I was genuinely excited to read a number of
weeks ago about the
launch of the Savannah Fund in Nairobi. This US$10 million incubator and
accelerator has been established purely to invest in digital and mobile
initiatives in Sub-Saharan Africa. Once they raise the capital, they will use
the funds to provide mentoring to start-ups, provide follow on investment to
those that graduate from the incubator, and then also invest in more mature
businesses in the region. Nairobi has been selected as the location for the
fund, which makes a lot of sense given the focus and energy that is being
generated from the success of M-Pesa and associated businesses. The efforts by
Eric Hersman of iHub fame
and his partners to generate interest and investment in East Africa technology
projects should be widely acknowledged.
What is interesting has
been the attention that has emanated from this announcement on the venture
capital, accelerator and incubation industry in emerging markets.
Traditionally, entrepreneurs in markets like the United States tend take the
path of raising initial seed funding from friends and family, before
connecting with incubators or accelerators who may provide early stage funding
and advisory support, often coupled with co-working spaces with other
start-ups. Whilst the product is being built and launched, entrepreneurs will
start the well-worn path to Silicon Valley to pitch for Series A funding. This
model has worked effectively in the United States for many years and while investment
in venture-backed companies only equates to between 0.1 percent and 0.2 percent
of U.S. GDP annually, these companies employ 11 percent of the total U.S.
private sector workforce and generate revenue equal to
21
percent of U.S. GDP. That is quite an impact!

However, it was previously thought that Silicon
Valley VC firms wouldn’t realistically invest in companies beyond a cycling
radius from their offices on the outskirts of San Francisco, but I think
recently, evidenced by the Savannah announcement, times are changing. India has
been leading the charge, tapping into approximately
$337
million of Silicon Valley venture capital in the last quarter of 2011. I
asked Ben Lyon from
Kopo Kopo in Kenya his
thoughts on raising capital in emerging markets. I was particularly interested
in what he had to say, as he and the Kopo Kopo team have been fund raising
recently. On interest in funding, “investors worldwide are beginning to realize
and act on the potential of emerging markets, which means more avenues - and
better deals - are becoming available to entrepreneurs”. However he did note
that in East Africa, it is “getting more difficult to raise funds in the
$100,000-$1 million range, and that investors seem to favour safer growth stage
investments over high-risk early stage investments”. This was interesting, and
reflects the view I have had from other venture capital firms focused on
emerging markets that technology was a little too risky and hard to
understand, and that traditional industry such as manufacturing or banking was
a safer bet.
Growing interest in the technology sector in
Africa however has attracted a number of venture capital funds in addition to
Savannah, including
Adlevo
Capital and Sawari Ventures. Entities such as Accion are also playing their
part, with the announcement in May of the US$10 million
Accion Venture Lab fund for
seed investment and advisory support. In addition there has been huge growth in
the development of technology hubs, accelerators and incubators,
with more than 50 now in 20
countries. These entities are building strong relationships with
governments and the private sector to position Africa as a market where
innovation will prosper. The development of this innovation infrastructure will
build confidence and expertise in start-ups, and potentially address the issue
of investors being more attracted to growth stage and mainstream industrial initiatives.

In Asia (with the possible exception of China),
the approach seems to be somewhat more fragmented, and in markets such as
Singapore, supported heavily by the government. Organisations such as
JFDI are working hard to develop the
accelerator and incubator infrastructure with events such as
Start Up Weekend Phnom Penh, and
membership of the Global Accelerator Network. Start ups in the
Philippines
and
Indonesia
comment on the difficulties accessing funds in those markets and the lack of a
start-up culture. However a market that will have
half
the world’s online population by 2016 presents a massive opportunity and we
must see growth in start-up infrastructure in the same way it is developing in
Africa currently. There is room in Asia for more private incubators,
accelerators and venture partners connecting innovative start ups in mobile and
digital with developed market capital.
Whilst emerging markets have been attractive as
growth stage infrastructure investments to date, they also present significant
opportunities to investors in digital and mobile. We are seeing the next
billion people come online in these markets using a mobile phone as their browser,
rapid advancements in payments infrastructure and a growing middle class. Some
venture capital funds are sensing this opportunity and are testing the waters
in Nairobi, Jakarta and Mumbai. As we see the start-up infrastructure build and
governments recognise the impact the digital sector could have on their GDP, I
firmly believe we will see rapid growth and investment in this sector. Massive
revenue opportunity and the raw talent is there in emerging markets – what is
needed now is further investment in accelerators and incubators, and funds like
Savannah.
- Brad Jones



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