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Uniquely African: How Homegrown Innovation Is Solving Many Of Africa’s Most Pressing Challenges

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By now, I am convinced that you have heard of M-Pesa, the popular and often-cited mobile banking system that has become Africa’s innovation calling card. But do you know about the Ushahidi crowdsourcing app, also from M-Pesa’s birthplace, Kenya? Built to digitally map demographic events, it is used across the world. Today Ushahidi, which means ‘evidence’ in Swahili, is a technology company with presence in more than 20 countries. The list of African innovations, born from the need to solve specific challenges, is very impressive.

For a number of years, Africa’s rise made headlines across the globe. A bruised world economy looked for new spaces of vitality, and the African continent was the ideal candidate. Registering an average GDP growth of over 5 percent, Africa appeared to be the next big thing on the global stage. The word ‘Renaissance’ was soon appended to the narrative.

Yet those predictions have not quite come to fruition and many skeptics have taken a more bearish view to Africa’s prospects. On the one hand, these cynics are right: Africa is not developing as they had expected. But this is always the drawback of an outside perspective; oversimplifying events and placing foreign templates on a fast-evolving landscape.

The fact is that Africa is innovating for itself and these innovations are delivered by the incredible number of countries, people and economies who call it home.

Local innovators play a unique role in the emergence of new technologies. Whereas many markets marginally improve on existing ideas, African nations tackle far more present, challenging and transformational problems. This creates a pedigree for resilience, performance and positive outcomes.

The Pan-African innovation scene is growing at rapid speed. According to research presented by the World Economic Forum, there are roughly 200 African innovation hubs, 3,500 new tech-related ventures, and $1 billion spent in venture capital. In 2016, startup investments were up 17 percent from the previous year.

Similarly, new technologies are gaining traction across the keystone continent. Nigerian businesses are among the fastest adopters of Cloud in the world. In Ethiopia, the Tulane Health Project modernises healthcare services through connectivity and cloud technologies. In Cameroon, the site 1 Task 1 Job is building a thriving self-employment culture; and in Rwanda, the improvement of government e-services and technology policies are enabling entrepreneurs to register a business online in a matter of minutes.

The fear of ‘digital colonisation’ by overseas technology firms is also being met head-on. Several rideshare services, most recently the Africa Ride in South Africa, are taking on Uber. Netflix, the entertainment streaming giant, is being challenged by homegrown companies such as Showmax and iROKOtv. Music lovers in Nigeria can set aside iTunes and try Musiccloud instead.

Even the challenge of food security is being addressed with the recent launch of SAP’s Rural Sourcing Management Solution. A homegrown system that helps small scale farmers manage their value chains at hands-on levels, which larger competitors with traditional systems are struggling to match.

Yet innovation does not happen whimsically. As mentioned earlier, there are a large and growing number of innovation hubs and projects across the continent. SAP launched the Africa Co-Innovation Lab in 2016, which has already seen great success.

It is expected that by 2050, Africa will contribute over $29 trillion to global GDP, up from $2.4 trillion today. This is not the story of a basket case relying on international intervention, nor that of a follower looking to copy other continents. The calls for an African Renaissance are getting an answer: the mother continent is doing it for itself in a uniquely African way.

By Brett Parker, Managing Director – SAP Africa

Juliet Nwanguma To Drive Growth for PayU in Nigeria’s $600M Online Payment Market

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PayU has rolled out strategies to intensify efforts to connect businesses to Nigeria’s online payment market. Annual online payments in Nigeria is estimated to surpass N200 billion this year from N167 billion in 2016.

Country Manager of PayU Nigeria, Ms Juliet Nwanguma,  says, “In order to pursue PayU’s aggressive expansion in the online payment market in Nigeria, we have identified businesses that can benefit from our  global expertise across 16 markets where we offer over 250 payment options.”

With over 2.3 billion users world-wide, PayU is confident it can help businesses grow their market share and help them to achieve their business objectives.

Data recently released by the Nigeria Interbank Settlement System (NIBSS) showed that 5.5 million transactions worth N46.7 billion were generated through online sales in the first quarter of 2017. This is an increase in the quarterly average of 3.5 million transactions worth N33 billion in 2016. This 58% growth is a clear indication of the increased confidence and preference for online sales amongst Nigerians.

The double digit growth, according to Nwanguma, is far below the potential of the market for online payments in Nigeria.

Nwanguma noted that in a country of over 180 million people, consisting of 61 million active bank customers and where e-payment transactions are worth N56 trillion in a year, the potential for online payments in Nigeria is huge and waiting to be tapped.

She disclosed that the mission of PayU is to leverage on Nigeria’s 97 million active internet users to popularise and increase online payments in Nigeria.

“At PayU, we believe that with the deployment of appropriate strategies and products which are designed to encourage more businesses to adopt online payment, the market in Nigeria can record triple digit growth in both volume and value of online payments. This is the driving philosophy of PayU’s operations in Nigeria” she said.

Since last year when we entered the Nigerian market, we have used our globally tested products such as tokenisation, recurring payments for subscription services and single click payments for faster checkout. Our range of services according to different business categories especially the PayU Easy service allows start-ups to start selling online instantly without the need of a bank account or trading history. ”

“PayU has succeeded in successfully assisting small, medium and large organisations with their online payments. In particular, the robust and flexible features of PayU Plus and PayU Enterprise have assisted merchants to grow and expand their online payment business.”

PayU offers merchants safe, secure, online shopping.  Their products are   PCI DSS Level 1 compliant which mean they are required to meet extremely stringent security criteria. All card details are secured by secure socket layer (SSL) and transfer layer security (TLS) encryption and reinforced through various encryption processes in order to provide protection for all payment information.   They also are 3D secure enabled which gives consumers added security when shopping online.

The increased preference for online payments among Nigerians offers new opportunity for businesses to increase patronage and grow revenue.

The global expertise of PayU, combined with its easy-to-use and secure online products provide the channel to leverage on this opportunity and achieve business objectives.

This Anti-Corruption Technology Will Eliminate Procurement Fraud In Nigeria

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The corruption-related revelations of the last Administration in Nigeria have shown that Nigeria needs a world-class Procurement Fraud Unit to reduce or better eliminate procurement related fraud in the nation. Big data analytics is a special area of computer science that uses high-level mathematical models to provide patterns or trends out of large datasets. Procurement related corruption can be drastically reduced in Nigeria through pattern matching and analytics. In this videocast, I present a technology solution that will help Nigeria deal with its corruption issues especially on public procurement.

5 Pillars For Microelectronics Sector Development In Nigeria And Africa [Video]

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In this videocast, I discuss the five pillars which are critical to develop Nigeria or indeed Africa’s microelectronics sector. Microelectronics is an engineering field that focuses on the design and manufacturing of electronics related products. Largely, every industrial sector depends on microelectronics as microchip, its bye-product, is the engine that powers the knowledge economy through provision of efficient computational systems. What we call ICT is an application-product of microelectronics as without the latter; the former can neither be possible nor advance. A creative ICT based economy requires a microelectronics strategy to help nurture sustainable innovation.

Steps To Boost Growth In Jobberman Nigeria

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In today’s videocast, I discuss how Jobberman, the pioneer job recruitment firm, can boost growth in its operations. As recession continues to affect companies, Jobberman must position itself as a firm that can train and deliver top-grade technical minds for local and international companies in Nigeria. It must have specialization in its recruitment/consulting business and build a category-king business therein. The future of this company is bright because most business operations will go digital. But it has to offer more in Nigeria besides connecting employers and potential employees as the pool of quality employees is low.