positive changes, sorry for that. It's not personal, it's part of a wider nihilism and pessimism towards everything in the world. Show us we're wrong!
@@ViriatoII We have no obligation to prove anything to you
@@mwanikimwaniki6801 I wasn't trying to fight, just wishing you to prove us wrong. I'll even edit that to "show us we're wrong!"
@@ViriatoII -Nihilism, pessimism, and absolute misery. You're right about that. That's all I see in the West and add to that violence in America in spite of Westerners being surrounded by trappings of "wealth". So sad,
@@ViriatoII I understand you and sorry for my broad here, we're becoming highly defensive in Africa😅
I can't remember the last time I handled physical cash - thanks to MPESA.
I am glad to see Bloomberg showing Africa's startup scene, more of this visibility will solve the problem.
Cash is the only way.
Keep our freedoms. Use CASH.
First world still in the stone age of using cards
It was funny going into traditional Maasai area and seeing signs that said "MPesa accepted". It's everywhere now.
Mpesa has been a real gamechanger. Looking forward to more local innovations in AI and metaverse.
But who owns mpesa?
I see great potentials in Africa, and it can accelerate faster with Nigeria and Kenya tech hubs collaborating (more), then helping South Africa and Egypt get on board to cover to cover and support the four regional markets.
Nothing can get Africa to one currency and single market faster than unified tech hubs platform
i can't speak on Egypt but SA already has a thriving tech scene,Cape Town is literally the start up capital of the continent .
It's time for Africa to become one of the economic superpowers.
Africa is a continent not a country.
@@shangothunder1055 That's why i said Africa, not Nigeria. Lol.
@@shangothunder1055 Africa usually votes in the international stage as one bloc.
I'll go one step further - what is a nation? The concept of a nation is made up. It is whatever the entity that some group of people recognise they are part of.
Sure, Africa has dozens of countries - mostly artificially drawn by European Imperial past. But it's important to know that it is exactly only that. What Africa is - whether it's a nation or regions or states or whatever is up to people living in Africa, and we should not try to use our westernised concepts to condescend them into telling them they are what we think they are rather than what they decide to be.
Also, even if we do take the western definitions (the borders are there like it or not) much rather like none of any individual nations in European Union has any influence or presence in international stage, but European Union does, you can say the same about Africa (as a bloc). Africa could be considered an entity as they behave as such.
So spare us your condescension. I think the more interesting question is can Africa do it and if so - how?
@@raccoonious4038 No it doesn’t.
@@shangothunder1055 Yeah but it has a strong identity like the US. So its almost like a country
Not mentioned is how much talent is lost to brain drain to the US and Europe where there is better pay. Also nearly all the investment is in fintech.
Tech business in places like Kenya has no brain drain.. actually it's opposite.
If money is the motivation, brain drain will continue for a long time.
In Nigeria this is so true... I worked for a bank in Nigeria as an enterprise network engineer, between 2020 and 2022, Nigeria has suffered the biggest brain drain problem in Africa, virtually everyone I know is leaving to either Canada or UK... Cos our government is full of idiots.
American and European companies are outsourcing IT services. People will still earn big locally.
you need to adopt to the evolbing development. brain drain is nolonger an issue in 2024. the glob has become one and one can work anywhere in the world. where you brain is needed is your field for working you are adding value to humanity but if allowed, your school of thought is that you will not serve the world because the opotunity to serve the glob is not originating in you home country! outdated school of thought.
I am a 16 years old Boy and I am passionnate about Business and Tech, And I will be launchching my Billion Dollar FinTech App in 2 years
Really happy see them flourishing.
Last time I went to Kenya it was pretty trippy going from the pastorlist areas of the Turkana then driving down into Nairobi and seeing thick glasses wearing hipsters in cafes. And MPesa is EVERYWHERE. Even the Maasai use it!
Africa is the future .
4:04 It wouldn't be a video about tech startups without footage of a foosball table.
Soft tech.. Africa has to concentrate on the hardctech as well. Making instruments, electrical devices, computer chips, mechanical things, chemicals sewing them a together in a meaningfull yet noncompetitive way for Africa's mothers and daughters to live better lives.
