There has never been a more
inspired generation of young Africans. These builders, innovators and risk
takers are fervent in their resolve to transform the continent. They are
solving critical socio-economic problems, exporting African culture to the
world, creating job opportunities for Africans, re-telling Africa's stories, and writing the future.
Following a request I made last week, I received over
800 nominations for this year's tally of
Africa's brightest young entrepreneurs under age
30. Seven of the names on this year's list were featured last year, but there are 23 new
rising stars you need to watch. Since there weren't enough under-30 entrepreneurs who could meet the
criteria, I included a few 30-year-olds. I present to you Africa's brightest young entrepreneurs. These are
the ones who are making the most dramatic impact in Africa today in
manufacturing, technology, real estate, media & entertainment, financial
services, agriculture, fashion and the service industry. They are impatient to
explore new possibilities and slowly but surely, they are building empires.
They may be today's
upstarts, but they are tomorrow's legends.
Aliko Dangote, Tony Elumelu, Chris Kirubi and Patrice Motsepe may call the
shots today, but these ones will take center stage tomorrow.
Meet the 30 prodigies transforming Africa as we speak.
Christian Ngan, Cameroonian
Founder, Madlyn Cazalis
After working in financial services in France, first
as an analyst at French investment bank Quilvest Group and as an associate at
Findercord in Paris, Christian Ngan returned home to Cameroon to start his own
business in 2012. With $3,000 of his savings, he founded Madlyn Cazalis, an
African hand-made bio cosmetic company that produces body oils, natural
lotions, creams, scrubs, masks and soaps. Madlyn Cazalis products are sold and
distributed across more than 30 chemist stores, beauty institutes and retail
outlets in Cameroon and neighboring countries in Central Africa. The company
does not reveal revenues but says it is profitable. Ngan, 30, is also founder
of GoldskyPartners Advisory, a small financial advisory firm in Cameroon.
Senai Wolderufael, Ethiopian
Founder, Feed Green Ethiopia Exports Company
The 27 year-old Ethiopian entrepreneur is the founder
of Feed Green Ethiopia Exports Company, an Addis Ababa-based outfit that
produces and exports popular Ethiopian spice blends such as Shiro, Mitmita,
Korarima and Berbere. Wolderufael founded the company in 2012 primarily to
serve the needs of the Ethiopian diaspora in the United States and Europe, but
as demand for Ethiopian spices increased significantly, Feed Green began
exporting to new markets within Africa. The company employs only women.
Eric Kinoti, Kenyan
Founder, Shades System East Africa
The 29 year-old Kenyan is the founder of Shades System
East Africa, a $1 million (annual sales) company that manufactures military and
relief tents, branded gazebos, restaurant canopies, car parking shades,
marquees, luxury tents, wedding party tents canvas seats and bouncing castles
across the region. The company's biggest
clients are non-governmental and humanitarian organizations. Based in Nairobi,
Shades System exports its products to Somalia, Congo and Rwanda. The company
says it is profitable and has 18 full-time employees.
Nick Kaoma, South African
Founder, Head Honcho Clothing
South Africa's own Daymond John in the making, Nick Kaoma is
building an urban legend. The 28 year-old Cape Town native is the founder and
creative director of Head Honcho clothing, a prominent South African lifestyle
brand that designs, manufactures and markets streetwear clothing that is hugely
popular among South Africa's young
urban dwellers. The company's product
line includes t-shirts and caps to cardigans, varsity jackets, hoodies, tank
tops and female dresses.
Ronak Shah, Kenyan
Founder, Kronex Chemicals Ltd
Shah, a 26 year old Asian-Kenyan, is the founder of
Kronex Chemicals Ltd, a fast-growing manufacturer of low-cost household
cleaning products. Shah founded Kronex
in January 2013 and the company has two products- a dishwashing liquid and a
multi-purpose detergent, both of which are gaining market share amongst Kenya's lower middle-class.
