Turning the lights on in Africa - Mike Heyink, CEO of Cape Town start-up, Yellow

Loading player...
Doing business in the countries north of our borders can sometimes be challenging. Unstable politics, a lack of infrastructure, skilled workers, and a low-income consumer base being just a few. These are some of the challenges that Cape Town online energy start-up platform faced when they tried to enter the solar energy market in rural Malawi. There was clearly a huge problem to be solved with just more than 10% of the population with access to electricity and households earning only $2 -3 dollar a day. But after initial hiccups, with a local partner they have grown their customer base to 50 000 people, set up a network of agents, attracted grant funding and a subsequent Series A equity investment of U$3.3 million. Now, they are eyeing expansion into other African countries. The CEO and Founder of Yellow, Mike Heyink told BizNews that there are upsides into tapping into Africa’s young and growing populations and enabling entrepreneurs to flourish. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
1 Mar 2021 8AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

BizNews Edge: Stranger than fiction - Jooste's consigliere meets ET-type end

Today's BizNews Edge covers three stories that cut to the heart of South African business and politics. John Steenhuisen has broken publicly with the DA, naming Geordin Hill-Lewis and Tony Leon in allegations that threaten serious damage to the party just months before the 2026 municipals. Prosus, once a byword…
29 Jun 8AM 24 min

Criminalising corporate silence with Wendy Addison

South Africa's first high-profile whistleblower Wendy Addison is done talking shop. She's raised a criminal docket against a corporation and its directors for silencing two financial industry whistleblowers — and she thinks it could be a watershed moment. Can personal criminal accountability finally give whistleblower protection real teeth?
29 Jun 6AM 23 min