The Ghanaian software developer teaching thousands of girls to code [View in browser]( [TC Daily Logo]
19 AUGUST, 2021 IN PARTNERSHIP WITH [Paystack Logo][Future Africa Logo][30& Logo Logo] Good morning âï¸ ï¸ On Tuesday, Twitter [announced]( that its users can now flag and report certain information as misleading. Looks like the right step and a more sustainable way to keep its 353 million monthly users in check from misinformation. In today's edition: - Meet Regina Honu
- Egyptian transportation startup Schoolz raises pre-seed round
- Shoprite launches AI-powered store
- The Nigerian Startup Bill The Ghanaian software developer teaching thousands of girls to code
The morning of the day Honu resigned from her job, she didnât know it would happen. She was used to a certain comfortable life, âI told my friends that I wanted to resign and they were like no, itâs a bad idea, donât be stupid. Bonus is coming. I just had that feeling that if I didnât do it that day. I wonât have the courage to do that again.â So she took the jump, resigned, bought a computer and desktop to start training kids. Itâs been almost ten years since she made that decision and itâs clear she made the right decision. Soronko Academy has trained over 20,000 young people in Ghana and Burkina Faso and connected about 5,000 of them to job opportunities. But the road to starting Soronko Academy was paved with many obstacles and difficult decisions. Before then, she had worked at two major banks in Ghana as the only woman in the IT department, participated in a reality show, and even almost joined Microsoft. Once, she got everyone promoted in her department. Itâs not what you think. While sharing an awkward interview experience with a colleague, she found out that she was at a lower grade and was the lowest paid. âI was the lowest-paid, not because I was female but because I didnât know how to negotiate. They donât tell women on the continent how to negotiate, you donât ask for more. While growing up, you take what youâre given, smile, and say thank you. Thereâs nothing like asking for more. Thatâs insolent behaviour.â Armed with this information, she requested to be promoted to a particular grade or sheâd resign. Her request was granted but ironically, her colleagues were also promoted to make it seem like a general department-wide promotion. Ouch! In [this article about Regina Honu](, she talks about growing up in Ghana, spending a year in Norway, her time at Ashesi University, and even her love life. PARTNER CONTENT Increase your online sales with a Paystack Storefront - a free, beautiful seller page that helps you bring creative ideas to life. ð¾ [Learn more at paystack.com/storefront]( Schoolz, an Egyptian student transportation startup, raises a 6-figure pre-seed round Currently, in Egyptian cities Cairo and Giza, there are about two million students in private and international schools who collectively spend over EGP 16 billion ($1.06 billion) annually. This large demographic is the target market for Schoolz, an Egyptian student transportation platform, which has [secured]( a six-figure US dollar pre-seed round to grow into the commercial world and deliver SaaS solutions to Saudi Arabian and Egyptian businesses. How it works: Schoolz was founded in 2020 by Hosni Ahmed, Abdel Monsef Ismail, and Ayman Hamza, to aid the safe and comfortable transportation of students. To streamline the student transportation process, the startup utilizes modern technologies, qualified drivers, supervisors in every vehicle, live cameras, and notifications. It is now planning a move into providing the services for schools, after raising a six-figure US dollar pre-seed funding round from investors from Egypt and Saudi Arabia. PARTNER CONTENT Join the Future Africa Collective â an exclusive community of investors who invest in startups building the future of Africa. With a $1,000 annual or a $300 quarterly subscription fee, you get access to invest a minimum of $2,500 in up to 20 fast-growing African startups each year. [Learn More]( Shoprite launches AI-powered store âWe like to say we want the mind of a startup but the soul of a grocer. Our ambition is to make grocery shopping more affordable.