Issam Chleuh, Malian
Founder, Africa Impact Group
Issam Chleuh, a 27 year-old Malian national and former
Ernst & Young Senior Associate, is the founder of the Africa Impact Group ,
an international organization focused on directing investment to socially and
environmentally beneficial ventures, an asset class called Impact Investing.
The company's services include data & research,
news, advisory services, and start-up incubation. Africa Impact Group's clients include impact investors, private
equity firms, family offices, leading African corporations, governments and
nonprofits.
Patrick Ngowi, Tanzanian
Founder, Helvetic Group
Patrick Ngowi, 29 is the founder of Helvetic Group, a
company that pioneered the supply, installation and maintenance of solar
systems in Tanzania's Northern
Circuit. Helvetic Solar Contractors continues to grow. Helvetic did more than
$5 million in revenues in 2013 and KPMG East Africa recently valued the company
at $15 million. Helvetic is also expanding into the South African region and
Ngowi is gearing up to take the company to Dar es Salaam's capital markets.
Heshan de Silva, Kenyan
Founder, DSGVenCap
After dropping out from school in the United States,
Heshan de Silva, 25, worked briefly for a tea exporting company owned by his
parents before breaking out to start VenCap, a business that sold travel insurance
bundled into long distance bus tickets. The company became profitable very
quickly, grossing over $1 million in revenues within its first year and setting
the pace for travel insurance for bus commuters in Kenya. He is now a venture
capitalist and the founder of DSGVenCap, a company that makes seed investments
in the tech, media, agribusiness and consumer industries in Kenya.
Julie Alexander Fourie, South African
Founder, iFix
At 26, Julie Alexander Fourie runs a company that
employs 40 people and services more than 4,000 clients a month. Fourie is the
founder of iFix, which repairs and services all Apple products and Samsung
Smartphones. iFix has branches in Johannesburg, Cape Town and Durban. Fourie
started the company in 2006 from his dorm room at the University of
Stellenbosch, helping colleagues and friends repaid broken and faulty iPods and
computers. Satisfied friends subsequently referred other Apple product owners
in search of repairs and Fourie's business
took off.
Sangu Delle, Ghanaian
Founder, Golden Palm Investments
Delle, 27 is a co-founder of Golden Palm Investments,
a holding company that invests in early stage venture and growth financing
across Africa with a strong bias for Real Estate, healthcare, agribusiness and
technology. GPI has backed startups such as Solo Mobile in Nigeria, mPharma in
Ghana and Zamsolar in Zambia. He is also the co-founder of cleanacwa, a non-
profit working to provide access to clean water in Ghana's underdeveloped regions. Sangu, who
previously worked at Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Valiant Capital
Partners, is currently an MBA candidate at Harvard.
Uche Pedro, Nigerian
Founder, BellaNaija
The 29 year-old Nigerian media entrepreneur is the
founder of BellaNaija, a thriving new
media company that develops online media content for African (primarily
Nigerian) audiences. BellaNaija.com is Nigeria's premier lifestyle, entertainment and fashion
website, and garners an average of 10 million page views every month.
Tebogo Ditshego, South African
Founder, Ditshego Media
The 29 year-old South African public relations
maverick is the founder of Ditshego Media, a leading PR firm specializing in
Media Relations, Investor Relations, Reputation Management and Corporate
Communications. Ditshego is also the Chairman of the South African Reading
Foundation.
Bankole Cardoso, Nigerian
CEO, EasyTaxi Nigeria Cardoso,
25, is the founder of the Nigerian operations of
EasyTaxi, a taxi mobile App that was founded in Brazil in 2012 by German
technology startup incubator, Rocket Internet GmBH. EasyTaxi serves to connect
cab drivers and would-be passengers. Through the App, passengers can confirm
their pickup point and then order a cab at the click of a button. EasyTaxi
sends the passenger a confirmation of the name and phone number of your driver
and gives passengers the option of tracking their driver and the vehicle in
real- time. Before setting up EasyTaxi in Nigeria, Cardoso worked for
PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Carlyle Group in New York.
