Co-Founder Of Nerve “When you live and work in Lagos, you can feel this boundless energy. You cannot help but pick it up!”
It
is with the passion and can-do attitude that characterizes Nigerian
entrepreneurs that Silas Okwoche explains the driving motivation behind
Nerve. “We are a make or break generation. We
have to transcend environmental circumstances” to make a change.
The
technology company he co-founded in 2013 is ready to become the next
Nigerian success story! Imagine
an African flavor of iTunes, a platform where Africans all over the
continent can distribute audio, video and text materials on a smartly
designed smartphone. Nerve is both a hardware and software company.
The startup placed in top 5 at Demo Africa
2014 finale event in Lagos, where the competition was hosted for the
first time. The big prize? A trip to the Silicon Valley to pitch at Demo
Fall conference in San Jose during Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW).
Nerve is getting ready to commercialize Nerve phones and Nerveflo, their content distribution platform. StartupBRICS caught
up with co-founder Silas Okwoche to talk about his company, investing
in Nigeria, and the role of the African tech diaspora.
Silas, tell us about your background. Have you always wanted to be an entrepreneur?
I studied chemical engineering, I’ve been an engineer all along but sometime after college I’ve developed a passion for IT and using the web and mobile to make a difference in Africa. I
come from a middle class family. My dad was a career person and my mom
was the entrepreneur. She always had a business that we were all part of
growing up. Nigeria is an oil-exporting country so every parent
encourages their children to start a career in the oil industry because
it is lucrative, but I think that helping my mom run her business led me
to the path of entrepreneurship.
What led you to start Nerve?
After
I started my first company, my team and I were working on
Internet-based services, building web applications for SMEs and large
enterprises. One of the platforms we created was an online scholarship
application tool for the government. We spent hours building this
application and it clearly made a difference in the way students applied
for scholarships in Nigeria. Unfortunately a year after we created it,
the government stopped using it. The impact of that platform was totally
discarded. That’s when we realized that if we didn’t make tangible
products that can transcend a client’s request, we wouldn’t be able to
make meaningful changes in our environment. We needed to shift our focus
towards making products for either mobile hardware or IT tools. That’s what led us to create Nerve mobile, a company that makes mobile devices and mobile platforms.
What do you think are the biggest misconceptions in the Silicon Valley regarding investing in Nigeria?
International
investors often believe they can transpose a successful western product
to Nigeria and expect to replicate their success in the African market.
The environment, the people, the cultures vary in their own way from
country to country. Understanding the dynamics in each country or continental subregion is the biggest risk reducer for investors.
They usually prefer to invest in companies that are similar to what
they know rather than finding a startup that is adapted to the market in
Sub-Saharan Africa.
Case in point is M-Pesa, the mobile-phone based money transfer and microfinancing service, launched in 2007 by Vodafone. At
the time, it would have probably been unimaginable from someone in the
Silicon Valley to invest in this new service, yet it worked in Kenya and
South Africa. Investors should be thinking about the nuances of each market when making investments here in Africa.
International investors often believe they can transpose a successful western product to Nigeria and expect to replicate their success in the African market.
Compared to startups in the Silicon Valley, where do you think African startups at your stage struggle the most?
Startups
in Nigeria and in most parts of Africa are just starting to apply the
Lean Startup method. We often focus on building a product, only to
realize that it is no longer the best fit for the market. People in
Silicon Valley understand the rapid attrition and know how to move
rapidly. They also know how to use data, do early marketing testing to
improve products throughout the development cycle; hence they grow
faster, they survive to become these companies that we all appreciate
globally. We need to take full advantage of data as well to improve our chances of success.
Let’s talk about incubators in Nigeria. How do they help ecosystems thrive?
Incubators are invaluable for the development of the Nigerian startup ecosystem. The first major incubator, CcHub, is about five years old.
Since then, many have been springing up. Incubators provide that
critical space where the necessary interactions can happen. They also
provide space where startups can manage their costs to get off the
ground. In Nigeria, for instance, running a business is a challenge because the Internet is still phenomenally costly.
A
couple of the most successful startups in Nigeria are linked to one
incubator or the other. BudgIt has ties to Cchub, Hotel.ng to Spark.
Incubators have always been instrumental and I think they will play an
even greater role going forward.
How can African tech diasporas help startups similar to Nerve?
Expatriates
generally have a global perspective on how to succeed and how to build a
company; they can bring this perspective to our operations. They can
also provide a technical expertise to develop a Minimum Viable Product
and get it tested quickly. We need to package our value proposition
properly to be able to get funding. Not being able to get funding is one
of the reasons why tech startups here die. The lack of adequate funding
also leads to the inability to bring a product to market quickly enough
for it to be sustainable and get that first set of users. With this
knowhow, we can build something truly phenomenal.
At the time, it would have probably been unimaginable from someone in the Silicon Valley to invest in M-Pesa, yet it worked in Kenya and South Africa!
What about the repatriates?
I
met a few repatriates in Nigeria. Some of my peers, tech founders, come
back and often realize that they underestimated the time and energy it
would take to get back into how things work in Nigeria, so a few leave.
Coming from abroad, there are challenges they might no longer
anticipate. My recommendation for them is to team up with local
entrepreneurs, who can facilitate the transition to avoid cultural or environmental shock.
Incubators are invaluable for the development of the Nigerian startup ecosystem. The first major incubator, CcHub, is about five years old.
How can these repatriates be assets for African startups?
Repatriates
are brilliant, for one, in communication. They know how to communicate
to a global audience. That is very important because if you cannot tell
your story, you are dead in the water. They understand the value of storytelling,
they can bring that clarity of communication to local tech startups.
Every time I have spoken to my friends who have studied in schools
abroad, they brought that clarity to our story. It has been phenomenal
and a great addition to Nerve.
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