â Yesterday, Shoprite Group [announced]( the launch of Checkers Rush, a pilot Artificial Intelligence-powered store that has no cashiers or checkout counters in Cape Town. Customers just enter the store, pick up the goods they want, and walk out without needing to swipe a card. Sounds like an Amazon Go store? Yes, it does and Neil Schreuder, Shopriteâs Chief Strategy Officer, acknowledged that in an [interview](. Amazon first opened a similiar type of store (Amazon Go) to its employees as a beta in its Seattle home market in late 2016, and then went on to open the store to the public in January 2018. At Shoprite, the concept store is the brainchild of Shoprite Groupâs new division, ShopriteX, which uses data science to âenhance customer experiencesâ. The division was also responsible for the popular Sixty60 online shopping app, which delivers products ordered within 60 minutes. Why Checkers Rush? Shoprite felt it was about time to do things differently since the pandemic has changed the way we work and live. Schreuder mentioned it has 20 million South Africans swiping their cards at different Shoprite locations at the rate of 450 swipes per second. All this activity means the retail giant has almost a petabyte (1 million gigabytes) of data to work with. Can I visit this store? At the moment, this pilot store is only open to employees as Shoprite is still training the system. It has only 40 products and will scale as soon as the system gets better. They hope customers will get to visit sometime in the near future as theyâre confident in the system. Will it work with an area with high crime rate? That's a valid concern but for now, the focus is making the system work well. After that theyâll implement appropriate security measures to reduce the risks of crime happening. Zoom out: Last year, the continentâs biggest retailer reported a $5.5 billion revenue (+4.7%) and $270 million net profit (+18.3%), despite experiencing a 16.7% decline in customers visits due to the pandemic. As part of measures to remain profitable, it announced that itâs discontinuing its business operations in Nigeria. With Checkers Rush, it's good to see the team experimenting and looking for ways to improve efficiency in retail. PARTNER CONTENT The hottest knowledge podcast right now? Take control of your lifelong investing journey by learning the basics of US Stocks and Crypto in an hour. Stocks have existed for over 100 years, Crypto is an asset class of the future, acquire the knowledge for free on our simplified podcast [here](. opportunities Startup Réseau, an accelerator based in India, has launched applications for the Wazo Challenge East Africa, which provides mentorship, technology credits, and funding to selected startups. The Wazo Challenge East Africa is open to startups that are leveraging technology and building innovative and scalable solutions across financial services, healthcare, agriculture, energy, and education. It is aimed at 18-to-30-year-old entrepreneurs from 19 countries across the UN-designated Eastern Africa region. Interested? Apply [here]( The African Telecommunications Union has extended the deadline for submission of entries to the ATU Africa Innovation Challenge 2021, to 31st August 2021 The winner will receive $10,000 and the winning practice will be crowned the 2021 ATU Best Ecosystem Practice in Africa Enabling Youth ICT Innovation. Interested? Learn [more]( PARTNER CONTENT Small business budget? Access affordable service and more on the FCMB Business Zone; a robust one-stop online platform that provides a wide range of services such as advisory, escrow, certified online learning, etc. to small and medium enterprises. Access it for free [here](. THE NIGERIAN STARTUP BILL On the 16th of August 2021, The Presidency and members of the Nigerian tech startup ecosystem held a Ministry, Department or Agency (MDA) consultation session to review the proposed draft of the Nigeria Startup Bill (NSB). The NSB is being designed with the hope to harness the potentials of Nigeriaâs digital economy through co-created regulations. The session was attended by Nigeria's Minister of Information and Digital Economy, Dr. Isa Ali Pantami and the Chief of Staff to the President, Prof Ibrahim Gambari among other key stakeholders. The Minister spoke about the formation of a council that will consist of Federal Government representatives and other stakeholders in the startup community, for continuous engagement on both sides. You can learn more about the outcome of the session [here.]( Visit the NSB [website]( and follow progress on the bill on [Instagram](, [Facebook](, [LinkedIn](. For partnerships and inquiries, send an email to hello@startupbill.ng. What else we're reading - [Substack's global expansion is risky business](
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