Isaac Oboth, Ugandan
Founder, Media256 Isaac Oboth,
24, is the founder and CEO of Media 256 LTD, a film
and television production company in East Africa. Media 256 was founded in 2011
and has a client list that includes Coca Cola, UNDP, USAID, the Ethiopian
Commodities Exchange, Marie Stopes International, the African Leadership
Network, and the African Leadership Academy. The company says it is profitable
and employs 7 full-time videographers and editors. Isaac is also an Anzisha
Prize Fellow, a pan- African award that celebrates innovative young African
entrepreneurs.
Barclay Paul, Kenyan
Founder/CEO Impact Africa Industries
The 22 year-old Kenyan is the founder of Impact Africa
Industries, a company that produces low cost sanitary pads for poor women in
informal settlements Kenya three years ago and he now sells the pads to as far
as Uganda and South Sudan. The company is located in Kitale, a small town in
Western Kenya and has 23 employees, 15 of whom are women who help in production
and distribution of the sanitary pads. Paul was an Anzisha Prize Fellow in
2013.
Seth Akumani, Ghanaian
Co-founder and CEO, ClaimSync
Akumani, 30 is a co-founder of ClaimSync, an end-to-
end claims processing software that enables hospitals, clinics and other
healthcare facilities all over the world to automate patients’medical records and to process records
electronically. Claimsync's solution
allows these healthcare providers to easily prepare medical claims and send
electronically to health insurance companies. In 2013 ClaimSync was the sole
African company to participate in the high-profile, IBM, Novartis,
GlaxoSmithKline backed Accelerator program HealthXL in Dublin. ClaimSync was
recently acquired by GenKey, a Dutch-based biometrics company.
Jonathan Liebmann, South African
Real Estate developer, CEO of Propertuity
The 29 year-old South African visionary is the
Managing Director of Propertuity, a South African Real Estate development
company and the brains behind the construction of the Maboneng Precinct, a
thriving cultural district in the east side of Johannesburg's CBD. Once a neglected and deteriorating
neighborhood housing abandoned industrial complexes, Liebmann transformed
Maboneng into a vibrant urban mixed-use community complete with Art galleries,
artist studios, retail spaces, offices and artist studios.
Tunde Kehinde, Nigerian
Co-founder, Jumia Nigeria
The 30 year-old Harvard MBA grad recently stepped down
as co-founder of Jumia Nigeria, the country's largest online retailer. Kehinde founded Kasuwa, a Nigerian
online retailer in 2012. Within days of its founding, Kasuwa received seed
funding from German online startup incubator and the company's name was changed to Jumia. Kehinde
resigned in January to start a logistics company.
Adii Pienaar, South African
Founder, Woothemes
Adii Pienaar, 28, is the founder of Woothemes, a
company that designs and develops customizable commercial themes and plugins
for WordPress. Adii built the business with a bootstrap budget, and the company
today generates over $3 million in annual revenues from the sale of its themes.
Woothemes also develops and sells themes for other content management systems,
including Tumblr. Pienaar also runs PublicBeta, a service that allows
successful entrepreneurs to transfer knowledge to new startups.
Zaheer Cassim, South African
Founder, One Way Up Productions
29 year-old South African media entrepreneur Zaheer
Cassim graduated from Columbia's
Journalism school and returned home to South Africa to found One Way Up
Productions, a television production outfit with a client list that includes
Ogilvy South Africa, Hollard Insurance, the African Leadership Academy and
Hackett.
Mike Muthiga, Kenyan
Founder, Fatboy Animation
Muthiga, 26, is the founder of Fatboy Animation, a
Nairobi-based animation company that produces 3 and 2 dimensional animation for
both film and commercial use. FatBoy Animations has produced several viral
animated commercials for Kenyan blue chips like brands such as Safaricom,
Telkom Orange, Barclays Bank and Jamii Telecommunications (JTL).
