Kenya's Start-up tragedy:
Pilotitis, policy failure and the absent domestic investor confidence in young entrepreneurs
Two days ago, I attended a World Bank sponsored consultative forum on
the World Development Report – 2016. I got myself caught up in a riveting discussion
on scaling up start-ups and why it has thus far been problematic in Kenya. I
have banged my head ever since about this. I couldn’t resist ranting the two
pence opinion I didn’t get a chance to dispense at the forum. Well, here it is:
Investors and young entrepreneurs
– two worlds apart
There is a fundamental disconnect between Kenyan young entrepreneurs
and possible domestic investors. Notably, the typical (prospective) Kenyan
investor is wired for hard concrete investments: real estate, construction,
agribusiness, and manufacturing. Tangible investments that come with lesser
risks of uncertainty. Not 'faith' in some 'pizza ordering' 'direction pointing'
'weather predicting' or 'breathe alcohol level calibrating' app developed by a
weird spectacle, jeans-tshirt-trainer wearing 19 year old at iHub least known
to him.
Make no mistake,
Kenyan investors have serious dime. Some of the machines these folks show up
with in town; some of the homes we see on TV after some Karen-Runda tragedy -
they spell BLISS, BLING, BALLING. Some of them were acquired by giant
multinationals, others learnt the genius of business in +254, and some in mind
blowing hereditary wealth.
A quick census -
they are 60 - 70 year-olds who do not understand and care least about ICT
revolution, big data, new media, the internet, yadda yadda. They are traditional
conservatives who hang out at analog exclusive membership clubs and enjoy the
country, game, and choma more. You sure won’t find them at Nairobi Java, or
Brew Bistro or Michael Joseph Centre or Strathmore or Nailab or Mojos where our
start-up entrepreneurs elect to quaff their chaff as my good friend Tom Osanjo
puts it.
‘Pilotitis’ – too poor to
sustain start-ups
We are too poor. Our young people survive on very thin limited
resources that can never support their maintenance (food, transport,
accommodation) as they concentrate on C++, python, SQL, Java etc birthing some
bad-ass Sportify-alibaba-uberlike idea.
People have got
to eat; it is only logical that entrepreneurs will pursue projects for as long
as they meet their immediate rudimentary needs; not the Facebook or Apple the
project could metamorphosise into a decade from today. Maybe our
entrepreneurial culturing is still inept - in shaping the correct attitudes and
discipline needed to see through an idea to its fruition however long it might
take, however frustrating it could be. So that we don't drop ideas as soon as they
fail to meet our immediate expectations. 'Pilotitis' - that's what my friend
John Kinuthia calls it.
Maybe our
investors as well aren't ready to cough out million after million into projects
without obvious direction towards success, surplus.
‘Expat capture’ – domination of
the start-up scene by foreign social entrepreneurs
Then there is the clever 'mzungu'. The bearded, man-bag carrying, sun
loving MIT, Stanford, Georgetown, Oxford student that jets in with substantial
funding, and fancy save-Africa social entrepreneurial ideas. From the 'brick'
to every other M-something (M-kopa, M-changa, M-ngombe, M-Gormahia) these folks
have clogged up the start-up scene in Kenya (no Nairobi, it seldom leaves the
capital).
I am a staunch
proponent of knowledge transfers and spill-overs, but am also well aware of the
dynamics of multinational domination and crowding out of local enterprise and
innovation. Lord! that might have come across a tad bit too leftist!
There are the
awesome ones - I hear the genius of M-Pesa was born by their ilk. Then there
are the stealthy borrow ideas-pimp ‘em up-come back to Kenya-bang new idea
kinda guys. And of course the mundane-nothing to write home about-boring ones
with ideas not worth the visa or Nairobi mahindi
choma lot.
Point is, all
these folks play in a concerto of domination that easily and unknowingly
downgrades Kenyan start-ups, unfairly competes for investor limelight/attention
and could demoralize budding home-grown talent. I sound ridiculously political
on this right?
Policy failure
Controversial as it may sound, the role of government, institutions,
policy, or legislation in propping up start-ups is profound. Whether in setting
up the requisite infrastructure (like broadband), guaranteeing funding, or
providing the regulatory environment (for example protection of intellectual
property rights).
Am willing to
argue that the government of Kenya has equally failed our start-ups (someone
said that 'government' is an amorphous nothing entity). Yes this is stuff that
is best executed by the private sector and facilitated by market dynamics. But
for a country with such an acute youth unemployment problem, it is in the
interest of government to put together a working framework for nurturing and supporting
homegrown entrepreneurs especially after proclaiming our intentions to build a
knowledge economy - Konza, Tatu City blah blah.
And I don't mean
dishing out Kshs 50,000 to young people hurdled into groups of 50 to hatch one
day old chicks in the name of Uwezo Fund, Youth Enterprise Development Fund,
Kazi kwa kijana and the likes.
The Missing link between knowledge and
post-class work experience
A few weeks before exiting the University of Birmingham, I had the
opportunity to attend free seminars and tutorials on penetrating the job
market. Resume building, pitching, presentation skills, the works. No offence, but the education system in Kenya (can’t speak for other
Sub-Saharan countries) fails flat in preparing students for the post-class work
experience.
This largely
explains the inability of many of Kenya's young entrepreneurs, with brilliant
ideas to market, sell their genius; to speak to the right audience and to win
investor confidence.
Yes, you learnt programming at JKUAT and are extremely good at it -
developing apps. Yes you studied design at Maseno University and you are superb
at crafting Ankara-African apparels. But you end at that. You cannot explain
yourself in 2 minutes to a Chris Kirubi at a cocktail at Alliance Francaise or
to a Bob Collimore at the gents at Ngong racecourse, or to a Vimal Shah on the
elevator at Lonrho House.
How will you ever
get your idea funded? scaled up?
The missed opportunity in industrial
clusters
What we sure lack, and which kick-start, sustain and encourage
entrepreneurship especially in knowledge driven economies in other parts of the
world are industrial clusters. Where knowledge meets industry and investors and
policy support.
Across the globe
start-ups thrive in such unique clusters. See the ICT & Biotech clusters in
Massachusetts, the engineering clusters in Batten Wurttemberg Germany, the
Silicon Valley, Emilia Rogmana & Tuscany's automobile and apparel clusters
in Italy; Toyota City in Japan, Scotland's Silicon Glen, Sinos Valley in Brazil,
Daegu South Korea, the French Sophia Antipolis, the examples are plethoric.
What is Kenya
doing to get there? The famed Thika town of our high school days?
Skewed focus on tech start-ups masking
other entrepreneurs
I will say one last thing, then
shut it, before I cause me trouble. This one will not go down well with some of
my tech and media folks.
In Kenya, there is a skewed focus
on tech oriented start-ups. So much so that it makes entrepreneurship today
almost synonymous with an ICT oriented something. And it need not be so. Mainstream
media most often highlight techy stuff, maybe because tech is sexy and savvy,
or they are easily accessible, or because of elite capture or simply because
they are the more of our young entrepreneurs. I don't know!
But surely, this near obsession
with tech start-ups almost masks substantial developments in other areas like
agribusiness, art, new media, that could do with the light.
Maybe if we broadened our focus,
coverage (now am talking to the media hehe), we could discover more young
Kenyans, struggling with marvelous ideas that could create employment and get
our young people off want and trouble. Remember the pencil portrait super-guy
who did President Kenyatta the other day. Imagine how many more of such are out
there unnoticed.
I rest my case on Kenya's #Startuptragedy.
Yours truly - Okwaroh Ja Paprombe