African Business Stories

Akaego Okoye

African Business Stories is the go-to podcast for insights into the women shaping Africa’s business landscape. Africa is one of the world’s most promising frontiers for growth and innovation—and women are at the heart of this transformation. Hosted by Akaego Okoye, this podcast spotlights female entrepreneurs who are breaking barriers, scaling businesses, and driving economic development across the continent. Through bold conversations, we explore funding, scaling strategies, digital transformation, and industry innovations—equipping you with insights, practical tools, and inspiration to navigate your own entrepreneurial journey. When women win, economies thrive. These stories amplify success, challenge narratives, and create a blueprint for the next generation of female leaders in Africa and beyond. Subscribe now and be part of the movement to champion women in business!

  1. Chioma Okotcha-Faloughi: Co-founder and COO Rivy - Hard Stops, Bold Restarts: Rebuilding After Setbacks

    06/03/2025

    Chioma Okotcha-Faloughi: Co-founder and COO Rivy - Hard Stops, Bold Restarts: Rebuilding After Setbacks

    Resilience takes on new meaning in my conversation with Chioma Okotcha-Faloughi, Co-founder of Rivi (formerly PayHippo), whose entrepreneurial journey embodies the grit required to build transformative businesses in Africa. Chioma never planned to become an entrepreneur. With her computer science background and experience spanning finance, policy, and education, she initially saw herself driving change through government channels. But a chance conversation about Nigeria's credit access problems led to co-founding PayHippo in 2019, where they moved from concept to customers in just weeks. After completing Y Combinator and raising $4 million, they were supporting thousands of small businesses with crucial financing. Then came the storm. A devastating fraud attack combined with the departure of both co-founders pushed the company to the brink. "I had investors ask why I didn't just walk away," Chioma reveals. Her decision to stay and fight – while managing a newborn at home – ultimately led to one of Africa's most remarkable business pivots. Recognizing Nigeria's energy crisis following subsidy removals, she transformed the company into Rivi, financing clean energy solutions for businesses across the country. What makes Chioma's story particularly powerful is her transparency about the darkest moments. From letting go 60% of her workforce to months without paying herself, she shares the painful realities rarely discussed in entrepreneurship circles. "Before this, I was just a nice tech founder. After hitting rock bottom, I became a fully certified entrepreneur," she laughs. Her advice to women building in Africa resonates deeply: "Stay the course, don't give up too soon, drill deeper." Whether you're an entrepreneur, investor, or simply fascinated by Africa's business evolution, this episode offers rare insights into building purpose-driven companies that survive existential threats. Follow Rivi's continuing journey at @RiviHQ and subscribe for more stories of African business innovation. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    1h 2m
  2. Kudzayi Hove: Co-Founder & CEO, Amayi Foods - From Private Equity to Purpose in Africa’s Food Ecosystem

    05/13/2025

    Kudzayi Hove: Co-Founder & CEO, Amayi Foods - From Private Equity to Purpose in Africa’s Food Ecosystem

    Kudzayi Hove's entrepreneurial journey from Zimbabwe to Nigeria represents a masterclass in adapting, pivoting, and building with purpose in Africa's challenging business landscape. As co-founder and CEO of Amayi Foods, meaning "mother" in her native Shona language, Kudzayi and her co-founders have transformed what began as a passion for Ghanaian Shito sauce into a mission to reclaim value from African agricultural commodities. The path hasn't been straightforward. After leaving her finance career at AFC, Kudzayi and her co-founders discovered that their initial focus on premium condiments and modern retail channels was limiting their growth potential. This realization prompted a fundamental strategic shift toward mass-market essentials like tomato paste that could reach consumers through traditional markets, which account for 90% of retail volume in Nigeria. Today, Amayi's products are distributed across 29 states, with 99% of sales flowing through these traditional channels. What sets Amayi's approach apart is their deep understanding of vertical integration. Rather than simply manufacturing consumer products, Kudzayi recognized that sustainable growth required building lasting partnerships with farmers and aggregators. This infrastructure not only secures consistent inputs for their retail products but has evolved into a broader vision of processing African commodities for international markets – capturing substantially higher margins than exporting raw materials. The company stands at a transformative moment with plans to acquire an established manufacturing operation that will dramatically scale their capabilities. Looking ahead, Kudzayi envisions Amayi as a $100 million enterprise within 5-7 years, built on three pillars: a strong FMCG platform with leading market positions, a nutritional commodities business serving domestic and international markets, and a commodity processing operation that maximizes value from African agricultural products. For fellow entrepreneurs, particularly women, Kudzayi offers wisdom earned through a decade of building: take care of yourself while you build. Even in the midst of survival-level challenges, finding moments for rest and renewal isn't a luxury but a necessity for sustainable success. Discover Amayi's products in markets across Nigeria or connect with them through social media @amaifoods_ng and at www.amaifoods.com. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    49 min
  3. Kikelomo Fola-Ogunniya: CO-Founder, Cargoplug Logistics - From Car Trunks to Cargo Hubs: Building Proprietary Tech for Global Trade

