Newsletter Subject

Next Wave: Everyone is asking harder questions

From

bigcabal.com

Email Address

abraham@bigcabal.com

Sent On

Sun, Dec 4, 2022 02:44 PM

Email Preheader Text

Checkpoint financing is upon us. 4 December 2022 Africa sobering Photo by Filip Kominik - Unsplash I

Checkpoint financing is upon us. [Read the newsletter in your browser.](=.qnAj4b8obFpl3vf4j7inFNcgS9pWBQoJUGo8O6rYxD4) [Next Wave Logo] 4 December 2022 Africa sobering Photo by Filip Kominik - Unsplash It is the Great Sobering. --------------------------------------------------------------- Gone are the days of idly arguing about how racism manifests in lower (but still high) valuations for African startups compared to their US and European peers. Gone is the “tech is the new [insert natural mineral/commodity]” vibe. And gone are quite a few of the companies born (and which blossomed) at the beginning of the roaring Twenties. Almost three months ago, I wrote “[There was nothing special about raising $5 billion](=.Jgla0p411Ttvx6DeWePpsDlVqQ2gmnwPoUdtnr7Xruc)” for the September 11 issue of Next Wave. By now it should be clear why—brace yourself for it. There was nothing special about raising $5 billion because there is nothing special about how venture capitalists (VCs) funded African tech/tech-adjacent companies. Context is the differentiator, the “special”. As the stream of capital made its way into Africa from celebrated US and European funds, context was mostly lacking. I mean, there is always something special about making investment decisions if you’re on either side of the table. And there are certainly a lot of unique opportunities in Africa. But the advent of venture capital, that distinctly American flavour of private equity, with legendary offspring like Genetech, Apple, and Microsoft, has not found its African palate. Becoming lean again. Chart design - Mobolaji Adebayo, TC Insights Outside of the PR and media spotlight, people are only now asking hard questions more often and openly. As a journalist, I cannot help but notice the flood of second-guessing that trails the announcement of a formerly well-funded startup shuttering its doors, or a new one opening shop. It seems like everyone, from the investment committee to journalists and even users, are asking, “What is the business?” with more earnestness than was common in the heady days of 2021. It is the Great Sobering. The realisation that technology won’t change much if you remove the nitro-boosters. And how little we understand (and pay attention to understanding) what scaling ventures beyond VC means. There is enough hangover to go round—journalists, tech bros, VCs and of course, the annoyingly ever present, regulator-incumbent class. Checkpoint financing It was bound to happen. Local VCs helped catalyse foreign investment into the space. Founders took advantage of the momentum to float their boats. And when venture capital, a tiny (relative to global PE holdings) but loud asset class combines with the obscure nature of private markets, you have a good recipe for entrepreneurial inebriation. The bill of the thrill is expectedly high. Like the drunk Nairobi boda (motorcycle) driver who, with me riding pillion, sped recklessly for 15 minutes, collected 1000 Kenyan shillings, (instead of 200 Kes) and dropped me at the wrong address (my fault), when I first visited Nairobi. But all of that is changing now. A rising tide lifts all boats, and when it ebbs, it leaves the naked swimmers without cover. Semil Shah, co-founder of Haystack, an early stage investing outfit [writes](=.mhRleKF8Ya9cx0RMSedpA_H22Jqq59DVZdw_dSPGHAU), “For an early-stage founder, it can feel like the walls are closing in. And they are. In previous downturns, startups could still be acquired for modest or great sums; today, these types of transactions feel frozen, and larger-cap acquisitions face regulatory, shareholder, and balance sheet scrutiny.” Checkpoint financing means founders and VC investors alike will need to prove to their investors that they can clear milestones over and over again. Even if it's just for show, no one wants to look like a softie, “...the larger the financing, the more checkpoints to clear,” notes Shah. Ask your friends who have raised or are trying to. Read: [AXA Mansard is partnering with Insurtech innovators to disrupt the insurance ecosystem](=.xgmq2p-14bbkzqkay2t-IrHqL9RedqZJBGap86Oa9Ow) --------------------------------------------------------------- Partner Message [Flutterwave $end-ad] Receive money from family and friends living abroad in minutes this holiday season with $end. Visit send.flutterwave.com and do it now! [Go to $end](=.cGZg6hj4QwFAA3xkDL7b1Vom5ajxN94LH-YpCQR9YRk) Experimentation and data over-replication Personally, I am growing fascinated with incumbent businesses in Africa. Businesses that have grown through the structural deficiencies that permeate African markets. This is not to ignore that a good chunk of these businesses were built on patronage networks and deals that would be grounds for jail or worse in more organised societies. It is to understand why the few that thrive outside the shady corners do so, where their analogue strengths are greatest, and how they sustain distribution networks across diverse markets. Photo: Chasing Outliers: Why Context Matters for Early-Stage Investing in Africa, © Tayo Akinyemi, Osarumen Osamuyi Going deeper by understudying incumbents and running experiments will become “importanter” as we navigate a changing market. Venture studios and hands-on learning while building should be the focus. It is not a new point to make. This is the point Scott Walker and Belinda Bowling are fixated upon with the African Scalecraft project, a study of the enablers, and future pathways for scaling commercial ventures in Sub-Saharan Africa. Partner Message [Paga-virtual-card-ad] TechCabal Insights has partnered with Zone (formerly known as Appzone) to release a whitepaper on payment infrastructure in Africa. In it, they explore the challenges that sit at the heart of innovation within the space, and what stakeholders in the private and public sectors need to do to address these challenges. They also look at the work that’s being done by innovators in the industry. [Download your free copy here.](=.08QPhhh9nRY0G1jM95qG3ztidtsLGnimhKT7YeSu0rA) “Many of these opportunities will be discovered through experimentation and exploited through stellar execution. In many cases, large, profitable opportunities in Africa are more likely to be created by deploying well-understood business models in poorly understood markets, rather than relying on frontier technology and innovation,” note the authors of [Chasing Outliers: Why Context Matters for Early-Stage Investing in Africa](=.4R1xtvZWl1oqHSizV1AJqJO2sYM4rysQVnbxb-DSnE8). More than ever, investors and founders will need to immerse themselves in research and education. The payoff will be enormous for people who are patient enough. If this sounds like too much work for an investor or founder, maybe you should reevaluate your approach. If anything, 2021 opened a door to unlock the entrepreneurial power in a digital Africa. It was never a call to celebrate Africa rising 2.0, but to understudy how a digital revolution in the demography and economies of Africa could create new opportunities. We would probably have been better off for it, if a piece of the capital inflow over the past three years had been devoted to researching and learning about markets over starting new companies with a hyper-growth-at-all-costs thinking. Partner Message [The Next Wave show-ad] On the third episode of The Next Wave show, we speak with Buchi Okoro, founder and CEO of Quidax and Marius Reitz, general manager for Africa at Luno. They talk about how Africa's crypto industry is evolving, what adoption on the continent will look like over the next few years, as well as how stakeholders can effectively balance the gains and risks associated with cryptocurrencies. If you missed the broadcast on CNBC Africa, you can catch up [here.](=.XPEoaIC67vPHvPUNoTG69fLczthSwMGgvDiQISxS52o) The Next Wave is brought to you by TechCabal in partnership with =.6paS7ZEvty5lcSPjoex4vqNSP6MhVxTC77ezC2NNhsg It airs on Wednesdays at 4:30 PM (WAT) on CNBC Africa (DStv Channel 410) [Watch episode replay](=.QsS8E1dwEJHdczUdlu2qsTRhcAKXYHpx7EQ1iIGKhpY) --------------------------------------------------------------- Dear reader! 2022 has been a wild ride in the African tech ecosystem, and we have played a critical role in covering the players, the human impact and the business of tech in Africa. We have provided the content, reported the data, asked the questions, and organised events to help you understand how tech is changing Africa. Now it's time to take stock. Please take a few minutes to share your thoughts on how we did in 2022 and what we should do better in 2023. By filling this survey, you stand the chance to win a $50 gift card! Thank you for your time! [Click here to tell us how we did in 2022](=.Di85cRHL-lj4BfvZqVb42Cl4tB6r3HdtJ9HMza1fFM0) We'd love to hear from you Psst! Down here! Thanks for reading The Next Wave. Subscribe [here](=.Bc-o--C1IMDqjdLaoA_Nd0XIC6RM_jPWX7GgExJF8mg) for free to get fresh perspectives on the progress of digital innovation in Africa every Sunday. Please share today’s edition with your network on WhatsApp, Telegram and other platforms, and feel free to send a reply to let us know if you enjoyed this essay [Subscribe to our TC Daily newsletter](=.I6t6hMOrvy2k85PYKJmFPlHMLO0qJPEf9NgHLkx39JQ) to receive all the technology and business stories you need each weekday at 7 AM (WAT). Follow TechCabal on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay engaged in our real-time conversations on tech and innovation in Africa. Abraham Augustine, Senior Writer, TechCabal. Share with your network =.dgg5qDsCVDQ_cHYDYKLnZCkY-MwWZJklz2v8pD8TC9M =.7_nXbe6d1Hsnm25nJKa3VJk0LbD4_zNHsZyO9DHQ5uk =.jhAc7aVg3NpNFtoVbMmZfvKZBGSXuDsmGM3y58vrTG8 =.lad8ynh2z0vd0zfB_ZU80yuKTkiT3PzWV7q6-Qwlg4A =.oTYie8Vn3iYDv08JFjOOxZXSRpGHjBYfNW_d2eS-R7Q # # # # # 18, Nnobi Street, Surulere, Lagos, Nigeria [View in Map](#) You received this email because you signed up on our website or made purchase from us.If you know longer wish to recieve these emails, please [unsubscribe](=.q84zJvRWQcamI2FO1jflFSUHeK1WEMuJ34rQxIgAAiU)

