Early-Stage Funding – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:56:04 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png Early-Stage Funding – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Madica Invests $400,000 in Two New AI Startups to Drive Inclusive Innovation Across Africa https://techeconomy.ng/madica-invests-in-anavid-and-hypeo-ai-to-boost-african-startups/ https://techeconomy.ng/madica-invests-in-anavid-and-hypeo-ai-to-boost-african-startups/#respond Mon, 20 Oct 2025 12:56:04 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=169606 Madica, the pan-African investment programme backed by Flourish Ventures, has expanded its portfolio with two artificial intelligence startups, Anavid from Tunisia and Hypeo AI from Morocco, each securing up to $200,000 in pre-seed funding. 

The companies will also join Madica’s intensive 18-month support programme, designed to help early-stage founders build scalable, investment-ready businesses.

Madica is seeking to close Africa’s funding gap by backing founders and startups usually overlooked by traditional venture capital. 

Since launching in 2022, the programme has focused on entrepreneurs from underrepresented regions and industries, providing capital and the kind of mentorship as well as structure that can make or break early ventures.

Both startups bring artificial intelligence into real-world African contexts. Anavid, founded by Ahmed Chaari and David Nilsson, uses AI to integrate with retail surveillance systems, reducing theft losses and improving in-store experience. 

Hypeo AI, led by Meriam Bessa and Salah Eddine Mimouni, provides a software solution that automates influencer marketing, from brand matching to campaign payments.

For Madica, these investments will help enhance innovation, which is also thriving across Africa, not just in a few well-known hubs.

At Madica, we believe and continue to prove that some of the world’s most transformative ideas come from places that are too often ignored,” said Emmanuel Adegboye, head of Madica. “The founders we’ve just welcomed are visionaries, building solutions with the power to uplift communities and shape industries. We’re proud to stand with them as they take on the next stage of their journey.”

For the founders, the partnership provides access to Madica’s growing investor network, business coaching, and two fully funded immersion trips to leading tech ecosystems both within and outside Africa. 

These trips, part of Madica’s structured learning model, give founders a platform to engage directly with investors, mentors, and other founders solving similar challenges.

Speaking on Hypeo AI’s mission, Meriam Bessa, the company’s co-founder and CEO, said, “Our region is rapidly growing with creative energy, but without the right digital backbone, it often goes untapped. We’re changing that by using AI to reimagine how brands and creators find each other, collaborate, and thrive. Backing by Madica will help us strengthen our AI capabilities to achieve this goal.”

Madica partners with ABAN
L-r: head of Madica, Emmanuel Adegboye; Yemi Keri, president of ABAN and Fadilah Tchoumba, CEO at ABAN during the signing of the MOU

Madica has also partnered with the African Business Angel Network (ABAN) to expand deal flow and co-investment opportunities for its portfolio companies. The collaboration, unveiled at the ABAN Congress in Lagos, aims to improve access to local capital and connect angel investors with institutional partners.

According to Yemi Keri, President of ABAN, “The future of Africa’s innovation economy depends on how effectively we can mobilise local capital and empower local investors. Our collaboration with Madica helps bridge the gap between angel investors and institutional capital, ensuring that more funding comes from within the continent, and that startups everywhere in Africa can access the right type of support to scale.”

Madica’s portfolio already includes a mix of standout startups such as Medikea, Daleela, Pixii Motors, and ToumAI, with a strong focus on gender diversity and regional inclusion. 

Its model combines funding with hands-on learning, helping founders refine governance, growth strategy, and personal well-being, areas often neglected in early-stage business building.

To date, Madica has continued to scout for new investment opportunities across the continent. Eligible startups must have a minimum viable product (MVP), ideally with paying customers, and be led by full-time African founders with limited prior institutional backing.

The team recently participated in Moonshot by TechCabal in Lagos and is heading to Big Angels Day Africa in Dakar this October, part of its approach to meet founders where they are, and to bring early-stage capital closer to the people shaping Africa’s digital future.

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ABAN at 10: Fadilah Tchoumba on Celebrating Lagos Congress and the Future of Angel Investing https://techeconomy.ng/aban-10-years-profile-angel-investing-africa/ https://techeconomy.ng/aban-10-years-profile-angel-investing-africa/#comments Mon, 25 Aug 2025 09:37:03 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=165754 In Africa, everyone knows the proverb: “He who pays the piper calls the tune.” For far too long, the tune of Africa’s innovation story has been played by foreign capital, commendable, but usually out of sync with the rhythm of local facts. 

The result has been brilliant ideas birthed on the continent, frequently shaped to suit external expectations, while local investors watched from the sidelines. But things are changing.

In just a decade, the African Business Angel Network (ABAN) has proven that Africans are not only capable of calling the tune but of owning the entire orchestra. 

Coming from a handful of angel investors in 2012, the network has grown to over 7,000 across 37 countries, mobilising more than $35 million in early-stage investments. Its impact includes over 2,000 jobs created, 500,000 women reached through inclusive innovations, and nearly half of all angel investors now engaging in cross-border deals.

These statistics reveal a maturing ecosystem where local and diaspora investors are beginning to write cheques that reflect their belief in Africa’s potential. 

As the African Business Angel Network (ABAN) celebrates a decade of impacting the continent’s early-stage investment ecosystem, all eyes turn to Lagos for its 10th Anniversary Congress.

Themed “Accelerating Local Capital Participation,” the question is no longer whether Africa can fund Africa, but how fast, how courageous, and how collectively it can be done.