    04/15/2025

    Kikelomo Fola-Ogunniya: CO-Founder, Cargoplug Logistics - From Car Trunks to Cargo Hubs: Building Proprietary Tech for Global Trade

    Kikelomo Fola-Ogunniya's entrepreneurial journey proves that sometimes the most successful businesses begin by solving your own problems. What started as a simple solution to cross-border shopping frustrations has evolved into Cargo Plug, a tech-enabled logistics company transforming how African businesses connect to global markets. When Kike and her co-founder Ama couldn't find reliable ways to ship purchases from the UK to Nigeria, they created their own solution. Operating from the trunks of their cars during lunch breaks from their oil industry jobs, they bootstrapped a side hustle that would eventually become a full-fledged international logistics company. Their company, initially called Jand to Gidi, has since evolved into CargoPlug, offering comprehensive shipping solutions from virtually any country to Nigeria and vice versa. What makes their story remarkable isn't just business growth, but the sustainability of their partnership. In an ecosystem where co-founder relationships often fracture under pressure, Kike and Ama have maintained a thriving partnership for 13 years. Their secret? Clear role definition based on natural strengths, transparent communication, and unwavering trust. The Cargo Plug journey offers practical wisdom for entrepreneurs everywhere. They diligently tracked financials from day one, which positioned them perfectly when seeking funding opportunities. They've weathered economic fluctuations, a global pandemic, and technological shifts while continuously evolving their services. Most impressively, they've built proprietary technology in-house, including user dashboards and shipping APIs that integrate with global platforms. Through their 'RICE' core values – Reliable, Intelligent, Customer-focused, and Exciting – they've created a company culture that keeps team members engaged for years, some approaching a decade with the company. Their story stands as powerful evidence that African entrepreneurs can build sustainable, tech-enabled businesses that solve real problems while creating meaningful economic opportunity. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    41 min
  4. Sarah Dusek: Co-Founder & MP, Enygma Ventures - Scaling Visions: From Startups to Venture Capital

    04/08/2025

    Sarah Dusek: Co-Founder & MP, Enygma Ventures - Scaling Visions: From Startups to Venture Capital

    Sarah Dusek's entrepreneurial journey reads like an adventure novel – from studying law in the UK to selling her glamping company for over $100 million and then dedicating herself to funding female entrepreneurs across Africa. Her story proves that business can be the most powerful vehicle for driving meaningful change in the world. After a heartfelt connection with Zimbabwe during her nonprofit days addressing the AIDS crisis, Sarah experienced a profound sense of belonging that would later draw her back to the continent. When her nonprofit work felt incomplete, she made a pivotal realization: perhaps business, rather than charity, could create more sustainable impact. This mindset shift led her through several entrepreneurial ventures, including the devastating failure of her first business during the 2008 financial crisis. Rather than surrender to conventional employment, Sarah and her husband relocated to Montana and bootstrapped what would become Under Canvas – luxury safari-inspired accommodations near America's national parks. The business struggled initially until Sarah made the crucial decision to pursue venture capital rather than continue growing slowly. "I realized I couldn't play small," Sarah explains. "If this business was going to last and build something of value, significance, and impact, we had to go big or go home." This perspective shift catapulted Under Canvas to a successful exit, but the fundraising journey exposed Sarah to the challenges female founders face in accessing capital. True to a promise she made herself during those difficult fundraising days, Sarah created Enygma Ventures after her exit – a fund exclusively backing female entrepreneurs across Africa. Her investment philosophy prioritizes determined founders who demonstrate exceptional execution abilities above revolutionary ideas. Today, Sarah continues building with Few and Far, a regenerative travel company developing eco-lodges in South African wilderness areas. Her message to female entrepreneurs remains consistent: think bigger, don't let anyone tell you no, and remember that when women create and distribute wealth, only good things happen. Subscribe for more conversations with the pioneering entrepreneurs reshaping Africa's business landscape and driving continental transformation through bold, innovative ventures. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    46 min
  5. Banke Kuku: Founder & Creative Director, Banke Kuku - Fashion with Purpose: Sustainability & Innovation in Luxury Design

