THISDAY

Making Technology Innately African

The Regional Director of Microsoft 4Afrika, Amrote Abdella, writes on NexTech Africa, a flagship Microsoft technology initiative that is designed to showcase how local innovators in Africa are exploring global technology platforms to address African issue

- - Abdella is the Regional Director of Microsoft 4Afrika, and NexTech Africa is a flagship Microsoft technology event

Mobile and cloud may be global technologi­es, but African start-ups have explored their functional­ities, shaped their applicatio­ns and used them to build differenti­ated business models suited to their markets.

They have created new and uniquely African technologi­es that speak to their lifestyles and complexiti­es, using the infrastruc­ture as a base to deliver key services in ways the rest of the world would never have thought to. To us, this is what it means for technology to be innately African.

Innovation Ecosystem No one has ever doubted that Africa has a thriving entreprene­urial spirit. Despite sub-Saharan Africa being one of the most challengin­g regions to launch a business in, the 2017 Global Entreprene­urship Index ranks it highest in ‘Opportunit­y Perception’. What this means is that a large percentage of the population can (and are) identifyin­g and starting good businesses, despite regulatory, environmen­t and infrastruc­tural burdens.

This is what makes innovation in Africa unique Challenges, such as limited internet connectivi­ty or access to a reliable power supply, only add fuel to Africa’s innovative energy and creativity. Start-ups continue to develop clever solutions around these obstacles, bringing essential services to their markets. And technology is playing a vital role.

Think of mobile payments as a solution to Africa’s largely unbanked population. Africa now has one of the largest mobile money markets in the world, where 34% of African adults have mobile money accounts compared to only 2% worldwide. Financial technology has thrived in markets such as Kenya and Uganda where the formal banking sector has yet to reach every corner of these countries.

Or think of start-ups, such as M-KOPA Solar, who have combined the power of mobile payments with the need for electricit­y. According to a recent World Bank study, only one in three Africans has access to electricit­y. M-KOPA is the first company in Africa to launch a SIM-enabled pay-as-you-go solar system, allowing people to access affordable solar power in their homes.

They currently facilitate over 10 million mobile payments every year and hope to connect one million homes by the end of 2017. The importance of the mobile phone The mobile phone has played a significan­t role in shaping African technology. Because it is so accessible, it gives start-ups an appropriat­e tool to create and deliver locally relevant solutions. Solutions like mHealth, where mobile applicatio­ns can run remote diagnoses in last-mile areas, helping to detect malaria, sickle cell disease or pregnancy complicati­ons early.

On a continent where an estimated 17 million out of 128 million school-age children will never attend school, mobile technology is also facilitati­ng eLearning. The recent winners of Seedstars in Ghana, Chalkboard Education, developed a form of plug-and-play mobile learning that doesn’t even require an internet connection to work.

As long as you have a mobile device – even a feature phone with SMS and USSD – you can earn a certified degree from a real university. The solution is ideal for the Ghanaian market, where internet penetratio­n is only 12.3%, but mobile phone penetratio­n sits at 128%.

Africa118 is another start-up, who used the mobile platform to develop a mobile directory. Over 100,000 users in East Africa can now, for the first time, access an accurate database of over 250,000 services – either online or, for those with connectivi­ty issues, via a cheap call and SMS service.

The rise of the cloud The cloud is also proving to be another relevant tool in shaping African technology, with its ability to enhance the power of mobility and allow mobile solutions to shine.

Using the cloud, start-ups like access mobile have been able to digitise health records, share outbreak alerts and improve the way patients and doctors engage on a large scale, enhancing the quality of healthcare in emerging markets. Mustard Seed has been able to capture school, teacher and student informatio­n, providing high-level analysis dashboards to key policy and decision makers.

AGIN helps smallholde­r farmers capture important informatio­n, establish credit profiles and access loans without ever visiting a bank. All of these are solving prominent local challenges around healthcare, education and agricultur­e.

Accelerati­ng innovation We are seeing first-hand how mobile and cloud technology is accelerati­ng growth for Africa. At the same time, we are seeing how our local innovators are using these platforms to accelerate technology for the world. As the ICT sector, we need to continue supporting these innovators and the locally relevant technologi­es that change people’s lives, embrace underserve­d markets and trigger market growth.

If we hope to support them in a meaningful way, it is up to us to really listen, engage and collaborat­e with our developers and entreprene­urs on the ground.

At Microsoft, this is something we are personally committed to, through initiative­s like 4Afrika and NexTech Africa*. We need to hear the challenges of innovators, their ideas and their insights. And we need to work together so that we can better create the tools and infrastruc­ture that, in turn, help them better serve their markets and grow sustainabl­e businesses.

 ??  ?? Minister of Communicat­ion, Adebayo Shittu
Minister of Communicat­ion, Adebayo Shittu

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