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How WaraCake’s Olatunde Ayilara became the cake mogul in Lagos

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WaraCake is a leading online cake store in  Nigeria. They make it possible for anyone to easily shop for cakes and gift items for loved ones in Nigeria.

According to the team, WaraCake specializes in delivering delicious baskets guaranteed to bring smiles to people’s faces. It was established in 2014.

The company also retails cakes and other gift items like flowers, chocolate on their website. Aside retail, it also offers delivery services for these products in Nigerian cities including Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt.

But the big deal is how this company started.

The Founder, Olatunde Ayilara, came up with the idea while in university. So WaraCake is an off-shoot of a campus-based business which focused on manufacturing and delivering cakes to students during valentine.

After piloting the idea in the University, he took it mainstream in Lagos, Nigeria late 2014.

Today, WaraCake is a leading destination for people looking to shop for cakes in Lagos and some Nigerian big cities.

To order your own cake, click here.

How Spellafrica introduced mVocabulary in Nigeria and building Sabi educational chatbot on IBM Watson

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SpellAfrica Initiative is a youth-led mobile for development social enterprise. It provides a mobile learning tool to help users improve their English across Africa. The SpellAfrica Initiative is born out of passion and dedication by the founder to improve his poor English vocabulary.

Today the idea has transformed into an award winning international nonprofit organization.

As a technology driven organization, they are working to improve education standard in the continent of Africa to meet the UN development goal #2,” to ensure that all youth and a substantial proportion of adults, both men and women, and achieve literacy and numeric skills”.

In January 2013, they introduced a simple technology solution known as the mVocabulary. mVocabulary is utilized to teach English vocabulary to young adults and youths across Africa. Since launched, over 55,000 users have benefited from the program.

According to the Founder, Elvis Austins, they are working by taking the initiative to the next level by developing a Chabot using a high tech Artificial intelligence Solution (AIS) developed by IBM Watson. They envision this AIS as a Personal Digital English Teacher.

The name of the bot is Sabi.

Sabi is a Chatbot for education and will serve as a personal teacher. In the first phase, she will be able to teach key concepts of the English language including reading, comprehension, pronunciation and punctuation. She will have the ability to assign homework and tests to the user based on their learning capability and progress.

According to the organization, since inception  in 2013, they have recorded the following metrics on the mVocabulary programme:

Over 1,850,000 English vocabulary message was distributed via the mVocabulary
Over 200,000 minutes spent teaching English via phone calls
2000 users are takes the monthly exams
222 people who have found jobs through our local job network

SpellAfrica is a registered nonprofit organization, though it charges a service fee of N100 Naira (25 cents) per user per month.

Experience the world of mVocabulary here.

What is a “hyperconverged” hardware?

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A  “hyperconverged” hardware is a type of data center hardware that combines a computer server and storage with networking.  The hardware can be managed and reprogrammed, meaning customers don’t have to write a check for new hardware every time their needs change.

Companies playing in this domain includes Simplivity which HPE plans to acquire.for $650 million in cash, and Nutanix,

This type of hardware is good for “hybrid IT” . Hybrid IT is tech talk for the ability to run some computing jobs and retain some data storage in-house, and delegate other jobs and data to outside public cloud infrastructure like Amazon Web Services or Microsoft Azure.

Africa Startup of the Year Contest Holding Next Week in Casablanca, Morrocco

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Africa Startup of the year award is a contest organized by Bonjour Idée with the support of 50+ partners (international corporations, incubators, chambers of commerce, media, competitive centers, influential blogs). While shedding light on disruptive startups, this contest is meant to add value to the partners’ actions at the heart of the entrepreneurial ecosystem of innovation and startups, and put them in contact with innovative startups.

The company just concluded its selection process based on the following metrics:

  • Company must be registered
  • Based in Africa to be named « african startup of year » or « OCP Africa Agritech of the year »
  • No geographical restriction for other awards
  • Company created after jan 1st 2010
  • Your activity’s environemental impact will be taken into account by the jury
  • Your product or service must be innovative
  • You should have a running MVP or prototype

 

The contest will hold in Casablanca as follows for the finalists:

25 January 2017 (Casablanca): Finalists pitches
26 January 2017 (Casablanca): Awards Ceremony

 

MAIN PRIZE: AFRICAN STARTUP OF THE YEAR

Named by Jury after Casablanca Pitches (see calendar)

  • 10000€ in Cash
  • 10000€ Visibility Pack (Bonjour idée website background with 100000+ views, mention in press campain, banner in emailing)
  • Integration into our partners’ business network

 

OCP AGRITECH STARTUP OF THE YEAR

Rewards an Africa based startup bringing innovation to farms and farmers

  • 5000€ in cash offered by OCP Group
  • 10000€ Visibility Pack offered by Bonjour idée
  • Integration in OCP Group Business Network

Farmers digital marketplace 2KUZE launches in East Africa to connect farmers, agents and buyers

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2KUZE, a digital platform that connects smallholder farmers, agents, buyers and banks in East Africa. 2KUZE, which in Swahili means “Let’s grow together,” enables farmers to buy, sell and receive payments for agricultural goods via their feature phones have been launched. The platform brings the benefits and security of mobile commerce and payments to farmers in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.

2KUZE was developed at the Mastercard Lab for Financial Inclusion in Nairobi, which was set up in 2015 to develop practical and cost-effective financial tools that expand access and help build stable futures for more than 100 million people globally. Through an $11 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Lab is working with East African entrepreneurs, governments and other stakeholders to develop local products rooted in the company’s global knowhow.

In the initial pilot, 2KUZE is being launched in partnership with Cafédirect Producers
Foundation, a non-profit organization working with 300,000 smallholder farmers globally. Currently, 2,000 small-scale farmers in Nandi Hills, Kenya are currently using the solution to sell their produce and working with farmer-friendly agents to ensure they reach the right buyers for the best price.

According to Mastercard, 2KUZE makes transacting much safer and simpler for all stakeholders in the agricultural supply chain – the farmer, the buyer and the agent. Farmers using 2KUZE can conduct the entire transaction of selling produce and receiving payments via their feature phones, without having to walk for hours to the markets. This enables farmers to capture a greater percentage of the wholesale value of their goods by providing price transparency, more direct access to buyers and empowerment of farmer-friendly agents.

This solution in particular supports women farmers, who often have household duties that prevent them from leaving the farm gate and are more often subject to having to take whatever deal is given to them on the day. Digitizing these transactions in a trusted, auditable environment provides a legitimate financial footprint, opening up access to loans and other financial services, and also introducing a more efficient process that benefits the entire value chain, as well as the overall economy.

Mastercard Lab is exploring the potential for 2KUZE to help farming communities receive the right level of investment and to encourage more efficient ways of doing business with smallholder farmers.

2KUZE is one of several broad-based collaborations on which the Mastercard Lab for Financial Inclusion is working. The Lab was established in Africa to contribute to the company’s global commitment to connect 500 million people to formal financial services through the use of public-private partnerships with governments, the private sector and non-governmental organizations.