Danson Muchemi, Kenyan
Founder, WebTribe
Muchemi, 29, is the founder of WebTribe Kenya, a
leading IT company in Kenya with operations in online payment systems, web
applications and network security. Webtribe's flagship company, Jambopay provides e-payments
services for e-commerce players as well as e-ticketing services and electronic
cash disbursement services. Jambopay is a recipient of the Google Innovation
Awards in Financial Services for 2013.
Kunmi Otitoju, Nigerian
Founder, Minku Design
Kunmi, a 30 year-old Nigerian fashion entrepreneur is
the founder of Minku Design, a company that makes leather bags for men and
women by subtly blending Aso-oke fabric (a hand loomed cloth woven by Nigeria's Yoruba people), into contemporary leather
bag designs. Minku also makes Yoruba-themed leather purses and jewelry. All
Minku Design's products are hand-made at a workshop in
Barcelona, Spain, but they are sold at high-end stores in Nigeria and on the
company's website.
Mazen Helmy, Egyptian
Founder, The District
27 year-old Mazen Helmy is the founder of The
District, one of the first co-working spaces in Egypt and one of the few in the
region. The District provides an
inspiring workspace (sitting on a total area of almost 1000 square meters) for
entrepreneurs and freelancers. Helmy founded the company in 2011.
Khaled Shady, Egyptian
Founder, Mubser
The 22 year-old Egyptian entrepreneur is the founder
of Mubser, a new assistive tool for blind people. Mubser, which will be
launched officially in March 2014, is a wearable belt with a
Bluetooth-connected headset that leverages RGB imaging and infrared dept data
captured by a 3D depth camera that allows blind and visually impaired people to
navigate around in a safe and easy way. The device recognizes object and
obstacles such as staircases and chairs.
Joel Mwale, Kenyan
Founder, Skydrop Enterprises
Mwale who is now 21 years old founded SkyDrop
Enterprises, a rainwater filtration and bottling company which produces low-cost
purified drinking water, milk and other dairy products in Kenya. In 2012, Mwale
sold a 60% stake in Skydrop to an Israeli firm for $500,000. Next stop:
Education. Last year Mwale founded Gigavia, an educational social networking
website.
Lorna Rutto, Kenyan
Founder, Ecopost Kenya In 2010,
Lorna Rutto, 28, founded Ecopost, a Kenyan company
that collects consumer plastic waste such as polypropylene and polyethylene and
converts them into durable, easy to use and environmentally friendly plastic
lumber, an eco-friendly alternative to timber which is used to manufacture
fencing posts.
Ashley Uys, South African
Founder, Medical Diagnostech
Ashley Uys, 30, founded Medical Diagnostech which
develops and markets affordable and reliable medical test kits for malaria,
pregnancy, syphilis, malaria, HIV/ Aids for South Africa's rural poor. Uys is a recipient of the
South African Breweries $100,000 Annual Social Innovation Awards.
Kimiti Wanjaria, Kenyan
Founders, Serene Valley Properties
Kimiti Wanjaria, 30, is a co-founder of Serene Valley
Properties (SVP), a Real Estate development company in Nairobi that constructs
and sells residential properties to Kenya's ever-growing middle class. SVP is behind the
development of Sigona Valley project, a $4 million gated residential community
outside Nairobi.
Arthur Zang, Cameroonian
Founder, Cardiopad
Zang, a 26
year-old Cameroonian Engineer is the inventor of the Cardiopad, a touch screen
medical tablet that enables heart examinations such as the electrocardiogram
(ECG) to be performed at remote, rural locations while the results of the test
are transferred wirelessly to specialists who can interpret them. The device
spares African patients living in remote areas the trouble of having to travel
to urban centers to seek medical examinations. Zang is the founder of Himore
Medical Equipments, the company that owns the rights to the Cardiopad.
From Forbes
Thanks for sharing such as nice article.
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