
Share
FEATURES
The Builder’s List
Recognising the operators, engineers, policymakers, and VCs building the pipes and platforms that power African technology, not just the people with titles, but the people who ship.

Organisers
-
Elie Habimana
Norrsken East Africa, Managing Director
Elie Habimana is in the business of density. As the Managing Director of Norrsken East Africa, he has spent 2025 proving that when you put the right founders, investors, and…
Learn More -
Jessica Hope
Wimbart, Founder & CEO
Tech founders and most of their early hires tend to know how to build start-ups. They figure out pain points that need solving, build digital products that address them, and…
Learn More

Enablers
-
Takuma Terakubo
UNCOVERED FUND, CEO & General Partner
Takuma Terakubo and UNCOVERED FUND spent 2025 formalising their evolution from an active Africa–Japan bridge investor into a more structured capital platform. In August, Uncovered partnered with Monex Ventures to…
Learn More -
Ibrahim Sagna
Silverback Holdings, Exec. Chairman
Ibrahim Sagna and Silverbacks Holdings spent 2025 doing what remains rare in African venture and growth investing: exiting, repeatedly, and with disclosed returns. In May, Silverbacks recorded its eighth profitable…
Learn More -
Natalie Kolbe
Norrsken22, Managing Partner
Natalie Kolbe is the Managing Partner of Norrsken22, a venture capital firm that invests in African tech startups. In 2025, Kolbe focused on sharpening and reinforcing the investment strategy that…
Learn More -
Olumide Balogun
Olumide Balogun, director, Google, West Africa
For much of 2025, Olumide Balogun used Google's scale as one of the most important Big Tech companies in the world to deliver measurable outcomes for startups, small businesses, and…
Learn More -
Marième Diop
Dakar Network Angels, Co-Founder
Before Marième Diop co-founded the Dakar Network Angels (DNA) in 2018, Francophone Africa lacked a structured mechanism for local business leaders to provide a "first check" and mentorship to tech…
Learn More -
Paula Ingabire
Minister of ICT and Innovation, Rwanda
If you want to understand the velocity of Rwanda’s digital transformation, look at the numbers under Paula Ingabire, the country’s Minister of ICT and Innovation. In 2025, she oversaw a…
Learn More -
Salima Bah
Minister of Communication, Technology, and Innovation, Sierra Leone
As Sierra Leone’s first Minister of Communication, Technology, and Innovation, Salima Bah sees her role as not merely regulating the ecosystem, but aggressively engineering it. Appointed at just 32, Bah…
Learn More -
Karim Beshara
A15, Co-Founder & Managing Partner
If you want to know if an ecosystem is maturing, look at the exits. If you want to know one of the people driving them, look at Karim Beshara. In…
Learn More -
Dr. Bosun Tijani
Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, Nigeria
Dr. Bosun Tijani is Nigeria’s Minister of Communications, Innovation and Digital Economy, a role in which he emerged in 2025 as one of Africa’s most visible technology policymakers. His year…
Learn More -
Mariam Hamadou
Minister of Digital Economy and Innovation, Djibouti
In 2025, Mariam Hamadou Ali proved that Djibouti can challenge Kenya and Ethiopia's duopoly in the East African region. As Minister of Digital Economy and Innovation, she pushed projects that…
Learn More -
Kola Aina
Ventures Platform, Founding Partner
Kola Aina and Ventures Platform spent 2025 doing the one thing that matters most in African venture right now: raising institutional capital and deploying it. In November, Ventures Platform raised…
Learn More


