Limitless Africa

TRUE Africa

Welcome to Limitless, the podcast series that  asks the questions which matter to Africa. Are tech start-ups the answer to Africa's unemployment problem? Can we stop fake news from spreading on the continent? How do we raise a generation of football stars?  These are just some of the topics we’ll be tackling. And we’re not looking for simple answers. Just as Africa’s potential is limitless, so are the possible solutions to any challenges the continent faces. During each podcast episode, we’ll be asking three very different subject experts to give their take on each question. This will come as no surprise but they don’t always agree. Made possible with a grant from the U.S. Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

  1. Ziad Dalloul - "We are a vocal and active champion of U.S. private sector investment on the continent"

    4 DAYS AGO

    Ziad Dalloul - "We are a vocal and active champion of U.S. private sector investment on the continent"

    "It is important to present DRC and Angola in the way it should be presented." On Limitless Africa, we look at the ways in which Africans can fulfill their limitless potential. And we also look at how partnerships with allies like the United States can help that happen. That's why we're talking to Ziad Dalloul, the founder, president and CEO of AfriCell, the only U.S.-owned mobile network operator in Africa. AFRICEL's main hubs are Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the DRC, the Gambia, and Sierra Leone. They have four thousand full time staff and have been going for over a quarter of a century. They have almost 20 million users across those four countries and generate $400million in revenue. It's worth reminding you AFRICEL is also responsible for the documentary Lobito Bound. It’s about the train line that connects Angola's Atlantic port of Lobito to the mineral-rich regions of the DRC and Zambia. And that's the key word: connects... connectivity is Africell's business. And when Africans connect among themselves and with the world, they will be able to fulfill their limitless potential. Plus: How American and Chinese telecommunications businesses differ. 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 00:00 — Africa + America: a new growth story 00:24 — The only U.S.-owned mobile network in Africa 02:13 — “Africa needs me” 04:32 — Taking on telecom giants 07:30 — The real risk of doing business in Africa 10:27 — Why mobile money is still just getting started 13:06 — Crypto, Binance and Africa’s digital future 21:53 — The markets investors keep missing 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: “People should start paying closer attention to the extraordinary potential of markets like Angola, DRC, Sierra Leone and Gambia.” “We wanted to have something different — a more human touch, a more boutique kind of approach.” “It’s hard to predict exactly what innovations will come, but Africans always give things a local twist.” “There are a lot of opportunities in these countries — the growth and the dynamism are all there.” 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15-minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interview with someone unlocking Africa's limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? How the Lobito Corridor could open up connectivity in central Africa https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/the-railway-opening-up-mining-opportunity-in-africa/ "How do you merge technology with human potential?" - the tech platform helping independent retailers https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-do-you-merge-technology-with-human-potential/ “African AI solutions are not being talked about” - Alex Tsado, the AI architect https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/african-homegrown-ai-solutions-are-not-being-talked-about/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review – it helps get the word out Share with someone passionate about innovation in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 min
  2. 23 MAR

    What should Africa be talking about?

    "A thriving Africa is better for the world than the Africa that we have today" Season 3 comes to a close, and this time, the hosts are in the hot seat. In this finale episode of Limitless Africa, Claude Grunitzky and Dimpho Lekgeu reflect on the conversations that defined the season, from Tomiwa Aladekomo on Africa's next chapter to Jean-Claude Homawoo on building Africa's own Silicon Valley, from Molly Jensen on podcasting across borders to GNL Zamba on peace and moral authority. They revisit standout moments, connect the dots across episodes, and finally answer the question they asked every guest: what should we be talking about that we're not talking about enough? Plus: Why an Apple producer is in Kenya 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 00:00 Africa’s limitless future starts here 00:56 Why Africa must take control of its own destiny 02:01 The secret behind Africa’s next tech boom: diversity 04:25 How African creativity is making billions worldwide 06:35 Why African art could change global power dynamics 11:11 Can Africa’s stability shape the world’s future? 14:12 The confidence revolution of young Africans 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "The financial impact of African creativity is not just realized on the continent, but it's also felt in the diaspora. " "It's important to recognize the greatness in our African societies." "We all come from the same birthplace, which is Africa. So all of us have a lot in common and we are different" 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15 minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interviews with people unlocking Africa’s limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? Why would an African-founded luxury brand choose to build its headquarters in the United States? https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/why-an-african-luxury-shoe-brand-is-headquartered-in-the-u-s/ Claude talks about what Africans can learn from the American mindset https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/the-most-successful-people-have-had-their-own-failures/ Who really benefits when African creativity goes global? https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-can-african-creatives-make-money-from-their-art/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review. It helps more people find the show Share with someone interested in sport in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    16 min
  3. World Cup Special: "Ghana and South Africa just went there to compete the numbers"

