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By Conrad ONYANGO
Africa’s women-led startups retained their sparkle through 2023, against the backdrop of one of the darkest periods for global startup funding, raising US$200 million, 7% growth over the previous year, according to a report from Africa: The Big Deal.
In 2022, these female-founded ventures had grown by 4%. The amount remains significantly lower than the US$ 2.7 billion raised by their male counterparts but the almost doubling in growth during such a difficult time indicates a growing interest in women-led startups from investors.
“Though it remained small, the absolute amount and share of funding going to female-led ventures did grow in Africa last year compared to 2022,” said Africa: The Big Deal Co-founder, Max Cuvellier in their latest analysis.
However, funding for female founders was concentrated in the seed stage, where they represented 20% of startups raising from US$100,000 to $1,000,000, a significant increase from 13% in the previous year.
In the US$1 million plus deals, female CEOs raised a total of US$6.4 million, a marginal increase over the earlier period. While the percentage of women founders decreased as the stages increased, there was still some growth higher up, with 7% recorded in the US$10 million+ category, also up from 4% in 2022.
Sabi, a Nigerian E-commerce startup, signed the largest deal by a female CEO, with Series B funding of some US$ 38 million.
This growth trend is also highlighted in reports by Partech and Disrupt Africa, showing funding to startups with at least one female founder growing from 20.2% in 2022 to 26.3% in 2023.
“Signs of improvement, then, but there is still a long way to go before we will see funding parity from a gender perspective,” said the Disrupt report.
The Partech analysis shows Kenyan female-founded startups led, raising 25% of the total amount raised by female founders in Africa.
However, this is a significant drop in the share of funding going to Kenyan women founders. The country accounted for 41% in 2021 and 61% in 2019.
Tunisia and Ghana are front runners of growth in this respect, with female-founded startups representing 38% of all deals in both of those countries, in 2023.
According to the Partech report, Kenya ranks fourth after Morocco’s third place, 35% share.
Next in the top 10 are South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal and Cote d’Ivoire respectively.
The E-Commerce sector accounted for the most of women-led venture funding rounds, capturing 22% of all funding. While fintech ranked second, securing 19%, that contrasts with a larger 24% slice of the overall startup funding pie.
On the other hand, funding for women-led ventures in the health-tech sector commanded a larger proportion (16%) of funding for female-led companies over funding for all companies (11%), according to Partech.
Distributed by bird story agency.
Steven Umidha is a data and financial journalist with over 15 years of work experience in journalism and communication.
He specialises in finance and economics reporting as well as on the causes, impacts, and solutions of global warming, conservation, pollution and sustainability, often blending scientific literacy with journalist ethics, while involving policy analysis and multimedia storytelling across various platforms in highlighting issues from biodiversity loss to ecological justice.
He is the founder of Financial Fortune Media, and a Co-founder of One Planet Agency (OPA). He has previously worked with the Standard Media Group, Mediamax Networks LTD, bird story agency, Business Journal Africa, and Financial Post among other outlets.
He can be reached on: Email: info@financialfortunemedia.com
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Last Updated on February 8, 2024 by Steve UMIDHA