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Let’s Begin Something Amazing at Tekedia Mini-MBA

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The feedback has been ALL POSITIVE. This is the best Tekedia Mini-MBA edition yet. “World-class”, “I understand business better”, “Legendary delivery by the SAP faculty”, “uncommon business insight”, etc – we’ve got a lot of great feedback already. You know what? We’re just in week 2 with many more to go.

If you still want to join, go here and join the best business school for innovators, builders, makers, etc in Africa. Tekedia Mini-MBA is peerless in how we approach entrepreneurial business education.

People, let’s begin something amazing here (click and register) . Price is N90,000 or $170 for the 12-week program. It is the best value in the world.

Tekedia Institute Offers Amazing Corporate Training for Organizations

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We work with startups, SMEs and corporations to prepare their teams for the growth opportunities ahead. You have raised that money and need to deliver on those milestones. We invite you to consider Tekedia Institute. More companies like yours are spending time with us.

Email us today. Our team will schedule a Zoom meeting to understand the core training needs. We will create a course specifically for your firm with relevant industry cases to make sure your team is ready to execute the mission.

At Tekedia Institute, we will help you turn your customers into FANs through innovation. Define your path, unlock new territories and thrive, with Tekedia Institute. Go here and email us 

Find A Path to Profitability

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The gestation period to profitability in a typical Nigerian startup is long. That long gestation is also the reason why many startups or small businesses collapse after a few years of founding. Typically, one way to deal with this is to raise capital, ramp up market entry to grow fast enough to attain profitability. But in our extremely volatile economy, if the timing is off by weeks or months, the company can collapse. You just run out of cash.

Yes, your new problem in Nigeria is not just capital but the long gestation period required for profitability, affected by many factors at scale.

Those factors include the fact that every business is a local government since you provide your light (generator), water (borehole), security (guards), etc. It is based on this that I tell founders – Do Not Blitzscale in Nigeria because if one core metric misaligns, you will struggle.

Blitzscaling within a stochastic system is an illusion and pure guesswork since the leverages cannot be put in order. Yes, the greatest entrepreneurs in Nigeria stay the course, go “slow”, and manage the state of our entropy. They look boring but there is a reason for that: you survive if you can find how to make profit rather than trying to go for dominance only to be tripped into oblivion.

Sure, this is not to say that you must not grow. I am saying that I want that growth to come from the BEST INVESTORS. And the best investors are CUSTOMERS. Until you can get them to invest in your business at scale, your mission has not been validated. As the world goes through a tough economic phase, find a path to profitability and that means making customers to invest in you by buying and patronizing your products and services!

Of course, there is a big lesson: do not begin scaling until you can retain customers. That retention is largely a validation that you have a product-market fit.

MFS Africa Secures Additional $100m to Extend its Series C Round to $200m

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MFS Africa has announced that it has secured an additional $100 million in its series C extension to $200 million. The equity and debt funding was led by African investment manager Admaius Capital Partners while existing investors like AfricInvest FIVE and CommerzVentures participated.

New investors who participated in the new round are: Vitruvian Partners and AXA Investment Managers. Debt financing came from Stanbic IBTC Bank, a Lagos-based bank, and Symbiotic.

Dare Okoudjou, founder and CEO of MFS Africa, said the new funding will further accelerate MFS Africa’s expansion plans across Africa, and boost its integration into the global digital payment ecosystem, its expansion into Asia through its joint venture with LUN Partners to enable cross-border digital payments between Africa and China, and its ambitious growth plans for the BAXI network, a startup it acquired last year.

“With this US$100 million extension of our Series C fundraise we are thrilled to have the support of world-class investors Admaius, Vitruvian and AXA IM Alts, and for the continued support of existing investors, on our journey to making borders matter less when it comes to payments.

“The strength of our business model is grounded on building a lasting digital infrastructure that unleashes and simplifies economic activities across the continent through any-to-any interoperability. Our multiple initiatives and solutions are providing access to Africans, at home and in the diaspora. We are building MFS Africa into a safe, sound, scalable and high impact pan-African payment infrastructure that will facilitate Africa’s rapidly growing commerce, both now and in the future,” he said.

TechCrunch reported that Okoudjou had made similar plans last November when the company announced its first $100 million tranche. But then, the Baxi acquisition was still pending approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria.

But the past six months have come with a significant change – BAXI now possesses two licenses to operate in Nigeria following the regulator’s approvals.  The Payment Service Solution Provider (PSSP), which allows BAXI to build gateways that process payments for third-party merchants, and Payment Terminal Service Provider (PTSP) license, empowers BAXI to deploy its point-of-sale terminals for agency banking.