Kenyans are obsessed with tech and the internet, commenting from Nairobi
Meanwhile… leaving out South Africa…
The world has been undermining our knowledge,our power ,our capacities.we rising 💪🏾
people dont know that egyptians are in kenya and sudan,kenya has great thinking capacity,people have ideas that need investments and given opportunity they have a wired brain that will awaken and make ideas never thought before,nigeria and zambia have great minds too
Further proof that being plundered for centuries cannot stop the source of true greatness!
Africa is the future and the future is now!
Africa needs its own Black-owned versions of Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, TH-cam, WhatsApp, Netflix, Visa card, Spotify etc.
so that we can cut down on a lot of toxicity brought by social media and stop consuming western perspective
Hundred percent
America will hate it though
Exactly👏🏼
Black owned ? most of does companies are publickly listed anyone can own shares in them.
Love this esp how Nigeria gave Kenya a run for its money. As a Kenyan, I am ashamed but as an African very proud of our bggest and important economy, Nigeria. Kudos Africa.
Why will you be ashamed of being Kenya.... In terms of corruption, no African country has it bad than Nigeria, Nigeria has some of the most talented and enterprising young people in the Continent but corruption has continued to stifle business here in.... As long as we are surviving it and making something out of it, be proud of who you are or where you come from.... I am Nigerian by the way.
LoL.
It's like saying china gave Philippine a run for its money.
It's the other way round, bro.
Nigeria has more unicorns than Kenya and more tech talents.
Patent laws or rights are killing African start-ups. For example mpesa was patented by Vodacom and took huge amounts of money from the economy!
Go Kenya. Biggest threat to investment in many African countries for private investors (as opposed to state sponsored investors from you know where) is political instability and corruption. What we don’t want is another software startup in Africa. Let start solving real issues of poverty such as shortage of education, water and energy and housing that can be used everywhere in the world. The most important being higher mass education.
Unfortunately external investors want to make money in the short term which is not necessarily aligns with what the country needs for the long term.
Go Kenya.
Innovation (which Startups fall under) can help with all that. You cannot expect to get ahead as a country if you are always depending on another country to innovate the technology you need. You can do both at the same time.
I like yo analogy
You know nothing, hope you have something to show for your theory.
what's wrong with having another software company?
It's not an "either or" situation. You can have software companies and still have those other startups working on hardware products that solve everyday problems.
Africa has a promising future in Tech.
Quite encouraging with the upsurge in unicorns but I am still worried that Africa is still not benefiting enough as the many external multinationals who provide the startup investments or funding do not allow a return-on-investments to close Africa's widening inequality gap.
Love to see the growth.
Nice to see the African startup scene. I wish they move more and more into Asian economies like India, China , Bangladesh and ASEAN . And Asian startups should start infusing capital in the budding startups of Africa . 👍👍😃
its not Africa its kenya
Lol china don't need it, china has complete internet chain ecosytem😂😂
@@mungai8482 So Kenya isn't Africa? Speaking English doesn't make you European.
@@asternoah5534 Isn't the earth in the solar system...isn't that in the galaxy so on n so fourth whats your point Noah? having a brain doen't make you smart man from the ark..Its a continent not a country...we specify when mentioning European countries and in the states we specify which city and state so come correct when you talking about the wealth generator of the world...the gem,the goldmine of music culture cobald diamonds you name it....every country is amazing and unique in its right...specify that Cobalt is from The DRC not from Africa...so on n so fourth peace punk.
I was also wondering why she didn't mention any Asian countries 🤔
Bloomberg tells African stories so authentically and in an inspiring way! Shout out to you.
the motherland
It's interesting how this historiography of African start-ups centres on companies that tapped into foreign funding. It's the only reason why you'd think Nigeria came to tech start-ups late. Companies like interswitch (one of the four unicorns referenced in the story) and ValuCard (now UPS) started as JVs of Nigerian banks from the late 90s/early 2000s. By 2003/4, ValuCard became first African fintech (that term wasn't common then) to receive direct investment in an EMV company.
What you are saying is true but to be honest, it was not until Mpesa was invented in Kenya in 2007 that the world took notice of Africa's tech space. Mpesa and other similar mobile money products took Africa by storm and led to the formation of the hundreds of fintechs that we see today. Landing of the fibre optic cable also helped boost Africa's tech space.
