African investor network group establishes pan-African association to promote Angel investing and accelerate early stage entrepreneurship.
In the past few years, business angel networks have been created across Africa with many more expected to emerge the next few years. To facilitate this growth of investor networks for early stage entrepreneurship on the continent, some of the existing networks including the Lagos Angels Network (LAN), Cameroon Angel Network (CAN), Cairo Angels, Ghana Angel Network (GAIN), Venture Capital for Africa (VC4Africa) and Silicon Cape, and with support from the European Business Angels Network (EBAN), have come together to establish a pan-African network of networks called the African Business Angels Network (ABAN).
The idea of such a pan-African network was first discussed at the 5th EU-Africa Forum held in Brussels in February 2014. One of the outcomes was the decision to organize an Africa Angel Investor Summit that would bring together the various African Angel investing networks to explore the creation of a pan-African network. In September 2014 VC4Africa and LAN hosted the first pan-African Angel Investor Summit as part of the DEMO Africa 2014 event in Lagos, Nigeria. Participants at the summit included business angels, impact investors, venture capital funds, and corporate venture capital managers. Participants at the meeting expressed the need to connect with counterparts across the continent and around the world through an organized structure. At the recently concluded EBAN 2014 Conference held in Helsinki, Finland the official launch of ABAN was announced.
With over 20,000 angel investors in Europe, many who consider opportunities in Africa, look to local partners to help facilitate their investment. Candace Johnson, the President of EBAN, explains, ‘The opportunity to create African-European entrepreneurial and innovative companies through co-investment by European and African angel investors is one of the most exciting initiatives that we have ever undertaken.’ She went on to say, ‘We are looking forward to working together with our African colleagues to develop these opportunities and create joint success stories’.
Tomi Davies, the newly appointed President of ABAN, added, ‘Angels play a key role in all successful entrepreneurial ecosystems and angel groups need to be encouraged. A major focus for ABAN will be to educate angel investors and support them with the tools and knowledge they need to make effective early-stage investments. What we aim to achieve with ABAN is the creation of a central point where the Angel investing community can come together in a shared effort to promote early stage investing across Africa.’
This announcement is made as part of Global Business Angel Week, a global event where angels and entrepreneurs around the world celebrate a culture of angel investing. And for ABAN and partners the focus this year is on African innovation and the question ‘How to multiply investments in African startups over the coming year?’. Join one of the more than 45 events that will take place Thursday the 20th of November.
At VC4Africa, we are excited to support this initiative and see ABAN as the next step in building a healthy and robust ecosystem for powering startup entrepreneurship on the continent.