    19 MAR

    World Cup Special: "Ghana and South Africa just went there to compete the numbers"

    "Ghana, South Africa… they just went there to complete the numbers." Join the banter - The 2026 FIFA World Cup is almost here, and for the first time ever, 48 teams will compete across the US, Mexico, and Canada. Nine African nations have qualified, and the stakes have never been higher. In this extended episode of Limitless Africa, host Esther Appiah-Fei brings together three voices from across the African football world. They tell us what they really think: UltimateKombo (Obi Kevin Nduka), Nigeria's biggest football content creator; Gabriel Ajala, founder of Africa Sports Unified; and Ndeye Diara, founder of Africa Scores. Plus: Why the weather could play in Africa's favour 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 3:0 Ultimate Kombo's life choices 5:50 Why France V Senegal is one to remember 11:28 The US sports calendar 16:40 How Nigeria missed an opportunity 20:17 What it means to come to the US 38:32 Looking forward to half time 44:28 The fixtures to look out for 47:36 Ambassadors for Africa 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "For the first time ever, 48 teams will compete… and nine African countries have qualified." "On the African front, every African should be supporting Morocco and Senegal." – Ultimate Kombo "The World Cup is where the world comes together to see the best of players, cultures and food." – Gabriel Ajala "This is an opportunity for African players to showcase themselves on the biggest stage." – Gabriel Ajala 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15-minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interview with someone unlocking Africa's limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? Why young Africans could be the champions in e-sports https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/why-young-africans-could-be-the-champions-in-e-sports/ Why Hollywood moguls are investing in African wrestling https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-hollywood-moguls-are-investing-in-african-wrestling/ How Africa is transforming video gaming https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-is-africa-transforming-the-future-of-video-gaming/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review – it helps get the word out Share with someone passionate about tech in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    55 min
  4. World Cup 2026: What does it mean for Africa?

    16 MAR

    World Cup 2026: What does it mean for Africa?

    "Ghana, South Africa… they just went there to complete the numbers." Join the banter - The 2026 FIFA World Cup is almost here, and for the first time ever, 48 teams will compete across the US, Mexico, and Canada. Nine African nations have qualified, and the stakes have never been higher. In this episode of Limitless Africa, host Esther Appiah-Fei brings together three voices from across the African football world: UltimateKombo (Obi Kevin Nduka), Nigeria's biggest football content creator; Gabriel Ajala, founder of Africa Sports Unified; and Ndeye Diara, founder of Africa Scores and co-host of the Africa Business of Sports podcast. Together, they get into team predictions, the business of African football, what nine African teams on the world stage actually means, and why this tournament feels different. Plus: Why the Norwegians could suffer 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 00:00 World Cup Special: Africa’s Moment on the Global Stage 🌍 00:00:42 Why the 2026 World Cup Will Change Football Forever ⚽ 00:01:19 Meet the Experts: Fans, Analysts & Creators 🎙️ 00:02:09 Argentina, Spain or Africa? Who Are We Supporting? 🤔 00:04:42 Senegal vs France: Can History Repeat Itself? 🔥 00:07:07 Nigeria’s Pain: Missing the 2026 World Cup 💔 00:08:49 Can African Teams Finally Go Further? 📈 00:12:04 Biggest Matches to Watch + Final Messages to Fans 🏆 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "For the first time ever, 48 teams will compete… and nine African countries have qualified." "On the African front, every African should be supporting Morocco and Senegal." – Ultimate Kombo "The World Cup is where the world comes together to see the best of players, cultures and food." – Gabriel Ajala "This is an opportunity for African players to showcase themselves on the biggest stage." – Gabriel Ajala 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15 minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interviews with people unlocking Africa’s limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? Why young Africans could be the champions in e-sportsWhy Hollywood moguls are investing in African wrestlingHow Africa is transforming video gaming 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review. It helps more people find the show Share with someone interested in sport in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    15 min
  5. Andela - "Brilliance is evenly distributed. Opportunity is not."