@@tkk3852 What dies it matter if the 'world' didn't take notice of our own development model? My point exactly is that we need to question narratives that centre western intervention. The fact is that the growth of the digital space in Nigeria is not some fluke, but a legacy close to three decades of tech ecosystem building. Just as it's entertainment is beneficiary of 60years of tv production. These things are not flukes.
@ deji&jinmi Word
African diaspora, make sure you get in on this! You know who can’t always be on 🔝 (both of them)
Thanks Bloomberg for covering this topic
Of interest too is Amazon has just initiated a major operation in cape town
These investment aim in just one industry that what surprises me.
They all look for tech industry and not the others for us who aim for other industry we are left behind. I think we need to give these other industry start ups another eye.
Look at Canada, Tech and Real Estate is driving the wave. EV will be the next big industry. Africa should actually ramp up Tech education/growth, it is the 4th industrial revolution and we shouldn't miss on this.
M pesa was also in India...by Vodafone
And this is why we have built daba finance. We want to make it easy for anyone to be able to tap in the most exciting economic region of the world: Africa!
African startup founder here. Not sure if it’s weird to look for seed investors in TH-cam comments 😅 If you’re interested in a pitch you can reach out 🙏🏾 this is kind of a Hail Mary so, sorry for the abruptness
Not the typical way when looking for investors. However, best of luck to you
how do I contact you
@@ricecripsies4099 they probably had a LinkedIn
check sizes you’re looking for?
You miss a vital information; how can we look you up? Tip: always make it easy for people to reach out.
Flutterwave sorta reminds me of SWIFT, although in a fledgling form. I'd suggest they expand and fully integrate themselves all over the continent first before entering western markets.
Would be smart of their part
Exactly they should expand into the Caribbean and South america first also. Flutterwave solves the issue of multiple currencies, which is something that exist in the Caribbean and South america more than in the USA or European Union.
they are looking the wrong way, decentralized crypto is the answer... lol they are just copying west old structure instead of following the new wave
Yes. Absolutely. Hope they take note of your point.
I was with you up until the women only nonsense. People who want to invest in something only care that it is going to make them money. It has nothing to do with what whoever is running looks like or identifies as because people only really care about whether it will earn them money. In fact I can see all the "women owned", "black owned", etc. branding as being detrimental as it inherently implies that that aspect of the business is significant when it is only really significant to marketing to a particular clientele.
Africa as a continent is larger than USA, China and India combined. Can’t we have identity the countries in the continent and not the continent as a whole?
nah because the continent is growing as a whole plus due to AFCTA the largest trade agreement on earth Africa now acts as a single market under the law.
i think its beneficial to Africa to move trade & brand globally as a block (AfCFTA is great), but you can't really say that the reality of tech founders living in the leafy suburbs of Cape Town is similar to a start-up founder looking for funding in CAR or DRC. By grouping the continent, we may be doing a disservice & increasing gaps further
@@lm_b5080 I agree it will take decades to fully come to into effect, but starting somewhere is the first obstacle.
You should. But the imperialist Western minds still group Africa as one, similar to how Asians are lumped into one group.
Mpesa actually revolutionalised mobile money in the world!
Mpesa is not a start-up its been active for more than 10yrs. It's its own financial system.
Africa is a continent and not a country. Be country specific when making documentaries on the tech developments.
People really think Africa is country in this day and age
@@sophia-yd3ds "I BLESS THE RAINS DOWN IN AAAAFRICAAAA!"
2 trillion dollar companies just moved to Nairobi. Google and Amazon. Google development center which is a first in Africa.
Also Nigeria too both companies
what are you saying bro?😂 Amazon is currently building their African headquarters in Cape Town South Africa so i dont know what you are bragging about.
@@sykewtf9820just check from Netflix Africa, Starlink, Google, BBC, Air France, IBM, , etc are all being situated in Kenya for a reason..... Amazon is not common in East Africa and that's why it was moved to Capetown
We are Global African Indigenous people!! Love and Unity is the best key for us all together!!💯 Also Giving thanks to the Great Mother's/Goddesses and Great Father's/Gods and the Ancestors and Guardians!! Saying from Snefer aka Bashiyr!!👸🏿🤴🏿
Women led women owned...we don't care. We want competence and that is it.
Exactly.
@MsZoomification Why does "women led women owned" matter?
@MsZoomification My question was why was it important for you.