EDM Keywords (204)

years wrote would worse work win whitepaper well weekday wednesdays website way walls us unlock understudy understanding understand types trying trails time thrill thoughts thanks technology techcabal tech talk table survey study stream stand stakeholders special speak space softie sit signed show share send researching research reply remove relying release reevaluate recieve received receive realisation reading raised quite quidax questions psst provided prove progress private pr players played platforms piece people payoff partnership partnering partnered opportunities openly often notice next newsletter never network need navigate momentum modest missed minutes microsoft mean markets map make luno lower love lot little linkedin likely leaves learning larger journalists journalist jail investors investor innovators innovation immerse ignore help heart hear haystack hands grown grounds greatest gone go gains friends free founders found focus flood float financing filling fault family explore exploited experimentation evolving even enormous enjoyed enablers email education edition economies ebbs earnestness dropped doors door done disrupt discovered differentiator devoted demography deals days data cryptocurrencies created covering course continent common closing clear checkpoints changing chance challenges certainly ceo catch call businesses business built building brought broadcast brace bound boats blossomed bill better beginning bc authors asking appzone approach announcement airs africa advent adoption address acquired 2023 2022 2021

Marketing emails from bigcabal.com

View More
Sent On

31/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

30/05/2024

Sent On

29/05/2024

Sent On

29/05/2024

Sent On

28/05/2024

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2024 SimilarMail.