Innovators
-
Kate Kallot
Kate Kallot, CEO of Amini
Good builders don’t just start with code. They start by asking who owns the foundation. What a thoughtful architect does for a city, Kate Kallot does for artificial intelligence (AI)…
Learn More -
Abi Mustapha-Maduakor
African Private Equity and Venture Capital Association, CEO
In a year of market correction, Abi Mustapha-Maduakor provided the ecosystem’s steady hand. As the chief custodian of African private capital, the African Venture Capital Association (AVCA) CEO spent 2025…
Learn More -
Nathan Nwachuku
Terrahaptix, Co-Founder & CEO
Nathan Nwachuku spent 2025 validating the ambitious thesis that has turned Terrahaptix into the go-to partner for securing the world’s critical infrastructure. Terrahaptix, which began in 2023 as a bold…
Learn More -
Adedeji Owonibi
Adedeji Owonibi, cNGN
In 2025, Adedeji Owonibi stood out for turning complex Web3 ideas into a regulated, working infrastructure across humanitarian aid, stablecoin, and financial compliance in Nigeria. As founder and COO of…
Learn More -
Margaret Wanjiku
Pollen Patrollers, Co-Founder & CEO
Margaret Wanjiku’s 2025 was shaped by a problem most people never think about—until the food runs short. Across Africa, bee colonies are collapsing at alarming rates, putting crops, incomes, and…
Learn More -
Washikala Malango
Altech, Co-Founder & CEO
For years, global investors looked past the Democratic Republic of Congo. But in 2025, Washikala Malango proved they were wrong. His company, Altech, demonstrated that the DRC isn’t just a…
Learn More -
Ahmed Aboul-Ella
InfiniLink, CEO and Co-Founder
Ahmed Aboul-Ella has done what few African founders have dared to attempt: he built world-class semiconductor IP in Cairo and sold it to a global giant. In November 2025, GlobalFoundries…
Learn More -
Yaw Bediako
Yemaachi Biotech, Co-Founder and CEO
For decades, African genomes were a blind spot in global cancer research. Yaw Bediako is ensuring they become the blueprint for the cure. In 2025, Bediako’s Yemaachi Biotech, an Accra-based…
Learn More -
Temidayo Oniosun
Space in Africa, Founder and Managing Director
As founder and managing director of Space in Africa, Temidayo Oniosun, in 2025, reinforced his role as one of Africa’s most influential space economy architects. As the leading strategic intelligence…
Learn More -
Alex Tsado
UduTech, Founder
Alex Tsado operates on a simple premise: you cannot build a sovereign AI ecosystem on rented infrastructure. For decades, the Nigerian-born AI entrepreneur who deployed the first Nvidia AI GPUs…
Learn More


Keepers
-
Chinasa T. Okolo
Technecultura, Founder & Scientific Director
In 2025, when governments began deciding how artificial intelligence would actually be governed, Chinasa Okolo was in the room helping shape those decisions. As an AI & Emerging Technologies Policy…
Learn More -
Olubayo Adekanmbi
DSN, Founder & CEO
For years, Olubayo Adekanmbi has been the "Dean" of Nigeria’s data talent; in 2025, he became its product architect. This was the year his philosophy of "inclusive AI" solidified into…
Learn More -
Maxime Bayen
Catalyst Fund, Operating Partner
In 2025, Maxime Bayen solidified his reputation as a pillar of transparency and strategic support within the African tech ecosystem. As the Operating Partner at Catalyst Fund and co-founder of…
Learn More


