workspace – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Fri, 17 Apr 2026 07:33:34 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png workspace – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 Lua Raises $5.8M to Build Human-Agent Collaboration Operating System https://techeconomy.ng/lua-raises-5-8m-to-build-human-agent-collaboration-operating-system/ https://techeconomy.ng/lua-raises-5-8m-to-build-human-agent-collaboration-operating-system/#respond Fri, 17 Apr 2026 07:33:34 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=179985 Lua, the operating system for human agent collaboration in the workspace, has secured $5.8M in funding led by Norrsken22, Techeconomy can report. 

Additional investors include Flourish Ventures, 20VC, P1 Ventures, Phosphor Capital and Y Combinator along with notable angels Henri Stern (CEO Privy), Kaz Nejatian (CEO of Opendoor) and Med Benmansour (CEO of Nuitee).

Lua enables any team, regardless of technical depth, to build, own, and manage their own agent workforce from day one.

The company is founded by Lorcan O’Cathain and Stefan Kruger, who met while scaling a fintech business in East Africa – Lorcan as COO, Stefan as CTO.

Before Lua, Lorcan was MD of Zephyr Management’s Africa business, a leading VC/PE fund operating across Africa, India and Sri Lanka. Stefan was VP of Engineering at Paystack, joining before the Stripe acquisition.

Lua will use the funding to continue to build out its developer community and the Lua Implementation Network, a growing community of independent partners deploying Lua agent workforces in their own markets around the world.

Since launching its agent developer platform in October 2025, Lua has grown revenue close to 30% week-on-week. In February 2026 alone, more agents were built on Lua than in the entire cumulative period since launch.

Where teams collaborate with agent workforce

Lua is an opinionated, full-stack agent platform with one-click deployment, accessible via CLI or a natural language interface.

The company handles infrastructure, model orchestration, data, channel integrations, and monitoring so that businesses only have to write business logic and choose the integrations their agents need.

Technical builders get a powerful framework and full developer tooling. Non-technical teams get a visual interface that puts the same capability in their hands. Both work on the same agents, on the same platform. In hours, a team can have a fully functioning agent workforce, coordinating handoffs between agents and humans, running inside their existing systems.

“The companies that will win over the next few years are the ones that build their agent workforce with the same intentionality they bring to their human workforce,” said CEO Lorcan O’Cathain. “Most businesses are either blocked by technical complexity or locked into rigid tools that don’t reflect how their teams actually work. Most agent platforms compound this with black box tooling and per-outcome pricing: the more your agents succeed, the more you pay, with no pathway to improving your agent economics. Lua is built on the opposite principle: teams own their agents, own their outcomes, and build compounding efficiency over time.”

“We are thrilled to support Lua. The founders fundamentally understand how agent and human workforces need to collaborate to get work done,” said Lexi Novitske, General Partner at Norrsken22.

“Additionally, they are a global company that has deployed in Africa, Asia, the U.S. and Europe with deep experience, a volume of data, and a pricing intuition that’s difficult to replicate. We’re excited to help them build out this operating system for human and agent workforces.”

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Working Anywhere | By Emmanuel Asika https://techeconomy.ng/working-anywhere-by-emmanuel-asika/ https://techeconomy.ng/working-anywhere-by-emmanuel-asika/#respond Fri, 13 Oct 2023 10:03:14 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=115757 Given the ongoing evolution in the digital technology realm, it is now unmistakably clear that the upcoming significant frontier, reshaping employee convenience and enhancing workplace productivity, can’t be confined to the traditional office space anymore.

A workspace can literally exist anywhere. And this will not necessarily alter the way you communicate and engage with your teams, provided you are well-prepared with the right tools (and mindset).

According to a WHY Magazine report, it is said that Facebook CEO, Mark Zuckerberg famously doesn’t have a closed office space but he instead works in an open workspace with other employees; same as Jack Dorsey of Square, Gilt Groupe’s Michelle Peluso, and Virgin’s Sir Richard Branson among other chief executives who have joined the office-less class of contemporary business executives.

Hence, it’s critical, at this juncture, to understand why institutions spanning various sectors, from digital technology, real estate, finance, fintech, telecommunications, integrated media, to tourism, and travel, are transitioning from traditional work arrangements to flexible models where ‘the home office’ is considered a non-negotiable option.

An International Labour Organisation (ILO) and Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA) International Labour Office 2022, report titled “The Next Normal: The changing workplace in Nigeria”, shows that in Nigeria, the majority of organizations (56%) would adopt a hybrid business model with a mixture of in-premises and remote work.

Today, status and efficient output indicators have drifted more from just physical offices to resource, aptitude and capabilities driven profiles i.e., employees who effectively deliver work remotely.

This is supported by Gensler’s 2022 U.S. Workplace Survey of 2,000 U.S. workers which shows that the most important reason to come into the office is “to focus on my work”.

Invariably, this is an assessment of the quality of resources that the office offers the staff for the ability to aid co-workers’ output and organization’s eventual profitability.

The report also shows that today the proportion of workers using unassigned workspace has doubled since pre-pandemic to 19%, whilst many engage in some form of hybrid work.

Since technological innovation and work processes are almost like inseparable Siamese twins, this is where the ‘corner office’ is very significant.

To set up and own one for seamless delivery, the most important consideration is to procure products that will help you optimize your limited space, manage time, and ultimately enhance your experience.

With an HP computer, coupled with a supplementary device like  Poly Voyager Free 60 series wireless earbuds to minimize background noise and eliminate distractions at home and good lighting you will look your best on video calls no matter where you are joining the conversation from.

Interestingly, if you are alternating location between office and your ‘home office’, you should equip yourself with a sophisticated laptop like the HP Dragonfly Pro, which is appreciably light to carry around effortlessly without straining your shoulder. It makes you look and sound great on video calls regardless of your location.

The abovementioned claim for an ideal ‘corner office’ model was buttressed in the words of Kate Lister, President, Global Workplace Analytics, when she said, “Beyond ergonomics, you should be thinking about durability, portability, productivity, and professionalism”.  

For the ‘home office’, it’s important to make your space invitingly alluring so you always want to spend time there.

You can achieve this with a combination of greenery that will expectantly stay alive without any extra effort, light up your favorite scented candles or hang some lights, and add personal touches that can bring you joy throughout the work period.

This breeds wholesome power of productivity for both business and staff, just as Lois Wyse, American advertising executive, author and columnist, said that “Power always works from the corner office”; implying that conventional ‘brick and mortar’ work model is fairly losing its pride of place competitively with the strong emergence of the new-normal in organization’s efficiency and workers’ output and experience.

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