    12 MAR

    Andela - "Brilliance is evenly distributed. Opportunity is not."

    "Talent is global but opportunity sadly isn't." This week on the Limitless Africa podcast, we look at something young Africans care about: work! How work is changing, how you can get hired, how you can upskill, and what kind of work is out there - in fact these days more and more jobs can be done remotely, parrticularly in tech. For us, for young Africans, this shift matters. It allows talent from Lagos to Nairobi and Johannesburg (that’s me!) to work for companies based in California or New York or wherever really without leaving home.  Andela is an American company doing just that - it’s a talent marketplace that trains and connects technologists from the continent and other emerging markets with leading companies around the world. It means American tech companies are getting high quality tech talent and Africans are sharing in the prosperity of Silicon Valley.  We speak to Koffi Kelvin, who trained with Andela, and Nicola Lyons, the company’s talent lead. Plus: How Koffi helped his family 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 1:28 The Andela mission 6:20 Why character matters more than skills 10:14 The importance of AI skills 14:15 Working remote 17:59 Are Africans cheap labour? 23:03 How to stand apart 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "I'm able to be present in the lives of the people who matter to me" "Price isn't really what Andela competes on with our global North American clients. It's the skills." "I feel like it's a huge plus for the companies which I get to work in to get my perspective as an African" 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15-minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interview with someone unlocking Africa's limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? "How do you merge technology with human potential?" - the tech platform helping independent retailers https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-do-you-merge-technology-with-human-potential/ “African AI solutions are not being talked about” - Alex Tsado, the AI architect https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/african-homegrown-ai-solutions-are-not-being-talked-about/ Can Africa and America win the AI race? https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/why-america-is-africas-best-partner-in-the-ai-race/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review – it helps get the word out Share with someone passionate about tech in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. We've also included a little plug for one of our other favourite podcasts 'Unlocking Africa' hosted by Terser Adamu. Have a listen here: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/unlocking-africa/id1603210129 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    29 min
  6. How American tech platforms are changing the future of work in Africa

    9 MAR

    How American tech platforms are changing the future of work in Africa

    "I was able to take my younger brother through university" Young Africans care about work because work is now the clearest route to mobility. In this episode of Limitless Africa, Claude Grunitzky explores how American tech platforms are transforming opportunity across the continent through remote work, AI upskilling, and online networking. Nicola Lyons explains how Andela evolved from a Lagos founded fellowship into an AI native data and services company supporting global enterprises. Koffi Kelvin, an engineer trained through Andela, describes how remote work makes it possible to contribute to companies like GitHub from Nairobi while earning above local market rates. Preston Ideh argues that Africa must not become only a consumer of AI tools and should move earlier in the value chain by building talent and products. Temi Badru closes with practical LinkedIn advice: share value, connect like a human, and stay consistent. Plus: The most annoying habit on LinkedIn 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15 minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interviews with people unlocking Africa’s limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review. It helps more people find the show Share with someone interested in tech in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    15 min
  7. Ella Peinovich - "How do you merge technology with human potential?"

    5 MAR

    Ella Peinovich - "How do you merge technology with human potential?"

    "We ultimately are trying to level the playing field for independent brands to be able to sell into big major retailers." On this episode of Limitless Africa, we’re looking at how African businesses can sell to US customers. If you’re a homeware brand in Togo, or a clean beauty maker in South Africa or a jewelry manufacturer in Kenya, how can you get your product to American customers, those consumers shopping on Target, Etsy or Bloomingdale's?  And it’s not a one-way street: those American retailers are also looking to stock amazing African homeware, accessories, lotions and potions - they are crying out for high quality products that are unique, and will delight their customers. That’s where amazing entrepreneurs like Ella Pienovich come in. She’s the co-founder behind PoweredByPeople, a multi-channel distribution platform that connects independent brands to over 100 million customers across more than 200 leading online retailers & marketplaces. Ella is opening up huge new markets, and offering digital innovation to African entrepreneurs. Plus: How clean beauty is the next trend. 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 1:35 Her first business 4:13 Tech-powered humans 5:52 The power of drop shipping 11:51 Building a business in Kenya 15:19 How to raise $20m 18:49 Transparency and compliance 22:55 The trends in retail 25:52 The power of thinking big 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "Transparency is part of the conversation, but the real shift I'm seeing is around compliance." "That's my own little secret ambition is to replace mass produced product in the retail market." 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15-minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interview with someone unlocking Africa's limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? Why an African luxury shoe brand is headquartered in the U.S. https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/why-an-african-luxury-shoe-brand-is-headquartered-in-the-u-s/ How hip hop can build empires https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/how-hip-hop-can-build-a-business-empire/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review – it helps get the word out Share with someone passionate about creativity in Africa 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    28 min
  8. Why an African luxury shoe brand is headquartered in the U.S.

