North African startups are not using their advantage. [Read the newsletter in your browser.](=.xPaoAKqLWOa3_rWZ7B6bhUZVD7cnxrZhTMGTnG_-nFA) [TC Daily Logo] 18th September 2022 North African startups are not using their advantage Photo by Jack Krier/Unsplash A strong diaspora and the opportunity to penetrate north Africaâs undigitised industry are two advantages that tech and tech-adjacent startups north of the Sahara are failing to fully leverage. In the past year, North African startups have attracted investor attention and cash on the back of the favourable narrative comprising a large and relatively young population, increasing digital consumption, economic tailwinds, and a deep pool of tech talentâespecially in Egypt. Across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA), the use of digital technologies has picked up too. According to MAGNiTT, startups in the MENA region raised a record $1 billion in 2020. Further narrowing our scope to only northern Africa, per [Briter Intelligence,](=.v_RJKiwv-q8FVZ94RWx0R7UEeFF_I4CRwaAVNA9TtIQ) the number of deals in the region more than doubled from 2019 to 2021, and the total amount being invested more than quadrupled. Egypt, the most mature ecosystem in North Africa rivals ecosystems in the Gulf | Chart by Fikyao Idowu â TechCabal Insights In this space, Egypt is the clear leader, even rivalling tech ecosystems in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Between 2020 and 2021, for example, UAE startups led the venture investing table, closing 44 deals. That was only two more than deals closed by startups based in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. In north Africa, tech firms in Egypt alone capture more than three-quarters of the total investment into the region. It is the regionâs most developed startup ecosystem, and while it is not the perfect method, Egyptâs startup world shares much of the potential and challenges of its peers in neighbouring countries. But the region has not been spared this yearâs rout in venture. | Chart by Fikyao Idowu â TechCabal Insights This remarkable growth has also been severely jolted by the venture funding slowdown, the broad sell-off in tech stocks, and the slow macroeconomic burn of inflation and sovereign debt chaos. Swvl, for example, one of the regionâs breakout stories, which earlier this year, listed on the NASDAQ via a [SPAC](=.iWImanVPucXmxamVubMJjlmYnfyb_p_aT413byCSDhs) is down almost 88% from its $10 listing price. Given this abrupt wake-up call, and how small and nascent the space is, it is conceivable that stakeholders in North Africaâs venture and tech firms will begin to reassess the opportunity while they brace for further impact. The thing is, North Africa has a lot going for it. Some are subtle, while others, like relatively better urban infrastructure and a large population, are obvious. One of the subtler advantages is the regionâs large diaspora linkages. T-minus 4 Days Until #FOC2022
[FOC2022-ad] For the second year in a row, TechCabalâs flagship event; Future of Commerce will bring together key operators and enthusiasts in Africaâs commerce sector, to discuss trends like social commerce and BNPL, as well as innovative ways in which startups and large corporations cater to the needs of the informal sector. If you work in payments, logistics, or are interested in Africaâs commerce scene, you donât want to miss this conference. [Click here to attend virtually](=.INca8h9bwWzAxKMH5VjuziH2z5cpt1m0w7A7gbfGqtQ) [Click here to in person](=.pDWUBHoXWUPCBFr1gSXj3czXUUpJI6KK2bc2dGnvon4) A diaspora beyond remittances The conversation about North Africaâs diaspora very often devolves to remittances. It is not unreasonable too. Remittances accounted for around [6%](=.QzatDjal2CxxbGCEWjXxm9PQHxjqnVrTI0JvRFG9ukY) of North Africa's GDP in 2020, according to the German market research firm, Statista. Even governments have come to depend on the annual inflow to shore up foreign exchange. âThere are more than 20 million people from the Middle East and North Africa living abroad, but we fail to think of them beyond remittances,â said Hafez Ghanem, World Bank vice president for the Middle East and North Africa. Remittances are a passive way to engage North Africaâs diaspora. Instead of thinking of the diaspora only as the source of annual dollarsâa perfectly legitimate perspective as remittance payments in the MENA are relatively untouched by digitisationâNorth Africaâs diaspora can function more deeply as a source of trade, investment, and technology transfer to and within the region. Partner Message
