Successful Start-ups and Companies are celebrated no matter their
country of origin, from Waze to Google to Alibaba and many others. They
end up becoming international brands but their countries pride. For
Africa her future will largely depend on the growth of entrepreneurship
and the building of companies by African young people, who make up the
greater part of the population, companies that can compete globally and
be listed in the NASDAQ or the NYSE. We need to build companies across
the African nations that will impact on the overall economy of the
continent.It is a good development that Africa is getting more attention
in the Global start-up arena. This is evident in the increased attention to African start-ups.
Thanks to
Kenya and its government for hosting the Global
Entrepreneurship Summit (GES) which was attended by President Obama and
many successful entrepreneurs from the US and around the world. The GES
attracted great attention to many African start-ups. More importantly,
it opened more opportunities and ignited greater passion in the minds of
young people in Africa on the need to take their destinies in their
hands and become entrepreneurs. The story of African startups is one
that can give the continent a new and positive story for the western
media, who has always seen Africa as a dark and under developed
continent. And so raising new leaders who not only have intellectual
prowess but also economic power and influence will secure Africa’s
future and start-up Africa can be the needed channel to achieve that.
Now that the attention to African Start-ups is growing, the human and
material resources to pull these through are also in abundance but what
is really needed is a clear road map of how to take this future, a
collaborative effort from the governments in Africa, an academic
community that is focused more on Innovation, entrepreneurship
development through strong research, development and commercialization
of products, increased number of science, technology, engineering,
physics and maths graduates all around the continent, a strong private
sector that understands their role in start-up development, successful
and influential entrepreneurs from Africa (as ambassadors) who will
support, encourage and mentor young entrepreneurs and also the need to
celebrate successful start-ups and tell their story to the world.
Understanding the dynamics of Start-up development and Creating a path for Africa
There are several key market areas that African Startups can focus
on, I see great opportunities around Education, Health, e-commerce,
Agriculture, Power, Renewable Energy and many more. Everyone who is keen
to play a role in Start-up development in Africa(the Government, the
private sector, academics, the entrepreneurs themselves) should first
understand the dynamics of start-up development around the world today.
There is a need to understand what type of start-ups Africa need to
focus on at this time and how to channel the needed support towards
such. Steve Banks in one of his articles: Why Governments Don't Get Startups gives
clear distinctions on this subject. Steve identified six types of
Startups: Lifestyle start-ups, small business start-ups, scalable
startups, buyable startups, large company start-ups or social
start-ups.Understanding this will help form the base upon which to
build.
Building Innovation Culture and Ecosystem
Innovation is the soul of successful Start-ups. An Innovation culture
is the platform that drives entrepreneurship and makes the creation of
successful Start-ups more predictable in a given ecosystem. Two
different innovation cultures that am looking at closely and I think
Africa needs to learn from is the Silicon Valley innovation culture and
the Israel( Start-Up Nation) innovation ecosystem. These two top
innovation cultures are different and operate with different challenges
but they surely have unique similarities, they have built a strong
collaborative effort of the Government, the academic community and a
private sector to form a solid and formidable triangle of innovation
culture that produces more successes. This innovation culture can be
replicated in Africa with key uniqueness of Africa in focus. Each of
these key players in the innovation triangle has to play their part to
make things work in that system.
First the government creates the enabling environment, stimulates
growth, guides, regulates and sustains the innovation ecosystem. So for
any innovation ecosystem to thrive government plays the leading role in
its success. African government should understand their role in building
an innovation culture that will produce successful startups that can
compete globally. Some of the role of Africa government should include
and not limited to: Understanding the types of startups needed in Africa
as I pointed out above, being aware of its role and playing it well,
having policies that favor and support entrepreneurship and startup
development, establishing an office that oversees start-up development,
starting initiatives and programs that provide early stage funding for
start-ups, increased funding for research and development, encouraging
the learning of science, technology, engineering, maths and physics
related courses as to produce more graduates from these fields, building
the needed infrastructure (like the internet, Electricity, Innovation
clusters), Helping in the development of private sector venture capital
market, willing to learn key lessons and also collaborate with countries
that have built successful businesses and Startups.
