• Why Beninโ€™s digital future depends on patience, partnerships, and people

    Why Beninโ€™s digital future depends on patience, partnerships, and people

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    Beninโ€™s Minister of Digital Economy, Aurelie Adam Soule Zoumarou, is pragmatic about the countryโ€™s ambitions. According to her, the government is focused on fundamentals: fiber infrastructure, national digital ID, platform interoperability, and inclusive access to services.

    At the core of building and strengthening Beninโ€™s tech ecosystem is the API-An (Agence de Promotion des Investissements et des Exportations), which is the national investment agency that runs incubation programs, offers one-stop support for startups and actively promotes entrepreneurship. Across the country, several digital innovation hubs are backed by the API-An and the Ministry of Digital Development, focusing on ICT, skills training, and startup acceleration.

    Benin also has a state-backed innovation district, Sรจmรจ City, which hosts the Sรจmรจ One incubator, tech labs, and R&D centers. The innovation city also houses a digital transformation built in partnership with the German government.

    TechCabal spoke to the minister on the sidelines of the recent Cyber Africa Forum. The minister outlined Beninโ€™s people-first digital strategy, the philosophy behind Semรฉ City (its flagship innovation hub), and why African venture investment requires patience and contextual awareness.

    This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

    Benin has made notable progress in digital transformation. What sets your approach apart?

    Weโ€™re not trying to set ourselves apart. Our core mission is to serve our citizens, whether theyโ€™re in a rural village or abroad. Thatโ€™s why weโ€™ve built a strong national fiber optic network, invested heavily in human capital, and rolled out digital platforms for public services. Citizens can now access government services from anywhere.

    Weโ€™ve also implemented a digital ID system to make this possible at scale. These are not headline-grabbing moves but they are critical infrastructure. Once those are in place, differentiation comes naturally.

    How is the government supporting startups, and how are you courting investors?

    Semรฉ City is our flagship program for startups. Itโ€™s not just a building or a buzzwordโ€”itโ€™s a full ecosystem. We provide training, access to talent, mentorship, and even virtual platforms for startups to showcase their work. On top of that, weโ€™ve passed legislation to identify and โ€œlabelโ€ high-potential startups based on their innovation or business model. That label is a signal: the government believes in this companyโ€™s potential.

    We also work through our SME agency to support visibility and collaboration, especially with ecosystems in Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa.

    But I want to be honest with investors, Africa requires patience. The continent doesnโ€™t follow the same playbook as Asia, Europe, or the U.S. Investors need to understand our dynamics. Itโ€™s not about quick exitsโ€”itโ€™s about deep impact.

    You mentioned digital public infrastructure. What role does that play?

    Itโ€™s foundational. Without infrastructure, startups wonโ€™t scale, services canโ€™t reach remote areas, and governments canโ€™t operate efficiently. Beyond the fiber network, weโ€™ve focused on interoperability: ensuring systems can โ€œtalkโ€ to one another and citizens donโ€™t need to chase paperwork across departments.

    From the ministerial panel, one of her strongest points was this: โ€œBeninโ€™s digital transformation doesnโ€™t stop at design, we focus on execution.โ€ That includes data governance, AI readiness, and ensuring inclusion for rural populations and women-led businesses.

    Whatโ€™s your message to global venture capital?

    If you donโ€™t believe in our startups, why would anyone else? Our government is investing because we see potential. Weโ€™re de-risking these businesses. But we need partners who understand Africa, not just the hype cycles, but the hard realities.

    Come with patience. Come with context. And come with a willingness to build alongside us.

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