The Star Early Edition

GovChat’s founder is listing tech firm Suppple on Luxembourg Stock Exchange

- DR PALI LEHOHLA Dr Pali Lehohla is the chairperso­n of the Suppple board, a Professor of Practice at the University of Johannesbu­rg, a research associate at Oxford University, a board member of Institute for Economic Justice at Wits and a distinguis­hed alu

SOUTH African business duo Eldrid Jordaan and Goitse Konopi listed their new technology venture, Suppple, on the Luxembourg Stock Exchange on Tuesday.

The market capitalisa­tion is £200 million (R4.69 billion) and the share price £2. The listing enhances Suppple’s financial stability and investment attractive­ness, facilitati­ng expansion into new markets and sectors.

The listing enhances Suppple’s financial stability and investment attractive­ness, facilitati­ng expansion into new markets and sectors.

Several years ago, I said the potential demographi­c dividend of South Africa was poised for a demographi­c disaster.

Jordaan and Konopi are staring the challenge in the face. Through their new company, Suppple, they have focused on the mission of education, health and product safety, especially food. They are putting technology to good use.

They have challenged not only South Africa, but the world, and achieved a major milestone today. That is why in my article yesterday was a teaser when I said: “Watch the space today.”

Jordaan is the former CEO and founder of citizen engagement platform GovChat, and Konopi its chief data officer. As part of Suppple’s organisati­onal structure, Jordaan takes on the role of founder and CEO, while Konopi is the co-founder and chief data officer.

I am proud to say that I am the chairperso­n of Suppple’s board and am proud of what it brings to the table. The name “Suppple” is derived a synonym for resilience, and represents the creation of “Social impact Using Public-Private-Partnershi­ps”.

Jordaan and Konopi have focused on the mission of leaving no-one behind.

It reminds me of Mosotho philosophe­r Morena Mohlomi, who establishe­d an ethical leadership school in Ngolile in the 18th century.

The philosophi­cal foundation­s of the school were “a responsibl­e leader pursues peaceful and productive alliances, accommodat­es stakeholde­rs, and uses new instrument­s of power to create intergener­ational value”.

The challenge tackled must result in intergener­ational value through transforma­tive leadership. Importantl­y, the results must be integrativ­e.

Today, May 14, history has been made in the families of Eldrid Jordaan and Gontsi Konopi as their team tirelessly met the demanding challenges of listing on a stock exchange. It is a wonderful realisatio­n of their hard work and vision.

Suppple’s value their values in matters that count for a nation.

GovChat was born out of pain. Jordaan saw a technologi­cal gap. GovChat was launched as South Africa’s platform for citizen-government engagement and it became a crucial vehicle, especially during the crucial and painful years of the Covid-19 pandemic.

It facilitate­d real-time communicat­ion and service delivery, supporting more than 10 million users with access to critical health updates, social relief applicatio­ns and government services.

Suppple, too, continues to go where there is pain and creates intergener­ational value.

Suppple is an infrastruc­ture-as-a-service API technology platform designed to assist government­s of all sizes, across the globe, to rapidly organise, digitise and automate their functions.

It answers the challenges that face the industry and consumers in retail and supply chain management.

To this end, the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa and GS1 South Africa, a leading supplier of barcodes in South Africa, use Suppple’s technology to play a pivotal role in the verificati­on and tracking of products.

The partnershi­p supports the scanning and verificati­on of more than 500 billion products globally. Ten billion products are scanned daily across 115 countries.

The robust system aids in addressing illegal trade activities valued within an inestimabl­e range of billions to trillions. The magnitude of leakage will be visible and known because of its power of integrated reporting.

The operationa­l reach is facilitate­d by the extensive use of GS1 barcodes across various products and markets. This allows for seamless internatio­nal operations and thus elevates the Suppple technology as essential, if not the tool for global trade and regulatory compliance in the consumer goods sector. This is what the South Africa of Struggle is achieving in front of our eyes.

Suppple’s Business Process Outsourcin­g (BPO) through Resolv Global,

call centre and collection agents, also enhances BPO services in South Africa, Kenya and Colombia with customised call centre solutions.

By integratin­g chatbots and AI technology, Suppple improves customer and employee experience­s, optimising operationa­l efficiency and effectiven­ess, thus yielding service quality.

At the level of the continent in public administra­tion initiative­s, Suppple operates in cities like Dakar and Nairobi, who use its software for managing public services, including social welfare, public health and urban planning.

The technology’s adaptabili­ty enhances civic operations.

The Senegal partnershi­p has led to the co-creation of platforms for

citizen-government engagement and the digitisati­on of social grants, driving transparen­cy and accessibil­ity.

Financial and market prospects in the context of the Luxembourg Stock Exchange Listing enhances Suppple’s financial stability and investment attractive­ness, facilitati­ng expansion into new markets and sectors.

With that in mind, the company’s growth strategy is targeting expansion into small and midsize business markets and scaling operations across global cloud marketplac­es within two months.

The board of directors consists of conscienti­ous people. These are Jordaan; Konopi; Dr Lwazi Manzi, the head of the AU’s Covid-19 response; Professor Randall Carolissen, the dean at Johannesbu­rg Business School and

former CEO of the National Student Financial Aid Scheme; Marina Short, the chairperso­n of the Credit Bureau Associatio­n of South Africa and CEO of the Consumer Profile Bureau; and I am the chairperso­n.

Jordaan and Konopi are the perfect leadership protégés of Lesotho’s Morena Mohlomi. Their business concepts help leave no-one behind and improve people’s lives.

 ?? ?? AS PART OF Supple’s organisati­onal structure, Jordaan takes on the role of founder and CEO, while Konopi is co-founder and chief data office. | SUPPLIED
AS PART OF Supple’s organisati­onal structure, Jordaan takes on the role of founder and CEO, while Konopi is co-founder and chief data office. | SUPPLIED
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