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Home»Society»Art and Culture»Africa has tech unicorns, but they aren’t scaling globally
Art and Culture

Africa has tech unicorns, but they aren’t scaling globally

King JajaBy King JajaDecember 23, 2024No Comments0 Views
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Africa has tech unicorns, but they aren’t scaling globally
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Africa’s tech unicorns have captured the world’s attention with billion-dollar valuations, but their global ambitions remain stunted. Behind the hype lies a deeper story of systemic hurdles, strategic blind spots, and untapped potential, writes Jennifer D. Daniel.

Africa’s tech ecosystem is booming. The continent has birthed at least seven tech unicorns in just the past few years, including Flutterwave, Chipper Cash, and most recently, Moniepoint. These companies are celebrated as emblems of African innovation, proving that billion-dollar valuations are no longer the preserve of Silicon Valley. Yet, despite the fanfare, Africa’s unicorns have not scaled globally.

Behind the headlines, there is a cocktail of systemic barriers, strategic missteps, and perhaps even an over-reliance on the narrative of African exceptionalism. 

Innovation without exportability

At the heart of Africa’s tech story is the mantra “by Africa, for Africa.” This focus has propelled solutions like M-Pesa and Paystack to tackle hyper-local challenges, from financial inclusion to e-commerce logistics. But the very strength of these solutions—deep customisation to local markets—has proven to be their Achilles’ heel in scaling abroad.

African unicorns thrive in addressing infrastructural gaps, such as fragmented payment systems or poor supply chains, problems that do not necessarily exist in developed markets. Take Jumia, once hailed as Africa’s Amazon. Despite its bold IPO on the New York Stock Exchange, the e-commerce giant has struggled to break into markets where robust logistics networks already exist. Its local advantage—an intimate understanding of Africa’s fractured logistics—became irrelevant beyond its home turf.

Funding without foresight

Africa’s tech unicorns have benefited from significant international investment. Venture capital firms, private equity players, and even sovereign wealth funds have poured billions into these companies. Yet, the funding has largely been tethered to a singular narrative: serving the African market.

Unlike their Silicon Valley counterparts, who secure funding with an eye toward global expansion, Africa’s unicorns are often celebrated for their ability to navigate regional complexities. While this focus has fuelled local growth, it has inadvertently tethered their vision. Rarely do we see African tech startups with strategies for entering the European, Asian, or American markets, let alone ambitions to dominate them.

Headwinds

Regulatory hurdles are another invisible chain holding back African unicorns. Inconsistent government policies, bureaucratic inertia, and sudden regulatory changes in home markets leave these companies in constant firefighting mode. When faced with domestic hurdles, taking on the Herculean task of navigating foreign regulations becomes less appealing.

International markets often view African companies with scepticism. Despite their successes, African unicorns are rarely seen as equals to their Western or Asian peers. Global investors, partners, and even customers perceive African tech as “emerging” rather than established—a stigma that is hard to shake.

Global expansion requires world-class talent—engineers, marketers, and strategists who understand international markets. While Africa has no shortage of raw talent, the continent is plagued by brain drain. Many of its brightest minds are snapped up by tech giants like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft, leaving local firms struggling to build teams with the experience needed to scale globally.

This talent gap is exacerbated by Africa’s fledgling tech education ecosystem. While coding bootcamps and accelerators abound, few African universities offer specialised programs in product management, artificial intelligence, or cloud computing—fields critical for building globally competitive companies.

Africa’s startup culture is profoundly different from Silicon Valley. The latter thrives on risk-taking and disruptive innovation, the former is often more pragmatic, driven by survival and social impact. This divergence, while admirable, creates a paradox: African startups excel at solving pressing local problems but falter when faced with the abstract challenges of entering competitive global markets.

The African tech ecosystem also lacks the kind of mentorship networks that have propelled Silicon Valley’s unicorns to global dominance. While accelerators like Y Combinator are stepping in to fill the gap, the mentorship needed to navigate international waters is still painfully inadequate.

Breaking down barriers

There are several approaches that would help African unicorns tackle these challenges.

First, African unicorns need to rethink their product strategies. Instead of solely addressing local problems, they must develop solutions that can scale. Safaricom’s M-Pesa, for example, has started expanding its mobile money solution to Asia, proving that local innovation can have global relevance.

Second, the ecosystem must foster a new breed of leadership—one that blends deep local expertise with global ambition. African founders must think beyond borders, hiring talent with international experience and cultivating partnerships with global players.

Finally, it’s time to rewrite the narrative. Africa’s tech ecosystem must assert itself not as an emerging player but as an equal partner in the global tech arena. This means telling stories of African innovation not as a novelty but as a necessity.

Africa’s unicorns have proven they can reach billion-dollar valuations. The next test is whether they can build billion-dollar legacies. To do so, they must escape the gravitational pull of their home markets and redefine what it means to be African, global, and indispensable.


Photo credit: wrcomms used with permission CC BY-SA 2.0

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