1. Fashpa
In the age of a billion e-commerce websites, Fashpa stands out for its
commitment to becoming Africa’s primary online fashion lifestyle brand. Where
many sites tend to focus on the nuts and bolts of e-commerce, Fashpa is trying
to create excitement and loyalty around their brand. It will be a challenging
journey but we think ex-Googler Honey Ogundeyi can deliver the goods.
www.fashpa.com
2. Delivery Science
Easily the most impressive new startup in Nigeria today, Delivery Science is
everything we look forward to in a company – an experienced and competent team
solving a real problem with real customers and local context. DS is bringing
much-needed big data to the business of e-commerce logistics, serving the
fastest-growing sub sector of the consumer tech industry. We’re expecting great
things from them.
www.deliveryscience.co
3. Printivo
Printivo was started by the young yet experienced advertising entrepreneur
Oluyomi Ojo and has quickly become the leading online print shop in Nigeria.
Printivo’s dedication to customer service have endeared them to their customers
and with the right support, it’s easy to see them becoming Nigeria’s default
printer. What’s next? Launching a new version of their web application
and a designers’ marketplace to create opportunities for creatives to make
money from the platform.
www.printivo.com
4. Hotels.ng
Hotels.ng is not a new startup
per se, but they’ve defied gravity
to maintain a solid position in the hotel booking space. Founder and CEO Mark
Essien has continued to show incredible tenacity and leadership in spite of a
robust challenge from Rocket-backed Jovago, ensuring that his company will
continue to serve his market for the foreseeable future. We think the only
place for this startup to go is up.
www.hotels.ng
5. Prepclass
Winners of TechCabal Battlefield 2014 have continued to impress. After
pivoting from an online learning platform to a tutor marketplace, PrepClass
have continued to grow, telling TechCabal that ‘demand is outstripping supply’
and trying to scale to keep up with the market. Wezam & Olumide may be
young, but they are fiercely determined to make that business work and are
succeeding.
www.prepclass.com.ng
6. Andela
Part-business, part-crusade, Andela aims to fill the world’s needs for
developers by training them in the most ‘unlikely’ of places – Africa. Andela
trains developers for free and then offers them as contract workers to
companies from around the world. If they can make the model work, it will
probably transform the startup landscape in the next 4-5 years. Fingers
crossed.
www.andela.co
7. Truppr
Bosun Tijani, co-founder of the Co-Creation Hub started this project to find
people to play sports with but it has quickly taken on a life of its own. What
makes Truppr special is the community of fitness enthusiasts that has developed
around it and the events it holds, making it a real phenomenon and actually
touching people’s lives. We’re very excited to see what they’ll do next.
www.truppr.com
8. ChopUp
A late addition to the list, ChopUp Games have interestingly attracted angel
investing from individuals such as Tayo Oviosu. ChopUp makes mobile games for
Africa, most recently releasing Sambisa Assault. It will be interesting to see
if they can unlock the mystery of gaming in Africa.
www.chopup.me
credit: techcabal
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