Operators
-
Mitchell Elegbe
Interswitch, Founder/Group Managing Director/CEO
Mitchell Elegbe and Interswitch spent 2025 reinforcing the durability of African financial infrastructure at scale. By March 2025, Interswitch reported ₦137.5 billion in revenue, up from ₦91.65 billion the previous…
Learn More -
Emma Sadlier
Digital Law Company, Founder
In July 2025, the Gauteng Division of the High Court in Johannesburg handed down a groundbreaking judgment against Meta (the parent company of WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook). It was a…
Learn More -
Sim Shagaya
Sim Shagaya, founder, Miva
In 2025, the Nigerian university system remains a numbers game that most students are losing. Every year, nearly two million hopefuls sit for the Joint Admission Matriculation Board exams, yet…
Learn More -
Jesse Moore
Jesse Moore, CEO, M-KOPA
What a year 2025 has been for Jesse Moore. Already a central figure in Africa’s financial inclusion story, the co-founder and CEO of M-KOPA used the past year to deliver…
Learn More -
Ridwan Olalere
LemFi, Co-Founder & CEO
What began as a remittance product serving African migrants evolved, under Ridwan Olalere’s leadership, into a full-stack financial infrastructure for people who live between systems: earning in tightly regulated economies…
Learn More -
Strive Masiyiwa
Cassava Technologies, CEO
In a global AI race defined by, among other things, access to compute, Strive Masiyiwa made a decisive intervention in 2025: he began building Africa’s own. In early 2025, Cassava…
Learn More -
Ismael Belkayat
Chari, Co-Founder & CEO
In 2025, Ismael Belkaya led B2B e-commerce Chari through a transformation that redefined what B2B commerce could become in Morocco. The company secured a payment institution licence from Bank Al-Maghrib,…
Learn More -
Benjamin Fernandes
NALA, Founder & CEO
Just as 2025 began, Benjamin Fernandes entered the year with some of the biggest opportunities — and the toughest realities — of his career. After years of building NALA into…
Learn More -
Femi Aluko
Chowdeck, Co-Founder & CEO
In a food delivery market that has broken more companies than it has built, Femi Aluko’s leadership made Chowdeck one of the few that survived, and continued to build momentum…
Learn More -
Tayo Oviosu
Paga, Founder & CEO
For more than a decade, Tayo Oviosu’s Paga has built financial rails that Nigerians depend on. In 2025, he pushed those rails beyond the country and into the global lives…
Learn More -
Joanna Bischel
Kasha, Founder & CEO
When Joanna Bischel launched Kasha in 2016 with co-founder Amanda Arch, there were very few African startups that could be categorised as “femtech” solutions, a subset of the healthtech market…
Learn More -
Kaushik Burman
Spiro, CEO
By 2025, Africa’s electric mobility conversation had outgrown pilots. Kaushik Burman was already building at scale. As CEO of Spiro, Burman spent the year turning electric two-wheel transport into a…
Learn More -
Olugbenga Agboola
Flutterwave, CEO
For Olugbenga Agboola, 2025 was about silencing the noise with numbers. After navigating a period rocked by corporate governance scrutiny, he has successfully steered Flutterwave toward execution, expanding its cross-border…
Learn More -
Mostafa El-Beltagy
Nawy, CEO
After Nawy, one of Africa's biggest proptech startups, became profitable in 2024, CEO Mostafa El-Beltagy drove operational scale-up in 2025. Under his leadership, Nawy transitioned from a simple proptech “connector”…
Learn More -
Hassan Bourgi
Djamo, CEO
Regulatory walls in West Africa are notoriously high, but Hassan Bourgi scaled them. In a defining move for the region’s fintech landscape, the Djamo CEO secured a microfinance licence from…
Learn More -
Ashraf Sabry
Fawry, Founder & CEO
In 2025, Ashraf Sabry proved that Fawry, Egypt's largest publicly listed fintech, is no longer just the country's biggest bill-payment network, but a highly profitable, multi-business financial services group operating…
Learn More -
Ladi Delano
Moove, Co-Founder & Co-CEO
Rare is the African startup that successfully exports its model to the Global North; rarer still is the one that becomes essential infrastructure for Silicon Valley giants. Under Ladi Delano’s…
Learn More -
Deepankar Rustagi
OmniRetail, CEO
Deepankar Rustagi’s OmniRetail is turning informal retail—often too fragmented to finance and opaque to scale—into something manufacturers, lenders, and logistics partners can finally trust. An outstanding signal for this in…
Learn More -
Karl Toriola
MTN Nigeria, CEO
Karl Toriola spent 2025 restoring MTN Nigeria’s financial and operational momentum after one of the most difficult periods in the company’s history. With inflation, currency depreciation, and rising energy costs…
Learn More -
Tosin Eniolorunda
Moniepoint, Group CEO & Co-Founder
Tosin Eniolorunda operates at a scale where "startup" feels like a misnomer. In 2025, Moniepoint solidified its status as a systemic pillar of the Nigerian economy, processing a staggering $250…
Learn More -
Odun Eweniyi
Piggyvest, Co-Founder & COO
Carousel Network produces one of Africa’s most listened-to podcasts. Piggyvest serves one of the largest communities of savers on the continent. Plur Africa runs one of Nigeria’s most recognisable community-led…
Learn More -
Anu Adedoyin Adasolum
Sabi, Co-Founder & CEO
Pivoting is easy to praise and hard to survive. In 2025, Anu Adedoyin Adasolum did both. She led Sabi through one of the most consequential strategic shifts in African trade…
Learn More


