Let us look at the lucrative business opportunities:
1. Food Business
Food is a basic need and a matter of survival. You can hardly ever go wrong with food in
Africa!. Africa’s failing agriculture industry is arguably the root cause of hunger on the continent. Agriculture, which used to be a booming and attractive industry, has been abandoned for white-collar jobs in the cities. At the current migration rate, more Africans will live in cities than in rural areas in the next 30 years. With decreasing interest from ordinary people and low investments from both the business community and governments, the current state of Africa’s agriculture industry makes it unable to produce the amount of food needed to feed a large and fast growing population.
There are several lucrative opportunities for entrepreneurs who start businesses, no matter how small, that help to solve the hunger problem in Africa. The high demand for food staples is leading to interesting opportunities in vegetable farming, cassava farming, livestock farming (fish, chicken, pigs, ostrich, snails). There is also a huge potential for businesses like animal feed production that support the agriculture industry.
Africa continent’s population (currently at over one billion) is predicted to rise to 2.3 billion in less than 40 years. With all these mouths to feed, agriculture is more than likely to become a booming industry in Africa’s future.
2. Job Opportunities
Since jobs must exist before people can be employed, does it mean that there are no jobs in Africa? Of course not! In fact, Africa’s economy has been growing steadily for over a decade and six of the ten fastest growing economies in the world are in Africa. A growing economy is often a clear sign that more jobs are being created. However, the main problem with the job market in Africa is that it is largely disorganized. It is quite difficult for businesses and employers to find potential employees with the right skills, education and experience for the positions they want to fill. To a considerable part, Africa’s unemployment problem has to do with information sharing rather than total unavailability of jobs.
Several smart Africans are already rising to the challenge of solving our continent’s unemployment problems. In Kenya for example, three ambitious entrepreneurs started M-Kazi, a mobile phone-based job recruitment service that allows job seekers to get information about available job vacancies and helps employers to target the right talents. This SMS-based information service is used by thousands of Kenyans on basic mobile phones with no internet capability which are still very popular in many parts of Africa.
In Nigeria, Jobberman.com, which was started by three university undergrads in 2009, has become Nigeria’s Number One job search and recruitment portal. In a country where more than 40 million able-bodied people are unemployed, Jobberman.com is helping millions of people to find their dream jobs. Seeing the huge potentials in this business model, Tiger Global, a New-York based fund with investments in Facebook and LinkedIn became an investor in Jobberman.com in 2011… a little less than three years after it started! The service now has a subsidiary in Ghana and plans to roll out across Africa in the near future.
Apart from providing critical information services that help employers and potential employees to find each other, there is also another angle to the unemployment problem in Africa - unemployability. Many of the people looking for jobs on our continent do not have the required education, training, skills and experience that make them desirable for employment. Businesses and entrepreneurs who can offer solutions to this problem in the form of skill acquisition programs, education and training are very likely to enjoy huge benefits.
3. Drugs and Medicines
Despite having less than 15 percent of the world's population, Africa alone accounts for nearly 24 percent of all diseases that occur in the world. Apart from poor access to essential medicines and vaccines, low quality healthcare, malnutrition, and poverty, our continent’s tropical (warm) climate favours the breeding of disease vectors (like mosquitoes which cause malaria). In addition to these factors, the rise of chronic diseases like heart attacks, cancer, respiratory diseases and diabetes is causing more deaths in Africa every year.
According to a recent WHO Report, infectious diseases are the leading causes of sickness and death in developing regions like Africa. Of these infectious diseases, malaria, HIV/AIDS, pneumonia, tuberculosis, diarrhoeal diseases, and measles make up more than 90 percent of over 10 million disease-related deaths that occur in Africa every year. Most of these diseases can be treated with the right drugs.
Africa’s serious disease problem has led to a huge and rapidly growing demand for drugs, medicines and other pharmaceutical products. The size of Africa’s pharmaceutical market is expected to reach nearly $45 billion by the year 2020 and entrepreneurs like Uganda’s Emmanuel Katongole are already taking advantage of this huge opportunity. Both giant drug manufacturing companies (inside and outside Africa) and small neighbourhood pharmacies are reaping huge benefits while they help to fight and reduce Africa’s huge disease burden.
4. Education
The standard of education in many parts of our continent has deteriorated very badly. Poor access to quality education at all levels – from basic primary education to university – is another serious and nagging problem across Africa. The poor quality of government education and low investment in the education sector has put it in a state of crisis in many African countries. Because many Africans understand that education is one of the few bridges out of poverty, millions of poor families on the continent are desperate to find good schools for their children. However, the existing schools and training facilities are both unaffordable for many people and not even enough to cater to the needs of Africa’s large and rapidly growing population.
To solve the problem of inadequate opportunities for affordable quality education, some entrepreneurs on our continent have come up with interesting solutions. Omega Schools, based in Ghana, is a chain of low-cost private schools that offers basic primary education to children in poor families for an incredibly low and affordable fee (less than $1 a day per student). Bridge International Schools in Kenya uses a similar low-cost model to provide affordable education to thousands of children in East Africa for less than $5 per month per student. Before these amazing businesses started, it was thought impossible to educate poor people at a profit.
5. Electricity
Some people say that if you look at the African continent from outer space at night, it looks empty and pitch black. Maybe this is why the rest of the world refers to Africa as the ‘dark continent’. The poor supply of electricity to support everyday needs like lighting up bulbs, pumping water and charging mobile phone batteries is a big and very serious problem in many parts of Africa. In many countries on the continent, less than 20 percent of the population have access to electricity; the situation is much worse in rural areas where fewer than 5 percent are connected to the electric power grid.
