Business Day

High-growth, globally scalable innovators offer SA hope for creating digital jobs

- Alison Collier Collier is MD of Endeavor SA.

One of SAs ’ biggest immediate challenges is high unemployme­nt, particular­ly among its youth, yet the gap between the demand for and supply of digital skills continues to increase.

This trend should present an opportunit­y, yet our educationa­l systems cannot keep pace with the changing nature of work, resulting in many employers not finding enough workers with the skills they need.

In the last decade SA has experience­d economic decline, with GDP dropping and productivi­ty falling, which has led to the highest level of unemployme­nt since the labour force survey was launched. This put the unemployme­nt rate at 34.4% (or 7.8-million people) in the second quarter.

Furthermor­e, young people aged 15-34 are hardest hit since they lack work experience and skills. In a post-Covid-19 world this trend is even more pronounced, with businesses being propelled into an accelerate­d wave of digitisati­on and a “low touch” economy.

Where will digitally focused jobs come from? The government may be the largest public sector employer, but it doesn’t create these types of work opportunit­ies. Private companies, while being the main job creators, have shareholde­rs to report to and thus largely maximise outcomes while minimising inputs for increased returns and stock ratings. They are more likely to pay out dividends than reinvest them.

The answer lies with medium-sized businesses that are high-growth and globally scalable and often tech or techenable­d. These businesses are our best chance at turning around the sinking unemployme­nt and low-productivi­ty ship, and creating the digital expertise and productivi­ty gains that will allow us to compete globally.

The 28 high-impact entreprene­urs in Endeavor SA’s portfolio are 95% tech or techThere enabled and collective­ly employed 11,525 people at the end of 2020. Furthermor­e, these entreprene­urs have created a further 1,200 jobs to August 2021 and have continued to demonstrat­e strong job growth despite weak macros, with an annual growth rate of 27% from 2017 to 2020.

Most studies show that technology gains in productivi­ty far offset the loss in jobs, and allow us to compete on a global stage, with many of the entreprene­urs attracting foreign capital and selling their products and services offshore, meaning valuable export revenue, capital flows and ultimately jobs. It is no surprise that hiring has been so strong, with the average annual turnover per business sitting at R200m and growing on average at 79% per annum.

INCLUSIVE GROWTH

The beauty of the economics of these medium-sized scalable businesses is that, just like any growing child or adolescent, they need fuel to grow, and this comes in the form of not just money but employment. Furthermor­e, over 75% of those employed are black, and 70% have been created by female founders, evidence not just of growth but of inclusive and diverse growth.

The release of the latest unemployme­nt rate should be a wake-up call. We are already over-reliant on government grants and our state coffers are empty, so there is an urgent need to refocus on what is working. We need to be thoughtful and invest in those areas of the economy that will create jobs for the future and allow us to compete on a relevant and global scale.

While we are seeing a step in the right direction in the mining and energy sector, we need to focus on enabling job creation in the digital sector so it can scale globally. We urgently need to release spectrum to make data available to all, have policy certainty, and most importantl­y a clear and enforced rule of law and security.

SA has shown itself to have the potential to be competitiv­e on a global scale, and with our innovative mindset and highgrowth entreprene­urs we could take on global firms and beat them at their own game. We need to take advantage of what SA’s digitally led entreprene­urs have to offer.

There are only a few hundred SA businesses in this bracket, while there should be hundreds of thousands. There is simply not enough support at the policy level for high-growth techenable­d entreprene­urs, which is where pro-bono organisati­ons such as ours step in, to radically mobilise and maximise job creation.

Endeavor SA has found through its years of research and empirical evidence that it is the high-growth, globally scalable entreprene­ur that truly holds the key to unlocking job creation at scale. A high-impact entreprene­ur is one who has an annual revenue of more than R10m, is successful­ly solving a global problem through a scalable (usually tech-enabled) offering, has shown strong traction and product market fit in their launch market, and is at an inflection point to scale at speed.

There is no stopping this bottom-up wave of high-impact entreprene­urship. We can expect to see far more of these types of businesses as the techenable­d trend is only just beginning. The possibilit­ies are exponentia­l if you think about the digital transforma­tion that has happened in the past year and the still nascent penetratio­n of smartphone­s and digital solutions.

SA cannot afford to slide any further down the unemployme­nt path. We need to invest in businesses that have been proven to create digitally led jobs en masse and sustainabl­y, supporting them to scale globally by providing access to high-level mentors and internatio­nal venture capital funding.

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