    04/01/2025

    Banke Kuku: Founder & Creative Director, Banke Kuku - Fashion with Purpose: Sustainability & Innovation in Luxury Design

    Banke Kuku's extraordinary transformation from textile designer to luxury fashion entrepreneur offers a masterclass in creative evolution and business resilience. After honing her craft at prestigious institutions like Central Saint Martins and Chelsea College of Arts, Banke's journey took an unexpected turn when customers began requesting to wear her vibrant prints rather than just display them as home décor. What followed was a remarkable story of adaptation and growth. Having launched her fashion line just months before the pandemic, Banke faced what could have been a business-ending disruption. Instead, she quickly pivoted to online sales, discovering that her colorful, joy-filled designs resonated deeply with customers seeking brightness during dark times. This pivot not only saved her business but fueled its expansion from a team of five to approximately 45 people today. At the heart of Banke's brand is storytelling through design. Her prints draw inspiration from Nigeria's rich natural environment, challenging stereotypes and showcasing the country's beauty. "Not everything in Nigeria is concrete," she notes, explaining how her work educates people to see her homeland differently. This commitment to positive representation extends beyond fashion through her initiative "Prints for Purpose," supporting environmental conservation and community development. The Banke Kuku brand now enjoys global reach with stockists across Africa, the Middle East, Europe, and North America. Her collaborations with celebrities like Gabrielle Union highlight how African designers can build international luxury brands while maintaining authentic cultural connections. For aspiring entrepreneurs, Banke offers simple yet powerful advice: be patient and consistent. As she reminds us, "Good work takes time," especially when weaving dreams into reality. Subscribe to African Business Stories to hear more inspiring conversations with the female entrepreneurs shaping Africa's economic future. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    35 min
  6. Chilufya Mutale-Mwila: Co-Founder & CEO, eShandi - Building a Challenger Bank: Scaling Financial Solutions Across Africa

    03/25/2025

    Chilufya Mutale-Mwila: Co-Founder & CEO, eShandi - Building a Challenger Bank: Scaling Financial Solutions Across Africa

    The path to financial freedom shouldn't be a privilege reserved for the few, but a right accessible to all. Chilufya Mutale-Mwila, co-founder and chief visionary officer of eShandi, is on a mission to make this vision a reality across Africa. Growing up in Zambia, Chilu witnessed firsthand how access to financial services could transform families and communities. After joining a microfinance institution as an intern, she spent six years immersed in understanding the challenges faced by small business owners in underserved communities. This experience, followed by leadership roles expanding fintech operations across Southern Africa, revealed both the power of technology and the limitations of existing financial models. The breakthrough came when Chilu realized that combining the efficiency of technology with the personalized approach of microfinance could create something revolutionary. eShandi (meaning "mine" in local language) was born as a pan-African challenger bank putting financial power directly into customers' hands. The company serves those often overlooked by traditional banks – market vendors, cross-border traders, and small-scale entrepreneurs who operate primarily in cash economies without formal financial records. What makes eShandi's approach unique is their deep understanding of customer needs. Rather than forcing digital-only solutions on communities accustomed to cash, they've created accessible pathways to financial inclusion. Their impact is measured in tangible success stories – women expanding from one market stand to three, entrepreneurs purchasing their first delivery vehicle, or families buying their first refrigerator. With operations in Zambia, Zimbabwe, and South Africa, Chilu has ambitious plans to expand eShandi's reach and services. The vision of "banking without borders" aims to connect African entrepreneurs across national boundaries, allowing seamless transactions and expanding opportunities. By adding insurance products, remittances, and new market entries, they're building a comprehensive ecosystem for financial empowerment. Ready to discover how innovative financial solutions are transforming Africa's economic landscape? Listen now to learn how eShandi is bridging the $330 billion financing gap and creating pathways to prosperity for underserved communities across the continent. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    38 min
  7. Adesuwa Okunbo Rohdes: Founder & CEO Aruwa Capital Management - From Vision to $60M AUM: How Gender-Lens Investing is Reshaping Africa

    03/18/2025

    Adesuwa Okunbo Rohdes: Founder & CEO Aruwa Capital Management - From Vision to $60M AUM: How Gender-Lens Investing is Reshaping Africa