To speak on this journey and the road ahead, Techeconomy had an exclusive conversation with Fadilah Tchoumba, CEO of ABAN, who spoke on what it takes to build a trusted voice for angel investing on the continent, why Lagos is the perfect stage for this milestone, and how the next decade of African innovation will be enabled by local capital.

Fadilah Tchoumba speaks on ABAN 10th Anniversary
Fadilah Tchoumba, CEO of ABAN

TE: Over the past decade, ABAN has mobilised over $35 million in early-stage investments across Africa. Looking back, what have been the defining moments that impacted this journey and established ABAN as the leading voice for angel investing on the continent?

Fadilah Tchoumba: The defining milestones for us from inception have been: 

  • Training and activating over 7,000 angel investors across sector-agnostic and sector-focused investments, up from just a few dozen in 2012.
  • Maintaining engagement with a community of 75 active ABAN angel network members across 37 African countries and the diaspora.
  • Achieved a 50% gender balance in all programs, leading to the activation of 200+ women angel investors across seven female-led angel networks.
  • Mobilising and catalysing over $22.5 million in angel capital towards 408 innovative early-stage ventures.
  • Supporting the creation of 2,000+ jobs directly through portfolio companies, and impacted 500,000 women through access to inclusive innovations and product value chains.
  • Establishing five new thematic angel networks in Africa focused on: Digital Trade, Climate-Smart Agriculture, Clean Technology, Smart Cities, and Sports & Creative sectors.
  • Approximately 48% of angel investors engaged in cross-border deals, underscoring a growing pan-African investment mindset.
  • Releasing 3 ABAN Angel Investment Survey Reports since 2022, and this year, we will be releasing our 4th report at the 1st ABAN Annual Congress on 17-18 November in Lagos.
  • De-risking investments in 21 startups across 15 African countries through the Catalytic Africa Matching Fund, with over $3.1 million deployed.

Each step was intentional, building capital and investor capacity, credibility, and cross-border syndication. Over time, these moves established ABAN as a trusted voice and convener of Africa’s early-stage investment ecosystem.

TE: The 2025 Congress theme, “Accelerating Local Capital Participation”, emphasises Africa funding Africa. What practical strategies is ABAN introducing to significantly boost local and diaspora participation in early-stage investing over the next five years?

Fadilah Tchoumba: We are doubling down on three investor-focused strategies:

  1. Catalytic Africa 2.0, which is a stronger co-investment mechanism designed to mobilise institutional, local, and diaspora capital into syndicates.
  2. Investor accreditation; we will be launching Africa Business Angel Accreditation to professionalise Business Angel investing and boost confidence among new entrants.
  3. Cross-border syndication vehicles, like Africa Business Angel Investment Vehicle (ABAIV), which provide structured, de-risked opportunities for diaspora investors to co-invest alongside local Business Angels.

These mechanisms are specifically designed to unlock larger ticket sizes, diversify deal flow, and strengthen Africa’s resilience against external capital shocks.

TE: Nigeria, and Lagos in particular, has been chosen as the host city for the Congress. Beyond its status as Africa’s fastest-growing startup ecosystem, what makes Lagos the ideal stage for this milestone gathering?

Fadilah Tchoumba: Lagos is more than just a startup hub. The city is Africa’s market getaway for innovation and scale. Lagos has produced unicorns, birthed thriving angel networks, and attracted global investors, while still reflecting the opportunities and challenges faced by entrepreneurs continent-wide. Hosting the ABAN Annual Congress in Lagos allows us to showcase Africa’s most dynamic ecosystem, while reinforcing the city as a model for how local capital and global ambition can intersect.

TE: Angel investing in Africa faces unique challenges, from policy gaps to risk perceptions. Which policy interventions or regulatory changes do you believe are most urgent to de-risk investments and build investor confidence?

Fadilah Tchoumba: Three interventions stand out:

  1. Tax incentives and reliefs for angel investors to encourage wider participation.
  2. Investor protection frameworks, particularly around shareholder rights and exit clarity.
  3. Capital market access reforms, making it easier to syndicate, structure, and exit investments.

We are actively engaging with policymakers to ensure these enablers are not only designed but executed at scale across multiple African markets.

TE: Catalytic Africa 2.0 is set to launch during the Congress as a new investment vehicle for diaspora-local syndication. How will this initiative work in practice, and what measurable impact do you expect it to have on deal flow and startup growth?

Fadilah Tchoumba: Catalytic Africa 2.0 will match every dollar invested by registered local angel groups with catalytic funds from partners, effectively multiplying deal sizes and de-risking investor entry. By enabling diaspora syndication into these vehicles, it ensures both patient and smart capital flows into Africa’s most promising startups. We anticipate this will not only grow deal volume but also increase successful cross-border investments by at least 40% over the next three years. 

TE: As ABAN looks ahead to its next decade, what is your vision for the role African angel investors should play in driving innovation in high-growth sectors like AI, health-tech, cleantech, and the creative economy?

Fadilah Tchoumba: The next decade is about African Business Angels becoming market-makers, not just funders. By leveraging deep local knowledge and networks, African investors can de-risk frontier sectors like AI or health-tech where global capital remains cautious. Business Angels will also champion inclusive sectors the creative economy, sports, and climate-tech, which reflect Africa’s unique strengths. The vision is clear: Africa’s next wave of global solutions will be born from angel-backed startups, and ABAN’s role is to keep equipping investors to seize these opportunities because ultimately, Africa must fund Africa.

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