Africa has many academic institutions which shows a great desire for learning and education, Nigeria for example has about 147 universities not
including Polytechnics and Colleges of Education. But what is seen in
the African education sector is a weak education system. This weak
education system has contributed greatly to why Africa is still not innovating and
underdeveloped. Building a strong educational system across Africa is a
challenge for African leaders and educators. A strong academic
community in an innovation ecosystem drives research, development and
commercialization of ideas that form great businesses, the academics
should be the ones to advice the government and private sector on how
innovation cultures are built. Stanford University for example played
leading role in the creation of Silicon Valley. The story of Israel’s
innovation culture is never complete without mentioning the role Israel
Institute of Technology - Technion plays.
The private sector on its own hand should be well organized, develop
great workforce, have great ideas and willing to collaborate with the
government and the academic community to build innovation clusters for
several businesses within the African nations. The private sector should
also see itself taking the lead in venture capital, Angel investment
and public funding for startups, this will determine the growth of the
ecosystem. Successful businesses and entrepreneurs from Africa should
help in creating this innovation culture for startups to thrive and also
serve as mentors for young businesses. Building a great innovation
culture in Africa will make it easier to seek a focused collaboration
within and outside the continent.
The need for more Innovators through STEM cannot be over emphasized
The stage Africa’s development is at the moment is such that we need
to increase emphases and awareness on the study of Sciences, Technology,
Engineering, Maths,(STEM) and physics as to produce thinkers and
innovators that will change the continent with their inventions.
Tuition to study STEM courses should be subsidized, scholarship should
also be provided for students to study.More women should be encouraged
in these fields to also become start-up founders.
Successful Entrepreneurs as Ambassadors of Startup-Africa
The truth still remains that only Africans can build Africa. While reading about the role individuals like Jon Medved played
in the early stage of the development of Israel Start-up Ecosystem,
makes me think we need people like Jon who is passionate about Israel
and goes all over the world preaching of the potentials inherent in
Israel. He also plays keep role in building the Venture capital space in
Israel. Saul Singer and Dan Senor, in their best- selling book,
Start-up Nation described Medved as “one of Israel’s legendary business
ambassadors….(he) has taken on a role that — in any other country —
would typically belong to the local Chamber of Commerce, Minister of
Trade, or Foreign Secretary”. Africa has successful and rich businessmen and women who can act as ambassadors,
invest in startup in Africa, travel all over the world preaching some
successes from Africa, her future potentials and encouraging other
people from outside Africa to come and invest in African start-ups. Tony
Elumelu of Tony Elumelu foundation and Ashish Thakkar of Mara foundation
are two individuals that quickly comes to mind, they are already
helping promote Africa start-up culture in no small measure. We need
more of such people.
Building Strong Venture Capital System in Africa is imperative
Every idea is a potential business. Funding is needed at every stage
of start-up development. Entrepreneurs in Africa find it very difficult
to access funds for their business. It’s not that Africa is poor, it’s
because there is no structured system that focuses on granting seed
funds to budding start-ups. Every stages of viable start-ups should not
have problems accessing fund for their growth. The future of African
startups will largely depend on how easy it is for anyone who has a
great idea to access the needed funds. African nations need to build
strong venture funds and attract venture capitals from all over the
world. The government, and the private sectors in Africa should
collaborate and build a strong network of venture capital system.
A greater Need to Tell our Story and celebrate every bit of success from Africa
As I travel from Africa to US, I see that one of the key challenges of
Africa and her development is poor media coverage of Africa to the
world. And yet very few Africans understand the role the media has
played in compounding the problem of Africa, be it politically, socially
or economically. Africa has been judged around the world by the ugly
stories about her in western media, we have left our stories to be told
by the western media and that’s why most stories about Africa
continuously show a dark continent where wild animals live with hunger,
war and diseases as regular companions. But interestingly, most people I
have met that have visited any part of Africa from abroad always want
to come back.
How do we change this complicated conspiracy that has been going on
for decades about Africa? Thanks to the Internet and of course social
media that provide more power to citizens and individuals from all over
the world to tell their original stories. We need to share stories that
show African’s resilience, reach culture, human and material resources
and our entrepreneurial prowess. African countries should focus on
creating, regulating and promoting contents that show Africa in positive
light. We need to build media houses from Africa that will match the
likes of CNN, Fox, Aljazeera etc. I have seen increased blogging
activities, social media commentators from Africa, it’s time we tell
positive stories about Africa and beam the right content about the
continent to the rest of the world. Every opportunity we have should be
used to celebrate Africa, our successful entrepreneurs and Start-ups.
The future of Africa depends on we Africans and the time is now!
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