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Looking for Seed Capital? Try Lunatech Ventures. Their Research Division is Awesome

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Are you an entrepreneur looking for seed investment or are you looking for a co-investor on this great idea you have? Learn about Lunatech Ventures. This company can be the real deal for someone with the right idea. It is Dutch based but they can go global.

 

We are seed investors, our main focus being Internet and Interactive media technologies. Our preference is for investment as equity (shareholding), this allows the investor and entrepreneur to share a goal – to create value for the company. We invest working capital, human resources, or a combination of both. We are willing to invest in pre-revenue companies – we may provide a company’s first working capital.

 

Their research division is also a cool one. We think that Dutch investors do put money in Africa. If you have got it, try this company, not just for the funds but partnerships and collaborations.

 

Lunatech Research was founded in 1993 as an IT consulting, product research and development team. As a team of adept self-managing architects and programmers, working with a very experienced commercial team, Lunatech has a successful track record of implementing medium-sized to large systems. Our skills are best applied in designing and building back office systems whereby a web interface is just one of many external user- interfaces.

 

We excel at going into your organisation, analyzing the requirements, and then – together with you – designing and building a system to meet your needs.

 

We work to an interactive development process. We build applications in a number of short iterations. This provides great visibility to the customer and it greatly improves the end result because the product and expectations can be adjusted along the way. With a proud record of providing professional IT services, joint ventures and investments in other peoples ideas, you’ll find us highly technical, very creative, and flexible.

Pulse is for Cameroon as Facebook is for World. Maybe, Pulse Could be for African Universities Soon

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They are building a social network site in Cameroon that will link students of the University of Beau. They hope to extend that to all African schools. The name is Pulse.

Notice this from their site – their site looked like Google + or Google + looked like Pulse. Either way, we have to hold off until they are done.

  • We working 24/7 to revamp our entire platform UI coz of the noticed similarity to Google plus.

The Motivation?

We started Pulse with  the idea to create a social network for the university of Buea, but after realizing a vast majority of African universities had no form of online student services, and how students depended solely on notice boards, in-class announcements and mouth to mouth communication, we decided it was time we did something about it.

Pulse is a social/geolocation platform aimed at connecting African universities, professors to their students. In other words, we trying to make African education look cool, Pulse will provide a platform where any university can own and operate its own high-end online students services at a low cost, without having to deploy any technical infrastructure, it will permit lecturers to communicate faster and cheaper to their students and lastly it will enable students to receive updates from their teachers and classmates through sms, web and email. We are building only for these category of universities and of course we taking into consideration the realities of African users, that means for us, that our platform will be centered around the mobile experience.

Recharging for Entrepreneurship – The African Network, Founded Right In Silicon Valley

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The African Network, TAN, is a global non-profit organization with the sole mandate of fostering entrepreneurship and technology among people of African descent. TAN was founded in Silicon Valley, California in 2004 to provide a support structure and network for entrepreneurs, aspiring entrepreneurs, and community leaders worldwide. The objective of TAN is to leverage all available resources through networking, education, training, and mentoring to develop entrepreneurship and enable community development among all people of African descent.

 

TAN accomplishes these aspects of fostering entrepreneurship and community development through two of its programs: TAN Conference (TANCon) and TAN Empowerment program (TEP). TANCon is now organized annually on two continents – Africa and the United States of America (USA). Its main purpose is to create an ecosystem where entrepreneurs, would-be entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, investors, business leaders, community leaders and policy makers network and discuss investments, business opportunities and other issues of relevance to all people of African Descent on a global level.

 

With this purpose of fostering entrepreneurship comes the giving-back to the community aspect of the organization known as the TAN Empowerment Program (TEP). The main aim of the TEP program is to mentor, train, educate and equip future entrepreneurs, especially the youth, with resources needed to take that leap of faith. In addition, TEP tends to focus on low-income, needy, under-served and less privileged communities with a view to mobilizing resources that could be used to uplift them. These resources could come in the form of mentoring, training, coaching and affordable physical resources that can make a difference in their lives.

Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Approves LFR Communications’s VTNetwork To Roll Out Mobile Payment

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LFR Communications is a financial services company operating in emerging economies and mainly serving the unbanked. LFR runs two businesses: Graphcard and Virtual Terminal Network (VTN), a mobile/web transaction network.  The Central Bank of Nigeria just approved the VTN to roll out mobile payment to Nigerian public. Below is the press release.

VTNETWORK Limited of Abuja, has received regulatory approval from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to permit mobile access to its platform, previously limited to online access.