Electricity is such a serious problem for Africa that the growth and prosperity of its economy and the convenience of our daily lives depends on it. Did you know that all the 48 countries of Sub-saharan Africa (with a combined population of more than 750 million people) generate roughly the same amount of electricity as Spain (a single country of less than 50 million people)? Africa arguably has the worst electric power infrastructure in the world with the lowest scores in power generation, consumption and security of supply! (source: WorldBank).
The explosion of mobile phone use across Africa has increased the demand for electricity and escalated the seriousness of the problem. In many countries of the continent, people have to travel several kilometers to find the electricity they need to charge their phones which they depend on for communication with close family and access to business-critical information (like fertilizer or farm crop prices).
Entrepreneurs like Tanzania’s Patrick Ngowi are seizing the lucrative opportunities in Africa’s electricity problems. By focusing on solar energy, which is freely and abundantly available in Africa, Patrick has brought electricity to thousands of homes in his country. To date, his company (Helvetic Solar Contractors), has installed more than 6,000 small rooftop solar systems in his country and four other East African countries – Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi. These rooftop solar products are used to light up thousands of houses at night. As a result, students can read for longer hours and do their homework while thousands of mobile phone batteries can be charged.
6. Waste
Africa is losing its natural beauty and environment to different forms of degradation especially solid waste pollution. According to the World Bank, Africa generates about 70 million tonnes of waste (both solid and non-solid) every year. As the income and spending power of the average African continues to rise, more goods will be consumed leading to even more waste. The volume of waste generated on our continent is expected to double in the coming years as Africa’s economy becomes more prosperous and the size and population of its cities explode.
Apart from the dirty and unsightly look that heaps of waste are giving to several cities across Africa, poor waste management is closely related to, and largely responsible for, the outbreak of diseases. Apart from its undesirable effects, the way we handle and treat our waste will play a very significant role in managing Africa’s natural resources in the future. Recycling waste (like kitchen waste, paper, plastic and metals) helps to reduce the pollution in our environment and provides jobs for thousands of people on our continent.
To tackle the menace of plastic waste in Nairobi (the Kenyan capital), Lorna Rutto, a former banker decided to start a small plastic recycling business. Her business uses plastic waste collected from dumpsites and garbage cans across Nairobi to manufacture fencing posts. These posts, which are used to fence houses and forest reserves, are becoming a preferred alternative to timber. So far, her innovative business has created over 7,000 fencing posts, 500 new jobs, generated more than $150,000 in yearly revenues, saved over 250 acres of forests and removed more than 1,000 tonnes of plastic waste from the environment.
Another interesting business that is solving the problem of waste disposal in Africa is DMT Mobile Toilets in Lagos (Nigeria) – one of Africa’s most populated cities. In its bid to reduce the public disposal of human waste, this business provides affordable access to toilet facilities in public spaces (bus parks, events, etc) across Lagos. To date, this company has manufactured over 3,000 mobile private toilets. It produces about 200 units every month for sale and for hire across Nigeria and in the West Africa region.
7. Transportation
With millions of human cargoes and goods that are moved around in villages, towns and cities across Africa, transportation has become central to the functioning of Africa’s economy and basic survival on our continent. With very bad roads, poor transport networks, absent rail lines and weak water transportation, the options for moving people and goods around on the continent are quite limited.
Although the roads are bad, people and goods still need to move around. With a population that is growing faster than anywhere else on earth, transportation remains a problem of the present and future for Africa. In spite of its challenges, smart entrepreneurs are rising to the occasion to solve everyday transport needs for millions of Africans. Motorcycles, taxis, buses, trucks and ferries are some of the ways of tackling the transportation problem.
8. Shelter
After food, shelter is arguably the next most important necessity in our lives. Shelter in this regard refers to housing accommodation, office space and public buildings. The growing migration of Africans from rural to urban areas is putting a lot of demand on available housing in the cities and towns. Another factor responsible for the shortage of housing accommodation in Africa is its fast growing population. By 2050, the number of people on our continent would have grown to 2.3 billion; this would mean that the current housing problem could worsen in the near future if nothing is done to solve it.
Seeing the huge opportunities and potentials in our continent’s housing problem,entrepreneurs like Nigeria’s Aliko Dangote, who is currently Africa’s richest man, has been making very significant investments in cement production, a very critical material in building construction. Other building and construction materials like wood, glass, aggregates and steel have become hot-selling products.
Individuals, businesses and governments are making huge investments in Africa’s real estate market. Smart entrepreneurs are buying up undeveloped land around major cities in a bid to build their own houses and possibly earn rental income from tenants who need shelter too. Other popular real estate investments are in office spaces and shops for traders.
Do you still see problems instead of opportunities?
Africa is full and overflowing with amazing potentials for people like you to make money. The challenge is that most of these opportunities are buried inside tough and challenging problems. It’s the same with everything in life. It is the same with finding gold, diamonds or crude oil; there is usually a lot of hard and dirty work involved. Somebody has to dig or drill many metres into the belly of the earth to find these precious resources. It’s also the same thing with Africa’s problems. If you want to make money on our continent, you will need to roll up your sleeves and solve a serious problem. The tougher the problems you solve, the more money you are likely to make!
This article is intended to open your eyes to the possibilities around you. Have you noticed a serious problem or suffering lately in your environment? What have you been doing about it? Nagging? Complaining? Blaming the government? Well, you now know you should change the way you look at and react to problems. Problems are huge opportunities to make money. Find one and fix it!
Culled from www.smallstarter.com
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