An important consideration has also been the level of commitment shown by each startup, something usually measurable by product or service refinement, knowledge and information gathering and a clear display of work done “on the ground.” As broad as this list has tried to be in terms of focus there are lot of unexplored areas in terms of tech innovation. This is something that will undoubtedly change as tech is identified more and more as a new age enabler. Here’s our list of local startups (in alphabetical order) to keep an eye out for in the next 12 months. Feel free to recommend any other startups that you think would be worth watching.
10ngah
Astro
A business focus that integrates device distribution and the creation and management of platforms for payment and multimedia is not easy to manage, considering the challenges involved in harnessing funding for such an investment. The Astro team has managed to pull it off though, with a strategy that seems to be looking at huge problems such as payment and piracy that are tackled by lesser funded startups, albeit singularly. Although some of their efforts haven’t been as clearly successful as most would expect, their ability to create clear, solid revenue streams and a growth plan is commendable.
Avelgood
This Bulawayo based outfit has been the most noticeable developer of apps for Nokia and Windows Phone devices on the local scene. Some of their products have included the Afcon 2013 App, The Metal Detector App as well as the bird watcher’s Twiggle app. This outfit is worth mentioning for their ability to make apps that actually go to market and address the largest market of mobile users in the country.
Mazwi
Remote Livestock Management System (RLMS)
This agro-tech platform has carved a niche in the tech focused management of livestock. Having processed more than $3 million worth of transactions since 2012 its impact has been felt by the growing sector of small scale farmers who constitute the majority of users of the system. It will be worth watching how this service will be evolving and what sort of growth it experiences as well.
School Sports Network
Traction Engine
This startup is behind a cloud based personal ad server which has provided a solution for local bloggers and content creators. Traction engine automates the ad selection process for a content creator’s customers as well the payment hassles. The advertisers can browse through a website or blog and its ad zones, find the ones with the preferred payment model, create an ad and pay for it immediately with mobile money, credit cards or bank cards. if you’re publisher you’ve probably realised by now that Google Adsense doesn’t really pay that well and that you need to do some direct selling. The problem is that selling directly is a lot of leg work, and even when do you sell, getting paid is a mission. Traction Engine takes most of that pain away.
ZimboKitchen
The startup team of Arthur and Rumbidzai Shoko launched this online Zimbabwean cuisine blog in 2013 and were runner ups at the 2013 edition of the ZOL Startup Challenge. They have displayed a strong social media presence and remarkable responses on their blog which exceed 50 000 page views per month. They made the move to monetise their content starting with the sale of a digital recipe book.
ZimSelector
Zimstay.com
Based in Bulawayo, this startup developed an online booking service which is also an information centre for local and international tourists. They have managed to create viable relationships with some of the tourism’s service providers and with a clear revenue model are showing growth potential.
15 comments
Good article but i quote “if you’re publisher you’ve probably realised by now that Google Adsense doesn’t really pay that well and that you need to do some direct selling.” Dont lie please, Adsense is the best monetising tool ever, but you have to have decent amounts of traffic, say 10k to 20k visitors a day.
I am talking from experience.
it’s actually the other way round, even for extremely popular website. Especially for high traffic websites. Adsense decides what to put on a publisher’s website based on bids and best match for adwords user and not that many adwords users target Zimbabwean webistes which means very bad deals. Adsense is a programmatic approach and in any case Google takes 30% of the earnings for placement. Direct ad sales are so much better even google admits it http://adsense.blogspot.com/2014/01/introducing-adsense-direct-simple-way.html
Traction Engine’s competition is Adsense direct ad sales with the advantage that Google requires payment via Google Wallet.
I am talking from lots of experience attempting an ad exchange for publishers.
Interesting perspective, but how many companies buy ad space in zim?
A lot of companies do – visit the Herald et al. I mean when you have a large quality audience and a good brand, then advertisers all over the world will be knocking on your doors. That is why you do not see AdSense on the very established publishers whom Traction Engine is addressing.
Obivously Traction Engine won’t work if I’m a nobody and get 200 visits a day, but for sites of bigger scale and reputation I think it’s a serious way to increase your bottomline.
AdSense – small-medium guys who are rising fast towards being a brand and attracting a quality audience
TractionEngine – the big leagues
Haha Zaniest, I think coming from Techzim whose main line is ads there’s obvious forethought to the claim they made. Can’t seem to find a question on Techzim Answers where Limbikani gave the stats about their AdSense performance a few months (maybe years) ago
I put my money on Avelgood, I visited all the websites and it was just captivating………….
The livestock website is a waste of $10,000 funding 🙂
Number 1 (10ngah) is correct…love their service. I thought Avelgood has been in the game for a while now to be on this list.
Then, since 2013, we’ve just been hearin that RLMS has processed over $3mil worth of sales/transactions. How come this figure doesn’t change???
RLMS is still a statrtup??? They have been around for ages now!! How about you cash your net wider and include other startups like maface.co.zw
lolest…………… wtf is maface.co.zw ?? ANother useless zimbabwean social network, thats what it is.
Download a CMS software, install then expect people to start using your service ? NOPE !
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very informative, though it needs upto date information