11 African Entrepreneurs Who Are Changing the Business LandscapeFrom hi-tech to fashion to branding, startups are transforming the continent and supercharging commerce.

ByDr. Obianuju Helen Okoye

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Jason Njoku
Jason Njoku

Africa is not a country. It is a continent bursting with jewels and ingenuity. Boasting several countries withthe fastest growing global economies, the Sub-Saharan African region is a vast business ecosystem, with gems hidden under rough terrains. For the creative entrepreneursI had the pleasure of interviewing, the secret lies in the digging. Here are their stories.

Jason Njoku, Nigeria.

Image Credit: Jason Njoku

As the founder ofiROKO Partners, andiROKOTv, the leading online streaming platform in Africa, Jason Njoku's principle is simple. "I am trying to make people happy," he says. Njoku admits that starting on YouTube in 2010 and building a successful global media empire has brought its challenges. "I make more mistakes than I make good choices. My only saving grace is that the choices that I make are better and more significant." Now a venture capitalist, his current obsession is funding local entrepreneurs. "I want to help young entrepreneurs build the next iROKOTV", he says.

Gina Din-Kariuki, Kenya.

Image Credit: Gina Din-Kariuki

In 19 years, Gina Din-Kariuki has morphed from being a public relations guru, to anaward-winningmanagement consultant and social entrepreneur, as well as honorary UNFPA ambassador and Red Cross goodwill ambassador. As the founder and executive chair of theGina Din Group, she has served as a strategic advisor to Safaricom, steering the expansion of Kenyan telecommunications. Currently she is assisting Kenya's central bank with its rebranding. At her pinnacle of achievement, what's next? "Where I am, it is much more about impact and significance," she says. "I spend a lot of time, building young women entrepreneurs across the continent. I want to be the woman that I didn't have when I was starting my business," says Din-Kariuki.

Adaora Mbelu-Dania, Nigeria.

Image Credit: Mr. Chiekezi Dozie

The founder ofA2 Creative, a thriving brand management company,Adaora Mbelu-Dania's track record includes being behind Guinness' recent new product launch in its second largest market, Nigeria. "I am inspired by people," she says. But inspiration is different than personal foundation, which she describes succinctly: "My recipe for success is God, love, discipline, patience, and forgiveness, in this particular order." Mbelu-Dania'sbusiness evolutionis seen in her mindset change. "My greatest mistake was thinking that I had to streamline and choose one thing," she says.

Related:The 7 Tenets of Branding

Alan Knott-Craig Jr., South Africa.

Image Credit: Alan Knott Craig Jr.

A trained accountant,Alan Knott-Craighas been changing the telecommunications industry in South Africa since 2003. His latest innovation is setting up the largest free public WiFi network in South Africa,Project Isizwe, which he has built one community at a time. What drives him? "Fear of failure," Knott-Craig responds. He attributes his million-dollar success to "focus, keeping my promises and marrying young. When there is no plan B, you have no other options," he says.

Nkechi Harry Ngonadi, Nigeria.

图片来源:Abeke改版

How does a person turn a passion into a lucrative business? By becoming purposeful about it. For Nkechi Ngonadi, CEO ofNHN Couture, it comes down to her inspiration: "Proverbs 22:29, The Almighty God and His Word," she says. In three years, NHN designs have been featured on prominent runways, and worn by celebrities across the African continent, and from the US to the Middle East. "Don't focus on the immediate need only. Set your eyes on the big picture," she says. What is her best advice? "Integrity, people follow if they trust." This trust has led to Ngonadi having almost100,000 active followers(and counting) on Instagram alone.

Related:营销建议从3时尚创业资助

Jean Bosco Nzeyimana, Rwanda.

Image Credit: Jean Bosco Nzeyimana

How do you describebeing seated on a Global Entrepreneurship panel between Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerburg and President Obama? "Exciting and frightening!" says Jean Nzeyimana. As founder and CEO of Habona, a clean and renewable energy company, this young entrepreneur has already achieved a milestone that many can only dream about. For him, it is bigger than a business. By transforming waste in his community to briquettes, a greener alternative to wood charcoal, Nzeyimana provides jobs and a cleaner environment.

Madey Adeboye, Nigeria.

Image Credit: Madey Adeboye

How do you create a booming business? Find a problem and solve it. For Madey Adeboye, a Nigerian lawyer, this was her path to startingGreen Grill House, a leading healthy food café in Lagos, Nigeria, that features delivery options. "Changing my eating habits and seeing the amazing results inspired me to want to do that for others." In just two years, Adeboye has gone from unraveling healthy cuisine in her own kitchen, to opening up her café and becoming a household name in Nigeria. Today, she has partnership requests coming from all over Africa.

Maavi Norman, Liberia.

Image Credit: Maavi Norman

The founder of IRISInternationalConsulting, social entrepreneur Dr. Maavi Norman bridges the gap by encouraging foreign investment in Africa, while supporting "deep local impact." Through his affiliation as a mentor with the White House Young African Leaders Initiative, Norman has helped guide a cohort of like-minded entrepreneurs in Africa. For him, it all comes down to this: "Stay laser-focused on solutions but evaluate a myriad of ideas for achieving them. Be open to readjusting, recalibrating and re-launching."

Gozie Udemezue, Nigeria.

Image Credit: Gozie Udemezue

What is the fastest way to scale a business? Find something old, add a modern twist, and send it back out into the world. This is how Nwachinemelu Local Food Kitchen was born.Gozie Udemezue, a trained lawyer and human rights activist, turned her kitchen into a golden goose, proffering a modern day version of her grandmother's traditional foods. What drives her? "God is my main source of inspiration," she says. In less than two years, her frozen foods are being mailed across the country and ordered from around the globe.

Related:Food-Tech Startup Dinner Lab Is Crowdfunding a Cool $2 Million

Ashifi Gogo, Ghana.

Image Credit: sproxil.com

As a consumer, how do you guarantee that your purchase is not counterfeit? That thought got Dr. Ashifi Gogo started onSproxilin 2009, which was recognized with anaward by the White House. "If I am paying extra, I need to know if it's organic", he responds. Sproxil engages with the world's largest brands to protect their consumers from buying counterfeit products. They reward loyal consumers to make them continue buying. Originally intended for the pharmaceutical industry to combat the huge global problem with counterfeit drugs, Sproxil has now expanded into the automotive industry and into the oil and gas sector.

Iyin Aboyeji, Nigeria.

Image Credit: Iyin Aboyeji

How do you getMark Zuckerberg to invest $24 millionin your company? Well, ask Iyin Aboyeji, he knows. Asco-founder of technology giant Andela, he launched a tech talent platform across Africa. Exiting that, he is now at the helm ofFlutterwave. "My definition of success is building up others, building up the continent," Aboyiji says. Indeed he is, as Flutterwave promises to change the way financial transactions take place in Africa, by offering easy exchange of digital currency, that opens Africa up to the world.

Dr. Obianuju Helen Okoye

Entrepreneur Leadership Network® Writer

Entrepreneur, Healthcare/Business Executive , Doctor

Dr. Obianuju Helen Okoye is an entrepreneur, physician and health and business executive in Chicago. She is the CEO and president of an international consulting firm that provides tech assistance to healthcare and business companies.

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