[FOC2022-ad] EcoFlow: Meet The Renewable Energy Solutions Company Poised To Solve Nigeria's Power Challenges. EcoFlow's Smart Home Ecosystem broke the Kickstarter record for the most funded tech project and was named one of 100 best inventions of 2021 by TIME Magazine. And theyâre bringing 3 of their latest innovations to solve Nigeriaâs power struggles! [Know more](=._aof0ytoBSeVtyzjh-NbdbIf1JtXtUOR16gomyJ4dw0) This is already happening at a level. Some of the regionâs tech founders had built thriving careers in the GCC, Western Europe, and the US before setting up a venture locally. The tech ecosystem also employs operators with experience from other work outside north Africa. What is needed, however, is to recognise the diasporaânot just returneesâas strategic assets to deepen two assets the ecosystem has not fully developed: a deeper pool of local capital and a buying market that is relatively impervious to local economic downturns. To better leverage its diaspora, North Africaâs ecosystem will need to be better at selling its success potential to north Africans residing outside north Africa. Deeper connection to industry Like most of Africa, startups north of the Sahara have yet to penetrate what industrial spaces exist in their markets. It is probably easier to build and sell a consumer app to your first 1,000 users than to penetrate industry networks with all the baggage that typically accompanies B2B markets. In addition, B2B tech demands a more technical kind of VC. The sort of investor that is willing to invest in research to look beneath a diverse selection of industry hoods. Hasan Haider, managing partner at +VC agrees: âAnother area for improvement is not with the founders but the lack of experience many newer VCs and investors have,â he told me. The good news is that the region has a significantly more developed industry sector. I use "industry" broadly to include any aspect of the economy that is non-tech and relatively undigitised. As Eslam Darwish, founding general partner at Nclude, a Cairo-based venture firm, [wrote](=.tsrkN_LPA8lFdYSa8HnmLRImKgbnkWkWeMGhgCi4NdA) recently on LinkedIn, âStartups don't operate in a vacuum nor are they an independent sector. They are a natural extension of existing industries.â Embracing this perspective means building an ecosystem that looks beyond directly reaching consumers, to building the technology and systems that power industrial value chains. Iâll admit that this is significantly more difficult compared to building consumer apps. To reach the full potential of this perspective, North African startups will eventually need to lean into their geographic advantage, not just to expand their market coverage but to build cardinal linkages with the GCCâs robust industry players and the different industries recording growth in sub-Saharan Africa. This may not be a consumer market move, but it helps North African tech talent find a quick outlet for deeptech solutions that may struggle to find a market locally. Indeed the failure of Gulf countries to provide digital economy leadership is one of the biggest opportunities for North African startups, especially Egyptian companies, to strategically become a digital hub that can rival trade and real-estate obsessed Dubai. Deepening north Africaâs tech penetration into indsutries may also confer startups from the region with a stronger path into sub-Saharan Africa. One area where we see this dynamic showing signs of life is in Amazonâs Egyptian play. Cairo Angelâs CEO, Aly El Shalakany believes that African startups, in general, can do better if they successful expand into more African markets. âWe are starting to see the convergence of the MENA, African, and South Asian economies. North Africa is starting to orient itself more towards sub-Saharan Africa, Egypt is beginning to see its sub-Saharan trade and investment ties as more important, and the Gulf Cooperation Council countries are increasingly leveraging diplomacy to position themselves for Africaâs future growth,â Wesley Schwalje, COO at Tahseen Consulting, a Dubai-based consulting firm told me. Startups in north Africa only have to recognise these trade winds and sail along. --------------------------------------------------------------- [Read: How Betterchalk is democratising the acquisition of technical skills in Africa](=.k-Of-kcMaXTYRBO9dQEXKx-kbmQQVi0mD4weDpS-UYQ) [Read: ChamsSwitch is providing seamless access to financial services for governments and businesses](=.79A9xaF5hJHubZPqCQH3sSOXf_CHaVjYqNgf5AUNM8E) We'd love to hear from you Thanks for reading The Next Wave. 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