Imagine a bus, jam-packed with uber-geeks from different
countries, taking on a four-day brainstorming marathon across Southern
Africa.
Well, imagine no more because it has just become a reality.
Founded by Elias Bizannes in 2010, StartupBus is a
voluntarily run programme by entrepreneurs for entrepreneurs who are devoted to
problem-solving around the world through technology.
StartupBus has completed several journeys throughout Europe and the US since
2010, and now for the first time it has touched African soil, completing 1,500
miles from Zimbabwe to South Africa.
"I'm very excited about StartupBus Africa because the growth potential of
Africa is enormous and we have had a huge interest," says Fabian-Carlos Guhl,
co-conductor of StartupBus.
More than 200 people applied and from them only 30 entrepreneurs were chosen
- the ones with the most proven track record - along with 10 mentors.
'In Africa, for Africa'
The organisers believe an initiative like StartupBus can really flourish in
Africa - a continent that is in the midst of a technological revolution.
StartupBus co-conductor Chris Pruijsen explains why the bus is
oiling the wheels of creativity
While most business opportunities for satisfying basic needs have been
exhausted in Europe, Africa is still thirsty for solutions to all kinds of
problems, such as access to healthcare, education and electricity.
And, according to StartupBus co-conductor Chris Pruijsen, mobile technology
is where most of the answers lie.
"We can do a lot more here with mobile technology than we could in Europe. In
Europe people just don't use their mobile phones in the same way as here."
He adds that it is not about the West coming to solve Africa's problems, but
about "the innovation that we do together - Africans and people from the West,
in Africa and for the African continent".
'Tangible
demo'
StartupBus Africa 2013 began its journey in Harare and stopped over in
Johannesburg and Bloemfontein, before finishing up in Cape Town.
In each of these cities local industry experts were invited to take part in
the activity, creating a tech hub where thoughts and ideas could be exchanged in
order to add local flavour to the experience.
On day one, competitors - or "buspreneurs" - had to pitch themselves to the
rest of the group by making their individual experience and expertise known.
The bus was comprised of designers, developers and business experts. Once
they had mingled and found skill overlaps, they formed teams of four or five
members.
Over four days on the bus, each team had to identify and
solve an existing, local problem by using technology - coding and collaborating
as they travelled from one city to the next.
"We need a tangible demo at the end - a product that is actually marketable,
testable and potentially even investor ready," says co-conductor Chris
Pruijsen.
A lasting difference?
One of this year's competitors, Benedikt Wahler, and his team created an app
called Greenback.
As Mr Wahler explains it, every time you donate money, view an advert on the
app or make a purchase at participating sponsors, "you generate Greenbacks -
points that will turn into energy hours for African families".
By doing the little things you do everyday - like shopping, booking a flight
or using public transport - you can make a difference, he says.
Another start-up called Bribed created an app that pinpoints and aggregates
the accepted amount to be paid for bribes within a certain area in order to
avoid people being ripped off by officials.
At the end of the road trip, each team had to pitch their start-up idea to a
panel of judges and investors, but there was no prize nor was there any
guarantee that their start-ups would gain funding or investor interest.
So will the apps being created actually make a lasting difference?
Mr Pruijsen insists that the important thing about StartupBus is not the
longevity of the apps being created, but that "everyone is in it to make a
really good product and for the experience of building".
Mr Guhl adds that the real difference is what entrepreneurs take back to
their communities once they get off the bus.
"They go back into the local communities in more than 15 countries and they
bring back what they learnt on the bus in order to improve the lives of their
people and become change makers."
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