Your Idea. Your Startup. The Right Investors. The Right Opportunities.
Bringing together founders, startups, and investors to unlock funding, mentorship, and opportunities..
Why this?
Africa is bursting with potential, but founders can't find funding, investors lack vetted opportunities, and game-changing resources, insights, mentorship, and connections are missing. The ecosystem deserves better.
Find Investors & Mentors
Connect with venture capitalists and angel investors actively looking for promising startups. Get funding and guidance to scale your business.
Discover Startups & Opportunities
Explore high-potential startups across industries and growth stages. Find innovative ventures to invest in or collaborate with.
Network & Expand Your Knowledge
Engage with founders, investors, and industry leaders. Exchange ideas, gain insights, and build meaningful relationships.
Track & Manage Your Connections
Keep all your professional relationships organized in one place. Stay connected, follow up easily, and grow your network.
Create & Share Pitch Decks
Craft compelling pitch decks and share them with the right investors. Get noticed and secure funding faster.
Access Exclusive Events & Programs
Join top-tier industry events, accelerators, and funding programs designed to help startups and investors thrive.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
Registering an LLC in Africa can take 50,000x longer than in the U.S. This regulatory burden, plus funding gaps, leaves founders without capital and investors without clear paths to vetted opportunities.
African tech needs bold investments to become truly competitive, yet many projects still operate on small-scale funding. While startups celebrate sub-$100M funds, major companies secure $300M contracts for just support. It’s time to think bigger.
African tech funding drops 56% in H1 2024, totaling $530M vs $1.2B in H1 2023. This funding winter is hitting founders hard—many struggle to secure capital to grow, stunting innovation across the continent.
South Africa saw 24% of equity rounds in 2020, but the failure rate for funded startups is alarming. Founders face massive barriers—funding is elusive, and investors miss out on vetted opportunities, slowing growth.
African startup funding fell over 50% from $2.4B in 2023 to $1.1B in 2024. Founders are struggling to find capital, and investors lack access to reliable, vetted opportunities—urgent action needed for growth.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
African founders face a funding crisis with high internet costs and electricity issues. Investors lack access to vetted opportunities, and the ecosystem misses critical tools and networks to scale innovation.
In Kenya, only 6% of startups receiving $1M+ in 2019 were local-led. White founders are 47,000% more likely to be funded—systemic bias leaves African founders without funding and investors without diversity in opportunities.
African VCs are acting like PEs, avoiding early-stage risk. This leaves founders without funding and investors without vetted opportunities, stifling innovation and growth across the continent.
2024 data shows African tech startups raised just $1.1B, down from $2.4B in 2023. Founders struggle for funding, investors miss vetted deals, and the lack of tools/connections hinders ecosystem growth.
From Ideas to Opportunities,Let's Build Together!
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