New year, same Nigeria? JANUARY 10, 2021
This newsletter is a weekly in-depth analysis of tech and innovation in Africa that will serve as a post-pandemic guide. [Subscribe here]( to get it directly in your inbox every Sunday at 3 pm WAT Hello, Eighteen hours before this newsletter hit your inbox, I was on the phone with reception. The shower in my bathroom had stopped working while I was_ _ _ Anyway, remind me to leave them a nice, not-really-passive-aggressive-but-frank rating on Hotels.ng later. As Robert Ingersoll famously said - and I paraphrase - we rise by reviewing orders. Hope your 2021 is off to a greater start than mine. Howâs your Bitcoin journey going? You havenât started? Oh thoughts and prayers, because that *bleep* is through the roof like a dog on steroids. Itâs risen so rapidly over the last month that Elon Musk, the worldâs richest man and meme daddy, now wants to be paid in Bitcoin. Is 2021 the year Africa fully rides the crypto train? Over the next 50 weeks, The Next Wave will bring you relatable insights on this and other leading questions on the trajectory of tech and innovation on the continent. In this edition, we review key themes from 2020 and invite you to ponder what this year has in store for each. Please [subscribe]( so you don't miss out what we've got in store for you. Also, you can catch up on [our previous editions here](. WHAT'S HAPPENING Securing Satoshis Funding announcements, boring and basic as they have become can alert you to market trends. Last August, BuyCoins Co-founder and CEO Timi Ajiboye [tweeted]( that Balaji Srinivasan had invested in the crypto startup. Besides a few blurbs in newsletters, there wasnât a lot of attention or analysis about the event. Nevermind Srinivasanâs credentials as a former general partner at Andreessen Horowitz, former CTO at Coinbase, and all-round Silicon Valley seer. Iâm not jumping into a retrospective deep dive here, but two things: Bitcoin is climbing towards all-time highs, and individuals are trading by using exchanges like BuyCoins. It is one of a growing [number of startups]( positioning for cryptocurrencyâs rising recognition in Africa. Bitsika, a startup based in Ghana, made its own notable move in October by winning over Nigerian artiste Davido as an equity investor and brand ambassador. A Series A round [appears to be]( on the startupâs schedule for February, a move that could further nudge the fast-growing popular perception about cryptocurrency. [ Read: The crypto of Africa ]( If 2021 is to be cryptoâs year in Africa, we expect these startups to build substance on these good vibes. That partly requires rolling out delightful product experiences to assure users that cryptoâs value is not only in possession but in utilization. BuyCoins sort of kicked that trend off with [Sendcash]( the service that allows Nigerians to receive the naira-equivalent of Bitcoin sent by a benefactor abroad. Itâs a good start, but when can this feature become deployable on ecommerce stores, hotels and Uber? Doing commerce with Bitcoin in Africa is a key 2021 topic because of the AfCFTA - the African Continental Free Trade Agreement which went into effect on the first of January. The AfCFTA secretariat says it [will take a while]( for the agreementâs fruits to manifest, thanks to deficits of roads, equipment at borders, and other infrastructure needed for efficient movement of goods. While we wait, crypto startups should double down on their piping from Lagos to Djibouti. As Bitcoinâs appeal improves, itâll be up to these startups to prepare Africans to overcome the limitations our multiple currencies impose on the easy exchange of products and services. [ Read: After this, AfCFTA what? ]( But they wonât have to do everything alone. Startups like Paystack and Flutterwave have taken up the challenge of helping individuals set up [online stores]( conveniently, and respond to orders from anywhere. Can we see some cross-functionality across channels? The hope for crypto growth - and growth in other tech sectors - in Africa this year is that reasonable steps will be taken on foundational issues like internet availability. Only about a quarter of the continentâs population is connected to the internet and the majority are on the [2G grade scale](. Maybe Facebook will hasten its undersea fibre optic cable project in Africa when its Nigerian offices open this year. Googleâs Project Taara, aimed at delivering fast internet with light beams, should boost the spectrum. Switch these on and itâll be all systems go! FROM THE CABAL New year, same Nigeria? Nigeria wants all her citizens to register for an identification number, making it a new requirement for owning a SIM. But in typical Nigerian fashion, staff of the organisation responsible for enrolling users have started a strike. [New year, same Nigeria.]( OPay expands to North Africa. OPayâs numbers cause a stir whenever the company publishes end-of-quarter figures. Their October 2020 results are quite the sight: processed a gross transaction value of $1.4 billion, more than three times the level in January. What to do with this kind of growth? Explore an [expansion to North Africa](. Best wishes for a great week Stay safe and see you next week. [You can subscribe to our TC Daily Newsletter]( the most comprehensive roundup of technology news on the continent, and have it delivered to your inbox every weekday at 7 am WAT. Follow TechCabal on [Twitter]( [Instagram]( [Facebook]( and [LinkedIn]( to stay updated on tech and innovation in Africa. â Alexander Onukwue, Editor, TechCabal Share this newsletter [Twitter]( [Share]( [Facebook]( [Share]( Sign up for The Next Wave
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