 

Through a suite of mobile apps suited for nearly every phone, even very basic handsets, VTNetwork’s new mobile money initiative will both provide much-needed service and develop much-needed volume, explained CEO Peter Ojo. Efficiently serving the needs of the unbanked requires volume unattainable exclusively online. Though Nigeria’s 90 million (some say 100 million) mobile phones this volume – and the means to reach the unbanked – can be harnessed. It is like adding thousands of smaller branches to a tree trunk with just a handful of large branches.

 

VTNetwork will start with a controlled pilot in urban and rural centers in Nigeria immediately following an analysis of the nearly 400,000 Nigerians already registered with VTN. In a sense the geo-targeting required by the regulators will be crowdsourced based on existing registrant demand.

 

Mobile payments are alternative payment methods that have been proven very effective and popular in cash-based developing countries. Due to the lack of alternative methods of transferring money or paying for goods and services. Instead of carrying cash, participants can use their mobile phone to pay for a wide range of services and digital or hard goods or simply send money for other purposes.

 

The mobile payment model adopted by VTNETWORK is Non-Bank Led (VTNETWORK is the lead initiator), while the method of operation is stored value (e-Money) account based. This method makes sense for the unbanked,  and the prepaid nature of each transaction makes the model even more secure.

 

VTNETWORK has been at the forefront of payment innovation in Nigeria since 2007, with over 5 million ecommerce transactions processed pre-launch and rapid adoption by local and international merchants who have found Nigeria to be an untapped market with over 43 million internet users with limited access to buying goods and services. VTN was selected to power USA-Africa trade mission submit in Maryland, USA in 2008. Following a recent effort to recruit agents, over 1300 agents have signed up and there are over 4900 registered merchants on VTN many of which will find value in becoming an agent.

 

About 28 million Nigerians are banked in a country of about 150 million and following the CBN’s cashless policy that was announced to take effect from June 2012coupled with the World Bank’s support of same, it is believed that the policy will fast track the nation’s financial sector.

 

Mobile payment has been well adopted in many parts of Africa, Europe and Asia. Combined market for all types of mobile payments is expected to reach more than $600B globally by 2013.

The Lost Power – How Users Rule The Web And Decide Winners. Myspace Lost; Facebook Won; Google+ Threatens

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A few decades ago, firms ruled supreme in getting the best profit margins out of their customers. It was an era of optimizing for the maximum possible profit. Market was very opaque because information was very expensive and untimely. Customers could not track price changes in real time. Even when they get the comparative prices, the distance to the other shop was a huge barrier. So in most cases, customers would knowingly pay high prices because of the need to save time.

This was the era when airlines maximized prices on tickets. When you leave your house to a travel agent, you have made up your mind to come back with a paper ticket. The travel agent was serving the airlines and the higher you pay, the better is his business. Though he may offer some choices among the competing airlines, there was no major price pressure on him since at the end you would be forced to buy from him. Why? You may need to drive another twenty minutes for another travel agent. Under this model where you either buy from the airline offices or travel agents, your choices are very narrow and the airlines were in control.

Then came the Internet era; from Priceline to Expedia, the customer for the first time had the power to make decisions based on price without even leaving the house. Go online; describe the trip and airline choices will roll down; usually, the cheapest one comes first. This market is a commodity business, especially for an average traveler. Who cares the airline you flew from Boston to Baltimore? Without that brand loyalty, the cheapest ticket always wins. The travel agents have lost the power to control the price.

The airlines suddenly must compete on price resulting to lower profit margins. There was price-war and it was very combative in the industry. Personally, I still think that the greatest competitor to airlines is the Internet. Without the Internet that destroyed the pricing model, they would still be doing much better compared to how they are doing today. At least, the Internet allowed the low-cost carriers to have direct access to customers. The Internet was the most important factor that enabled these low-cost carriers to get into the industry. It provided a platform through which they connected to customers directly and competed on price effectively.

As we celebrate the 25 years of.com, we will continue to see major transformations and disruptions arising from the Internet. Bookstores are going to become history in the next few years. The model of buying books and setting price for the local community is dead. The local community is no more ‘local’; they can buy from any part of the world. The local bookstore is competing with shops in China, India, Canada, etc because Amazon and eBay have provided platforms on the web that make such possible.

As we celebrate the 25 years of.com, we hail it for making customers indeed the Kings.

And to look at the recent events. We all agreed that Myspace lost to Facebook. But Facebook is not going to win by its name. Users will decide. Now that everyone is waiting for Google+, Facebook could be troubled. It simply means that no one has real influence in this age. You win today and when something fresh and exciting comes, they move. It  is a new order – companies are losing power while the users have assumed heavy dose of it.