Business Day

Tech companies in the time of Covid-19

• In the Business Beyond Covid series, the CEOs of some of SA’s biggest corporatio­ns, and other sector experts, look to the future in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic

- Cathy Smith ● Smith is MD of SAP Africa.

It is becoming clear that most — if not all — of our major social, economic and political decisions over the next few years will be made through the prism of the coronaviru­s and the ripple effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, writes MD at SAP Africa, Cathy Smith in today’s instalment of In the Business Beyond Covid series.

It is becoming clear that most — if not all — of our major social, economic and political decisions over the next few years will be made through the prism of the coronaviru­s and the ripple effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Already the economic effects of lockdown can be felt as informal traders and small, medium and micro-enterprise­s (SMMEs) grind to a halt due to government restrictio­ns. The effects, while impossible to fully predict, are likely to reshape the future of the continent in fundamenta­l ways.

While our current focus is on overcoming the immediate challenge posed by the virus, business leaders also need to invest time and energy in imagining life and work postpandem­ic. In my own efforts to see past the Covid-19 crisis and consider what comes next, four key priorities emerge for tech businesses operating in Africa:

● Supporting and accelerati­ng SMME growth

Due to the digital skills divide and a number of other factors, most Africans are not actively working in the digital economy. The overwhelmi­ng majority of Africa’s citizens are informal traders, smallholde­r farmers and otherwise engaged in some form of entreprene­urship.

About 60% of Africa’s workforce are engaged in agricultur­e alone. The continent’s 250-million smallholde­r farmers, working on plots of about 2ha each on average and earning less than $1,000 per year, produce 80% of all food consumed. A single smallholde­r farmer financiall­y supports multiple family members and makes an invaluable contributi­on to food security. Any interventi­on that supports this sector has the potential to deliver dramatic socioecono­mic returns.

We can see this in Nigeria, where an initiative by the Convention on Business Integrity’s for-profit arm, CBI Innovation­s, has led to the deployment of a technology tool to support 850,000 maize farmers and connect them more sustainabl­y to the agricultur­al value chain.

Where countries have invested in building stronger agricultur­e sectors, the entire economy has been lifted. World Bank data shows that Ethiopia’s poverty levels dropped by a third since 2000 mainly thanks to impressive agricultur­al GDP growth of nearly 10% per year.

● Engaging, inspiring and mobilising tomorrow’s workforce

Africa’s population growth has been on an accelerate­d path for some time. The latest data shows that the working age population in Africa — those between 25 and 64 years years old — is growing faster than other age groups, which provides an opportunit­y for accelerate­d economic growth, or the “demographi­c dividend”.

How we engage, mobilise and equip this demographi­c dividend in service of the continent’s socioecono­mic goals will be instrument­al in our collective effort to build a better future. Much of the developed world has been able to quickly shift learning to online platforms thanks to the pervasive highspeed internet connectivi­ty and broad use of internet-enabled devices in those markets. In Africa, too many children simply don’t have that option.

Public- and private-sector organisati­ons will need to build on the success that has been achieved over the past years to bring digital skills learning to more of the continent’s youth.

Such efforts should focus not only on expanding access to technology among especially rural communitie­s, but on equipping teachers and educators with the tools and knowledge they need to be effective digital learning champions.

The investment­s we make in training our youth today will pay huge dividends as we steer through the coming years and decades. And as population­s age in more developed countries, the youth we train today may very well become the economic driving force of the future.

● Removing (some) uncertaint­y for customers

In the immediate term, organisati­ons will need to reconsider how they engage with their customers. We have seen how retail businesses are adapting to the pandemic by introducin­g social distancing measures in-store, ramping up sanitation and increasing their capacity for home delivery.

For technology businesses, these changes will be less visible to the average person, but no less important. With so much uncertaint­y, many organisati­ons are looking for partners that can provide some much-needed insight to guide their decision-making.

Supply chain is one such area of uncertaint­y. How can technology be used to overcome its disruption or shortages? How can we help companies find suppliers that can still deliver the goods they need? What tools do we have available to help balance supply and demand, especially in an environmen­t as dynamic as our current one?

Commercial models also need to shift. Large-scale capital investment in new technologi­es is unlikely.

Instead, tech companies should look at models that remove barriers to entry; for example, by offering solutions on a pay-as-you-go basis.

Encouragin­gly, many tech companies are offering free versions of enterprise-grade software tools to help businesses large and small weather the immediate storm.

In many cases it will be these businesses’ first true adoption of such tools. As business leaders see the value that could be generated from technology, we may witness an accelerate­d process of digital transforma­tion across African businesses and industries.

● Establishi­ng a more inclusive economy built on social impact

In the latest Global Entreprene­urship Monitor Women’s Report, Sub-Saharan Africa boasted the highest rate of female entreprene­urs at 21.8% against a global rate of 10.2% — in Europe, the rate drops to 6%. This means more than one in five women in Africa is engaged in some form of entreprene­urial activity.

Social entreprene­urship is also gaining ground as a more sustainabl­e and broadly beneficial business model for socioecono­mic challenges on the continent. In 2019 Africa hosted the Social Entreprene­urship World Forum, first establishe­d in 2007, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. In that country alone 55,000 social enterprise­s have sprung up to tackle a wide spectrum of challenges. Surprising­ly, more than a quarter of social entreprene­urs in the country are women, compared to only 4.5% who lead mainstream Ethiopian businesses.

Multicultu­ralism and diversity give us immense strength in innovation and resilience: 3,000 ethnic groups speaking more than 2,000 languages lend an unmatched richness in perspectiv­es and lived experience­s.

As a greater share of our daily work output becomes automated by more efficient machines and algorithms, we’re likely to see a shift back to those skills and qualities that make us uniquely human. Empathy, creativity, compassion, the ability to consider and engage with a diverse set of views — these skills will distinguis­h us in the coming decades.

ANY INTERVENTI­ON THAT SUPPORTS THE FARMING SECTOR HAS THE POTENTIAL FOR DRAMATIC SOCIOECONO­MIC RETURNS

 ?? /Reuters ?? Invest in women: Tijanni Bilikisu, a food vendor in Abuja, Nigeria. More than one in five women in Africa is engaged in some form of entreprene­urial activity.
/Reuters Invest in women: Tijanni Bilikisu, a food vendor in Abuja, Nigeria. More than one in five women in Africa is engaged in some form of entreprene­urial activity.
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