Project Contributors
- Temitayo Jaiyeola
- Fu’ad Lawal
- Kosisochukwu Ugwuede
- Ganiu Oloruntade
- Ifeduyi Oyesanmi
- Muktar Oladunmade
- Adonijah Ndege
- Frank Eleanya
- Kenn Abuya
- Emmanuel Nwosu
- Sakhile Dube
- Opeyemi Kareem
- Abubakar Abdulrasheed
- John Adoyi
- Emmanuel Nwosu
- Latifah Yusuf
- Eme Agbor
- Fancy Goodman
- Vivian Nnabue
- Aderemi Adesida
- Osemudiamen Ehiabhi
- Wunmi Eunice


How We Selected
Building anything of value is hard anywhere in the world. In Africa, it is harder. The Builders’ List recognises people doing it anyway.
Beyond shipping products, Africa’s technology ecosystem constantly navigates unreliable power, fragmented logistics, weak public infrastructure, and regulatory uncertainty—often all at once. Progress is rarely linear, and success is usually hard-won.
Founders alone do not make the industry. It is sustained by people doing a variety of work, some of it invisible but critical to the industry’s success. To recognise them, TechCabal is launching The Builders’ List: an annual index of the most consequential people shaping Africa’s technology ecosystem in the calendar year. It is a record of who’s building, and what their work reveals about the system they are building within.
For the inaugural edition, our selected Builders are grouped across five categories:
- Operators: Those who make systems work at scale.
- Innovators: Those creating new products, models, or technical possibilities.
- Enablers: The individuals and institutions lowering the cost of building for others.
- Organisers: Those connecting people, capital, and opportunity.
- Keepers: The stewards of trust, continuity, and institutional memory.
Together, these roles offer a more complete map of how the ecosystem functions.
The Builders’ List is an editorial project led by the TechCabal newsroom, informed by independent reporting and conversations with founders, operators, investors, policymakers, and long-time ecosystem observers across the continent and the diaspora.
Our selections were based on our assessment of what materially changed within the calendar year, from infrastructure to policy or scale, rather than reputation or momentum alone. Where work is still emerging, progress was evaluated within the realities of the sector, market, and country in which it occurred.
Candidates were assessed comparatively and contextually. Starting from over 600 deeply researched names spanning all 54 African countries, we weighed outcomes against each builder’s operating environment—geography, regulation, capital access, impact and institutional maturity. Context that applies in Lagos doesn’t automatically translate to Kigali or Dakar.
Final decisions were made through editorial review. While external perspectives informed our reporting, the list reflects TechCabal’s independent editorial judgment.
This process, as our first, has been a critical learning curve. It reminded us that Africa’s technology ecosystem is far broader than funding headlines suggest—spanning hardware engineers in Cairo, beekeepers in rural Kenya, ministers rewiring infrastructure, and documentarians building institutional memory.
We learned that in 2025, the builders who matter most are no longer defined by capital raised or growth velocity, but by what they’ve made durable. This list revealed an ecosystem maturing past obsessions with scale and spectacle, toward the quieter work of building things that last—profitable businesses, regulatory frameworks, talent pipelines, and infrastructure others can build on.
The Builders’ List will return in 2026, and the patterns will shift. But the commitment remains: to document not just who is building, but what their work reveals about the system taking shape.

Africa’s technology ecosystem is firmly in its endurance era
Temitayo Jaiyeola, Senior Reporter and Lead Curator, The Builders’ List






