The MEST Africa Challenge 2020 application deadline has been extended to May 13th.
Applications for this year’s MEST Africa Challenge was initially scheduled to close on April 18, 2020. However, with the trending coronavirus pandemic, it became imperative for the MEST Africa Challenge which will be held virtually, to be extended.
“We realize that the MEST Africa Challenge and funding opportunities for African tech startups are now more important than ever,” says Jorn Lyseggen, CEO of MEST.
“MEST is committed to supporting the African tech ecosystem through these difficult times. Through the MEST Africa Challenge, we will help promising startups across the continent get visibility, access to networks, and funding”.
Participating entrepreneurs will take part in country-wide competitions where they’ll pitch virtually to a panel of expert judges.
Finalists from each country will go on to compete on a global stage in front of entrepreneurs, investors, corporate partners and ecosystem players for the chance to win $50k in investment from the MEST, and the opportunity to join the MEST incubator community.
In 2018, the inaugural Challenge saw over 700 applications from Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, and South Africa.
Forty semi-finalists made it into regional pitch competitions in Accra, Lagos, Nairobi, and Cape Town, and Nigeria-based cloud accounting company, Accounteer, was the first year’s winner.
In 2019, three startups, Kenya’s WayaWaya Ltd, South Africa’s Snode Technologies, and Ghana’s Oze, tied for first place; all three winners were offered $50,000 in equity investment and $25,000 worth of products from Microsoft.
“Africa has a fragile and vulnerable tech ecosystem. Support for tech entrepreneurs on the continent is crucial in these challenging times.
“MEST is more than a decade long commitment to the Africa tech scene is unshaken by COVID-19, and through The Challenge and its other programs, MEST is tirelessly working with the belief that Africa will become one of the world’s most exciting hotbeds for innovation and tech startups,” concludes Jorn Lyseggen, CEO for MEST.
This year, the Challenge is expanding its reach from five target markets to nine. Tech founders in Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, South Africa, Côte d’Ivoire, Sénégal, Rwanda, Ethiopia, and Tanzania are encouraged to apply here before May 13.