    Imagine raising $60 million to back female entrepreneurs in Africa when less than 2% of venture capital flows to women across the continent. That's exactly what Adesuwa Okunbo Rohdes accomplished with Aruwa Capital Management, one of Africa's few female-led growth equity funds specializing in gender lens investing. From boarding school in the UK at age 11 to investment banking at JP Morgan, Adesuwa's path took a pivotal turn when she identified a crucial gap in the market: the severe underfunding of businesses led by or serving women across Africa. In 2019, pregnant with her first child, she took a leap that many called crazy – leaving the security of traditional finance to launch her own fund focused on backing women. The timing couldn't have been more challenging. After securing their first investment, COVID hit, forcing a complete strategy pivot. "We had to tweak our fund structure, reduce our minimum ticket size, and prove ourselves over and over," she reveals. Through persistence and creativity, Aruwa mobilized capital from non-traditional sources, primarily women investors willing to trust a first-time fund manager over Zoom during a global pandemic. Today, Aruwa's portfolio spans 13 companies across health, essential consumer goods, financial inclusion, and renewable energy – all either female-founded, female-led, or significantly benefiting women in their value chain. One standout success, Koolboks, provides solar-powered refrigeration for market women in off-grid areas. Since Aruwa's investment as their first institutional backer, they've grown revenue five-fold and expanded from Nigeria to 25 countries worldwide. Beyond financial returns that exceed global benchmarks, Adesuwa's vision extends to transforming Africa's investment landscape. She advocates powerfully for mobilizing African institutional capital to fund African fund managers, arguing that Western investment models often fail to address the continent's unique realities. "Until we have more African pools of capital driving this discussion, there is no skin in the game to go beyond just ticking boxes," she explains. Listen now to discover how persistence, purpose, and a deep commitment to gender equity can transform not just businesses, but entire economic systems. As Adesuwa puts it: "We don't need seats at the table. We need to create our own tables." ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    41 min
  8. Africa’s Business Outlook for Female Entrepreneurs and What to Expect in Season 4.

    SEASON 4, EPISODE 1 TRAILER

    Africa’s Business Outlook for Female Entrepreneurs and What to Expect in Season 4.

    Welcome back to African Business Stories, where powerful narratives meet practical insights about the women reshaping Africa's entrepreneurial landscape. Season 4 arrives at a pivotal moment: Africa stands as a dynamic frontier for growth and innovation with maturing startup ecosystems and increasing investment flows, yet female entrepreneurs continue facing a staggering $42 billion funding gap despite driving transformation across technology, agriculture, healthcare, and finance sectors. This season takes you deep into the strategies and stories behind Africa's female-led business revolution. You'll hear directly from founders who've expanded beyond borders to create global impact. We'll explore innovative funding mechanisms, venture capital trends, and how women navigate complex financing challenges. From fintech innovations to AI applications, we'll examine how technology adoption is accelerating growth for women-led ventures across fashion, logistics, energy, and beyond. Beyond business mechanics, we're uncovering the power of connection – how mentorship, strategic partnerships, and global networks create pathways to scale. Each episode brings you the raw, resilient journeys of women defining success on their own terms while breaking industry barriers and creating new possibilities across the continent. Whether you're building a business, considering investment in Africa's growing markets, or simply passionate about economic transformation, these conversations offer invaluable perspectives from the frontlines of entrepreneurship. The challenges are real, but so is the determination and creativity of Africa's female founders. Join our community that champions these voices, subscribe on your favorite platform, and become part of the movement supporting women at the heart of Africa's economic future. Together, we're not just telling stories – we're changing narratives and opening doors for generations of entrepreneurs to come. ABS WEBSITE: www.africanbusinessstories.com ABS INSTAGRAM: https://instagram.com/afribizstories/ LISTEN/FOLLOW/SUBSCRIBE: Apple Podcast | Spotify |Youtube

    4 min

Trailers

5
out of 5
22 Ratings

About

African Business Stories is the go-to podcast for insights into the women shaping Africa’s business landscape. Africa is one of the world’s most promising frontiers for growth and innovation—and women are at the heart of this transformation. Hosted by Akaego Okoye, this podcast spotlights female entrepreneurs who are breaking barriers, scaling businesses, and driving economic development across the continent. Through bold conversations, we explore funding, scaling strategies, digital transformation, and industry innovations—equipping you with insights, practical tools, and inspiration to navigate your own entrepreneurial journey. When women win, economies thrive. These stories amplify success, challenge narratives, and create a blueprint for the next generation of female leaders in Africa and beyond. Subscribe now and be part of the movement to champion women in business!