The money is in manufacturing and farming. Software is secondary. We don't have a African computer. Invest in value addition. Tech startup are focused in urban areas we struggle with electricity and data.
Never forget that those who own the fiber cable into a country have the power to influence and without natural resources a computer, mobile phone would not exist.
They will grow if they are solving real African problems
Africa's Century!!
This is commendable
China investment: “it is debt trap! “
US investment: “great opportunities for Africa!”
Why don't u take that to your mother bedroom where u were conceived
Sad truth..
@@scorpio6416 China invests on the government. Others invest on people that's what I would put it
@@scorpio6416 what a manipulations ....
KENYA KENYA KENYA Na vile tunasumbuka kupata hata internships pekee.
A growing economy doesn't create jobs only it creates opportunities beyond jobs ....you must find your niche
Super Beitrag, danke für die Infos!
Africa is the future
MummyAfrica needs private investment and entrepreneurship so this is a more positive video than seeing 'MummyAfrica got loans from a Chinese state-owned, CPC-controlled company' which is corrupt MummyAfrican politicians taking their countries into irrational, impoverishing debt.
MummyAfrica needs to gain a variety of investment means from private institutions, not state organisations❕️
Father Africa*
Great vid Bloomberg, but remember that Kenya is not Africa, so to say investors are piling into African startups but you're only talking about Kenyan companies is just not fair. We are doing far more awesome things here in South Africa and Southern Africa as a whole but no light is being shone there, I am telling you there is massive innovation in the fintech sector and energy sector too here in South Africa.
Nigeria has 4 out of 6 African tech unicorns, yet very little was said about Nigeria.
It's not a competition guys.
How does it feel for once when Kenya and Nigeria get the shine? South Africa always gets the shine. For once South Africa has not been mentioned and you are up in arms. To be honest Kenya's and Nigeria's tech start up space is more vibrant than South Africa's at the moment, looking at amount of funding raised and number of start ups produced.
Kenya is Africa we are a country in Africa how are we not Africa
@@solomonobihan9465Nigeria is literally the unicorn capital of the continent.
A lot of foreign investors still are guilty to unfair benefit sharing. Western corporations have an advantage versus African ideas as they have pressure to monetizing ideas.
Wow. This is impressive.
Ayeee lesss go Africa!!!! I want Africa to win so bad because I want to retire there
We are a Kenyan consultancy ,keen on facilitating agricultural projects to source funding . As the lead project consultants, we are seeking funds for an eco-friendly apicultural community project in Gabon
Wakanda Forever!
Beautiful marketing for our LOVELY COUNTRY... BEAUTIFUL.
AFRICA IS THE FUTURE.
8:32 that’s zuck with Bihari in Lagos not Kenya
Great video!
The future is African
history repeats itself
Next time put the names of the speakers, so that people can be abe to contact or reach them - Great video though. As a software engineer with a startup i am looking for ways to develop relationships with people who can help
this makes me happy 🤩
*Asia and Africa needs to trade and invest in each others market more.*
Edit: I just realised yt is removing my reply to my own comment. Crazy level of censorship going on, it seems.
100%
Africa doesn't have much to offer Asia besides arable land for food and minerals. Asia would dominate in intellectual property and destroy all these African start-ups.
@@zinjanthropus322 Possibly
@@zinjanthropus322 >>> You’d be surprised.
@@itumo2645 American and European tech workers are being outmatched by Asians and somehow you imagine Africans can directly compete? That's not where our advantages lie.
Wow Beautiful Kenya 🇰🇪
Sad thing about Nigeria is the regulatory environment is literally stifling innovative startups and forcing them to migrate. I believe Flutterwave and Andela have already upped sticks (their HQ's at least).
This along with corruption needs to be a priority. Buddy works for GE and was telling me how much bribes play a role on wether your petition/surveys are even looked at.
You are always quick to write negativity about Nigeria yet Nigeria is clearly leading the Tech space with 4 out of the 6 unicorns in Africa and more successful start up emerging yearly from Nigeria. Irrespective of what happens in Nigeria, Nigerians thrive so you should rather focus your energy on perfect environment created in your country.
@@amosadewuni460 Corruption is a deteriorating factor in Afrika I guess, same in Kenya.
They are going Nowhere.
Nigeria is where their bread is buttered.
And startups are popping up every day.
