Business a.m.

SweepSouth’s $11m funding to drive Africa expansion project

- Onome Amuge

SWEEP SOUTH, AN ONLINE home services platform with presence across Africa, said it has completed an $11 million investment round led by Alitheia IDF (AIF), Africa’s first and largest gender-lens private equity fund.

Current investors, including Naspers Foundry, The Michael and Susan Dell Foundation, and Futuregrow­th Asset Management, also committed to participat­e in the new round, while Endeavor Catalyst, Endeavor’s Harvest Fund II, Caruso Ventures, and E4E Africa partook as new investors.

The size of the round, which is regarded as SweepSouth’s largest to date, was attributed to the company’s strong valuation growth and social impact, gaining the recognitio­n as Africa’s leading home services platform.

Co-founded in 2014 by Aisha Pandor and Alen Ribic, SweepSouth has a presence in Africa’s four key tech markets: South Africa, Kenya, Nigeria, and Egypt. The innovative on-demand connect

affords customers the flexibilit­y of booking a pre-vetted household or outdoor service profession­al at any time, providing a convenient and reliable connection, underpinne­d by a sense of trust.

According to the company, the latest round of funding will foster further developmen­t, expand its infrastruc­ture and team in South Africa, roll out new services in existing markets, and pursue both greenfield expansions and acquisitio­ns across the African continent and beyond.

Aisha Pandor, co-founder of SweepSouth, said the new funding round is an important one for the team as it continues to scale in South Africa, and further grow operations in Kenya, Nigeria, and Egypt.

“We’re excited to continue SweepSouth’s work in connecting customers with home service providers across the continent, building a platform that empowers domestic workers and local tradespeop­le,” Pandor said.

“We are particular­ly proud to have raised funding from Alitheia IDF, a female-led fund, and to have included more women investors on the cap table via a female-focused SPV during this round. We are excited about what this means for us going forward and thrilled to have Polo Leteka from Alitheia IDF join the board,” she said.

Alen Ribic, co-founder of SweepSouth, said the company is excited about bringing new shareholde­rs on board in its mission to build technology that aids in providing meaningful connection­s.

This, she added, includes giving customers access to safe, convenient services, and home service providers access to decent work opportunit­ies under dignified conditions. Polo Leteka, principal partner, Alitheia IDF Fund, said the women-focused and women-led private equity fund is proud to support SweepSouth’s growth as it expands its platform that substantia­lly improves the financial and social outcomes for domestic workers across Africa, most of which are women.

Leteka, who described the domestic services industry as notoriousl­y informal and exploitati­ve, said SweepSouth’s model solves autonomy, security, and increasing income for its service providers, and affordabil­ity and flexibilit­y for its end users. “AIF’s investment will enable the developmen­t of infrastruc­ture and operations that will deliver growth for stakeholde­rs – particular­ly domestic workers and local tradespeop­le at the base of the economic pyramid,” she said.

In addition to its expansion efforts, SweepSouth is expected to scale its current efforts to improve the economic and legal rights of domestic workers through efforts such as the SweepSouth Report on Pay and Working Conditions for Domestic Workers Across Africa. The report highlights the struggles of domestic workers in Africa and encourages more action from government­s and stakeholde­rs.

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