Tag: Nigeria

  • Daba Joins Spleet’s $2.6m Seed Round for Affordable Apartments

    Daba Joins Spleet’s $2.6m Seed Round for Affordable Apartments

    daba Finance, a startup that enables investing in Africa’s best private and public companies seamlessly, has participated in a $2.6 million seed funding round by Nigeria-based Spleet, which provides residential rent management and financing products.

    daba was launched in 2021 with a simple mission—to democratize investing in Africa by providing a barrier-free way for investors (of every level) to access curated investment strategies and build wealth by investing in the African private and public capital markets,  through its all-in-one platform.

    What is Spleet?

    Spleet was founded in 2018, and its mission is to build a marketplace to connect landlords with vetted tenants looking for flexible rent payment options. 

    We have some important news! Spleet has raised $2.6million to scale its residential rent focused products.
    Image from Spleet

    Why Spleet?

    Spleet is one of the foremost startups disrupting Africa’s real estate and property market, which unlike industries such as financial services, has remained unchanged for decades. It has a focus on affordability, which remains a big pain point for residents in urban areas. This is partly because most tenants earn their incomes monthly and often find it difficult to afford the typical 1-2 years of advance rent demanded by homeowners. 

    Since its inception, Spleet has processed millions in rent, housed over 1,000 tenants with flexible payment options, and onboarded over 35 individual and corporate landlords. 

    What next? 

    According to Spleet CEO, Akintola Adesanmi, the funding will go into deepening its product offerings for landlords, real estate agents, and tenants across Nigeria while also testing out new markets.

    “daba is proud to partner with Spleet on further scaling its robust solution that caters to the crucial needs of both sides of the housing market,” said Boum III Jr, co-founder and CEO of daba. “We’re even more motivated to help more investors back more of such companies and qualified ventures bypass the traditional barriers to accessing capital.”

    Don’t miss the opportunity to invest in the next big startup. Tap here to download the daba beta application and use access code: daba3SJPov to start investing

  • Social Commerce in Africa: The $28bn Opportunity

    Social Commerce in Africa: The $28bn Opportunity

    Today, a lot of buying and selling is done over social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and WhatsApp.


    In emerging markets, this brand of e-commerce (called social commerce) has grown over the years. 

    Facebook and Instagram are used for online shopping more than e-commerce marketplaces by Africans, per a 2019 GeoPoll survey, and social commerce accounts for the majority of e-commerce activity on the continent, according to GSMA and UNECA. Beyond just shopping on social media, buying decisions are also influenced by online social communities.

    An underlying reason for this growth is that these channels don’t require much digital expertise and are easily accessible for less tech-savvy vendors in Africa. 

    Small-to-medium formal businesses also set up stores on social platforms to promote and sell to all sorts of buyers, where they already spend several hours per day.

    Image from Later.com

    By the numbers

    • 3.6 billion: The number of people that use social networking sites globally
    • 34%: The share of Africa’s population using the internet as of 2018.
    • 233 million: Total Facebook subscribers in Africa as of December 2020.
    • 18%: Average increase in the number of online shoppers in Africa between 2014 to 2018, against 12% globally
    • 92%: SMEs in Kenya that used social commerce as of June 2020.
    • 87%: E-commerce shoppers that strongly agreed that social media influenced their purchase decisions in a 2018 report.

    The opportunity: Social commerce does a great job blending content sharing, messaging, and selling into one, helping businesses shorten the sales cycle. But most of the processes through which transactions happen—from product discovery and selection to order placements and payments—are crude and inefficient. Put simply, social networks aren’t built to support end-to-end online shopping experiences, meaning users need third-party support for the logistics and payments side of things.

    6 Startups to watch and why
                   

    Image from daba

    Many African startups currently offer solutions that help improve social commerce processes for vendors. Below are a few;

    Catlog   

    The Nigeria-based startup offers vendors a simple way to create an online store on its platform, add their products, and create a custom link they can share on social media with deals finalized on WhatsApp. 

    ANKA 

    Ivorian SaaS player provides merchants with an omnichannel dashboard through which they can monitor their sales and inventory across all several channels—Afrikrea, social media, and websites—and manages payments and logistics for vendors.

    Chooya

    Which brands itself as the “TikTok for e-commerce”, digitizes word-of-mouth marketing, allowing consumers to recommend sellers and get rewarded for it. 

    Tendo

    Offers the average individual an opportunity to tap into Africa’s e-commerce boom by selling online with zero upfront inventory. Ghanaian sellers on the platform are able to source products and resell items using social commerce tools such as WhatsApp, arrange delivery, and get paid, all through the app.

    Rabawa 

    Enables Nigerian entrepreneurs to leverage social media for curating, promoting, and selling their products. Its social sharing integrations include WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, allowing vendors to earn from their social networks such as friends and family.

    Tushop 

    Works with “community leaders” to make access to groceries more affordable and more convenient for Kenyans through community group buying. The leaders register with the startup, collate orders from their neighbours and manage door-to-door deliveries all through its platform.

    Elloe AI 

    Is a Kenya-based AI-powered, conversational commerce platform that allows small businesses to manage customer interaction and sell products online across various messaging platforms such as Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp.

    Image from the Wfanet.org

    The challenge: Limited access to the internet presents potential challenges to the ability of startups in the social commerce space to scale. In addition, selling products via social media platforms alone has its disadvantages, such as when Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp experienced lengthy outages last October.

    The future: Social commerce continues to blur the lines between social interaction and online selling while accounting for an increasing share of e-commerce sales. We expect to see more growth in the collective social commerce sub-sector in emerging markets as more people come online. More so, Africans are more likely to patronize people they interact with on social media. As a result, social commerce on the continent has a very promising future.