The three are part of a panel of 12 judges to whom the shortlisted candidates will pitch their business idea during the Kickstarter Olympics which runs from March 1 – 5, 2021. The Jua Fund is a US$2-million venture capital fund to provide African entrepreneurs with capital to kickstart or expand their enterprises. Close on 700 applicants from 22 countries applied to the Jua Kickstarter Fund, which was launched by African industrialist Adam Molai in late November last year. Successful applicants will receive funds as well as mentoring and guidance to help them launch or grow their enterprises. Says Magrath: “I am honoured to be on the judging panel for the Jua Fund as I want to pass on the experience that I have gained as an entrepreneur. One of the most important lessons I have learned is that when you take on investors and partners, it is not about how much money you get, or the valuation, it is absolutely about the quality and integrity of the person sitting across the table that matters most. Your business will thrive or die on the quality of the people you surround yourself with.” Says Jeanica Ndagano Onema, Chairman of JNC Consulting Group and one of four female judges on the panel: “Africa is the second most populous continent, but its contribution to global manufacturing value add did not even reach 2% in 2020!  For this grim reality to change, it is important that Africa industrialise. And this will not come from the help of donors and even less from public funds, whose role is to put in place policies and infrastructures to make the private sector flourish and therefore local entrepreneurship. “We need Africans, captains of industry, to encourage local entrepreneurship through coaching, mentoring and emulation by rewarding the best projects. This will create a culture of entrepreneurship.  By initiating the Jua Fund, Mr Molai confirms his transformational leadership to change the paradigm of our continent.” Molai, who has successfully started several enterprises across Africa and whose TRT Investments had $125-million of assets under management as of end 2019, launched the fund – which means sunrise in KiSwahili – to inspire the Continent’s entrepreneurial generation. “Without entrepreneurs, economies cannot grow and countries cannot advance. African entrepreneurs unfortunately do not get the support they need to thrive for a myriad of reasons. Yet Africa is full of enterprising people. “Wherever there is adversity, there is opportunity. Africa is rife with adversity, wherever you turn business prospects are in abundance. Entrepreneurs provide solutions to societal challenges, whilst creating space for the advancement of their communities. I feel that Africa is so much more open and it is full of so much more opportunity than you would find elsewhere. I want to do everything in my power to ensure that this potential is cultivated and unleashed,” says Molai.

The panel of judges is: 

Vera Baker, Founder, For Colored Girls Who Tech / Jua Fund Cheryl Kisunzu, Director, SIMBA Global StartUps Andrew Lowe, Co-founder, Tuareg Energy Limited Brad Magrath, Entrepreneur-in-Residence, ALX and The Room; Co-founder and former CEO, Zoona Mhanisi Malaba, Coordinator, Jua Fund; Director, Thola’Njia and, Mota-Engil Construction Adam Molai, Founder, Jua Fund; Chairman, TRT Investments Joel Nettey, President and Chairman, International Advertising Association; Founder and CEO, The Ninani Group Anna Henry Nyimbo, Founder of Cartrack Tanzania, Retriever Limited Kenya, Retriever Limited Rwanda and Neoboemi Africa Jeanica Ndagano Onema, Chairman, JNC Consulting Group Professor Benedict Oramah, President, African Export Import Bank Chris Oshiafi, Group CEO, PanAfrican Capital Holdings Ibrahim Sagna, Global Head & Director of Advisory & Capital Markets, Afreximbank

For more information on the Jua Fund, go to https://www.jua.fund or follow the fund on twitter @Jua_Fund, Facebook @JuaFund or LinkedIn Jua Kickstarter Fund.