MFS Africa has been bold in its acquisition playbook for a startup. TechCrunch mentioned its purchase of U.S.-based Global Technology Partners (GTP) in a cash-and-shares deal worth $34 million. With its rapidly expanding business base that connects over 320 million mobile money wallets across 35+ African countries and 700 corridors, the Africa-focused and London-based company sees an untapped market of millions of Africans who can’t use their mobile money accounts to pay for subscription-based services run by international companies such as Netflix and Amazon. This is due to cross-border payment bottlenecks.

The acquisition of GTP, which integrates prepaid cards with a single bank account and incorporates them into its mobile payment platforms, gives MFS Africa an avenue to issue prepaid cards to its customers so they can perform these tasks — and also serve the African diaspora market in the U.S.

“The strength of our business model is grounded on building a lasting digital infrastructure that unleashes and simplifies economic activities across the continent through any-to-any interoperability,” Okoudjou said in a statement. “Our multiple initiatives and solutions are providing access to Africans, at home and in the diaspora. We are building MFS Africa into a safe, sound, scalable and high-impact pan-African payment infrastructure that will facilitate Africa’s rapidly growing commerce, both now and in the future.” 

MasterCard Partners Ecobank To Help SmallHolder Farmers Connect To Financial And Agricultural Ecosystem

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MasterCard and Ecobank group have partnered to connect millions of smallholder farmers in Sub-Saharan Africa to Mastercard farm pass, a digital platform that will enable farmers to easily connect with agricultural sectors and also sell their farm produce at a fair price.

Both partners will deploy MasterCard farm pass to smallholder farmers to connect them to the financial and agricultural ecosystems. This farm pass will bring together various agric-sector stakeholders from the supply and demand sides, in one agricultural marketplace which will amplify the collective positive impact on farming.

With the Mastercard farm pass, smallholder farmers can get to sell their produce at better prices, access quality inputs, get updated on the latest farming information, and pay digitally as well as get paid. It will enable them to create a profile that will unlock financing opportunities, for both working and capital input.

The Mastercard farm pass will also enable smallholder farmers to integrate their businesses with payment systems, as well as enable them to build a digital transaction record that can facilitate formal credit or other financial services from banks and other financial institutions.

This is a very good initiative that has been rolled out, because it will offer these smallholder farmers a major digital boost. Looking at how most African countries are faced with severe hunger and food insecurity due to the poor agricultural sector, unfavorable climatic conditions, and also the impact of the Russian-Ukraine war.

The African region is said to be the worst hit from the war, which has seen the region faced with severe famine and hunger. Due to its heavy reliance on import-based commodities, such an approach has affected food security in the region. MasterCard farm pass comes in very handy this period, because food security in these African regions is critical and needs urgent attention to help alleviate the plight of the citizens of these regions.

Many smallholder farmers are faced with a lot of challenges that stifle their growth as well as limit their production output. Some of these challenges are; Lack of access to relevant financial tools to purchase and also get paid, limited access to the market, lack of up-to-date information, the problem of securing quality inputs, lack of working capital to finance farming activities, etc.

All these challenges aforementioned are no doubt limiting smallholder farmers, which has greatly affected their production output, led to inefficiencies, waste of resources which has prevented them from running a sustainable agricultural business.

With Mastercard farm pass, it will eliminate most challenges these farmers are faced with, which will improve the agricultural value chain in Africa to ensure that there is food security in the region. This will also help them to become less dependent on other countries for food commodities, also contributing to the economic growth of the continent.

These smallholder farmers can also upgrade from operations of small-scale farming to running commercial farming. Recall that the African Development bank AFDB through its president Mr. Akinwunmi Adesina suggested the e-wallet system to enable farmers to get direct access to farm loans and other support, which will also eliminate corrupt middlemen.

The Mastercard farm pass is very similar to the e-wallet system as they both have similar features with the same motive of ensuring that smallholder farmers get access to markets, updated news, and financial supplies.

The African region needs a transformation in its agricultural sector because food security is a critical issue in the region. Food insecurity in the region is one of the major causes of infant and adult mortality, childhood illnesses, Malnutrition, etc.

One key cause of all these has been linked to inadequate food production in the region. With Mastercard farm pass, I believe this initiative will aid in the increase of food production in the region, which will not only eliminate famine and ensure food security, but will ensure that the African region is immune to hunger.