    2 MAR

    Why an African luxury shoe brand is headquartered in the U.S.

    "I became extremely fascinated with Mansa Musa's story." Why would an African-founded luxury brand choose to build its headquarters in the United States? In this episode of Limitless Africa, host Claude Grunitzky speaks with Armando Cabral, founder of Armando Cabral Footwear, who was born in Guinea-Bissau and now runs his brand from New York. Cabral explains how his African heritage shapes his design philosophy, why he describes himself as a “cultural design activist,” and how the pandemic pushed him to research West African history more deeply, including the Mali Empire and Mansa Musa. Cabral also breaks down the practical business logic behind locating in the U.S. market: access to entrepreneurial energy, stronger retail networks, and an ecosystem that responds to ambition with enthusiasm rather than skepticism. He shares what it took to land major American retail partnerships, including Bloomingdale’s, and how collaborations with brands like Allen Edmonds validated the global appetite for authentic African storytelling paired with uncompromising quality. Finally, the episode confronts a hard question: why not manufacture in Africa today? Cabral offers an unglamorous but important answer about infrastructure, expertise, and the realities of scaling craft at luxury standards, while still articulating a long-term vision of expanding retail presence across the African continent. Plus: Three tips for entrepreneurs 🌟 IN THIS EPISODE: 1:12 From model to cultural design activist 2:36 Why Mansa Musa inspired a fashion label 4:49 Expansion in Africa 5:42 U.S. H.Q 7:30 The African consumer 9:19 Manfacturing in Africa 10:52 Getting Bloomingdale's 💬 QUOTES TO REMEMBER: "In order to know where you're going, you need to know where you come from." "African heritage is very unique." "It's going to be tough, but eventually you will succeed. " 🌍 ABOUT LIMITLESS AFRICA The podcast that asks how Africans and Americans can work together for shared prosperity Every Monday: 15 minute episodes that dive into an issue that matters to Africans Every Thursday: extended interviews with people unlocking Africa’s limitless potential ➕ WANT MORE? "If there is something that Africa can learn from America, it's that abundance mindset." - Olugbenga Ogunbowale https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/if-there-is-something-that-africa-can-learn-from-america-its-that-abundance-mindset/ "Sometimes to build Africa, you have to leave Africa" https://trueafrica.co/article/podcast/sometimes-to-build-africa-you-have-to-leave-africa/ 💗 LOVE LIMITLESS AFRICA? Subscribe on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts Leave a 5⭐ review. It helps more people find the show Share with someone interested in Africa’s creative industries 🚀 FOLLOW LIMITLESS AFRICA Instagram: @_trueafrica Website: https://trueafrica.co/ Substack: https://limitlessafrica.substack.com/ 🤝 FRIENDS OF LIMITLESS AFRICA Limitless Africa is sponsored by the US Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    15 min

Trailers

About

Welcome to Limitless, the podcast series that  asks the questions which matter to Africa. Are tech start-ups the answer to Africa's unemployment problem? Can we stop fake news from spreading on the continent? How do we raise a generation of football stars?  These are just some of the topics we’ll be tackling. And we’re not looking for simple answers. Just as Africa’s potential is limitless, so are the possible solutions to any challenges the continent faces. During each podcast episode, we’ll be asking three very different subject experts to give their take on each question. This will come as no surprise but they don’t always agree. Made possible with a grant from the U.S. Department of State and the Seenfire Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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