@@Freedmen-American-Reparations Sad thing is speaking without a lack of understanding. Nigeria's largest diaspora is in the U.S. and it numbers somewhere around 500,000 tops. This is a country of over 200 million folks - do the math. Nigerians are in Nigeria. And company's relocating their HQs is because they are globally minded in terms of expansion, something other Africans may want to pick up from Nigeria. Andela has sights on Latin America, and as you heard Flutterwave is positioning itself as a global company, rather than merely a national/regional company. And all this would accrue to the benefits of Nigerian pockets/economy. You view is jaundiced because of your own limitations.
Why doesn’t flutterwave focus on developing countries outside of Africa? Bases in already developed countries that already has access to that type of tech should not be the focus but what do I know.
Thinking the same thing why not go after South America. First world countries are so fought after by the giants that they just can’t compete
Yup. Stay in the developed countries, they will be able to grow with those countries as their economies grow. But trying to break into Europe, America... ehhh, that seems like a genuine waste of capital. Unless they can provide something this US companies cannot. It doesn't really make sense
Eh cause africa is low hanging fruit. Simple. Why go to places your not loved. Lol. A waste of time.
Potential for growth is so minimal in already developed countries. How much room do tech giants such as Amazon or Apple really have to grow compared to start ups in Africa that have potential to create a monopoly over the entire continent
I don’t really see them making that mistake. Because I watched an interview with one of the the founders, Iyin, when he revealed that one of the reasons he relocated from Canada to Lagos, Nigeria, was exactly because those Western countries were already saturated with similar technology. There was hardly any room to grow as consumers already had access to such technologies.
I believe the way to go for them will be to look for markets in developing countries. Truth is, they haven’t even scratched the surface in Nigeria.
My concern is that do tech startups (providing services) produce jobs? I understand software developers are needed, but how can tech startups employ young Nigerians? Because Africa's problem is the inability to turn raw materials into refined ones, which are sold at higher prices. That, to me, brings in money into the county, which can then be disseminated throughout the country. But one company creating services like a mobile banking system makes things easier but does not create jobs.
Thousands of software dev jobs, smartphone oriented jobs, and even agent networks. Many jobs can be made and do get made.
Please, abandon that stone-age thinking
Many things can be true at one time. Plus on a macro level, tech creates opportunities (e.g., mobile banking eliminates lots of hurdles in the commerce of "market women" which in the aggregate creates greater wealth)
You cannot have that industrialization process without these modern services businesses.
Are you currently hiring in Africa?
I hope they learn from the mistakes of the west but experiance has shown that humans never see the corporation coming until its far too late..
Inspiring!
Let’s go Africa
lookout for safiboda startup this year
When people make the argument about the inequitable distribution of capital to women have any stopped to maybe think that statistics show that women start businesses at lower rates. Yes, women go into SELF EMPLOYMENT at equal rates but women go into ENTREPRENEURSHIP at 1/3 the rate of Men, especially in Africa.
They have raised record funding but they don't have budget for creatives.
We need to come up with new and creative ideas, copping the west and Chinese technologies will not help Africa grow bigger.
Especially hardware startups.
No budget because it went into their pockets
Thank you.
Kenya is lit 🔥
India has already created ONDC and UPI api which can be used for online delivery market scene and online payment. It can be used by Africa for online ecosystem
India can use its technologies to fix Indian problems
Same hands giving taking, Africa be wise as a serpent and harmless as a dove..
Too much innovation in banks 🎉🎉🎉
Samuel Gebre, go and buy a pressing iron and use it.
techs and soldiers are the worst dressers and the saddest thing is they don't even notice it until someone points it out and even then they wont care.
@@qarahiyo When going about day to day, maybe acceptable. Doing a feature like this for millions to see........poor self representation and that of a Bloomberg employee. Even a shirt would have suffice. All the techies in the video and not another one having an unpressed shirt.
Are the sweet 'now comes Africa' headlines on already? Usually you wait for the summer break. Why not do a migraines story? Haven't heard one since last year
It is usually very annoying when Western media just bunch up Africa into one entity like it is a single country. Africa is diverse and the countries are very different.
Begin your reports with that fact in mind.
Its messed up. It just shows the level of ignorance around the world is scary.
So whats your argument?...they talked about countries in Africa aren't Kenyans and Nigerians africans
Wonder what's the catch
It's headquartered in San Francisco.