Africa Built
Fintech Is Easy
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Africa Built is a podcast that explores the history of African technology businesses. It features deep dives into companies that are building Africa's economy. The show is a production of NotaDeepDive and Fintech is Easy.
Epizódy
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How Jumia Went Left - Jumia Part II 17.07.2026 1h 23minIn the second episode of Africa Built, we conclude our two-part series on Jumia. In this episode, we dissect the complex story of Jumia—from its IPO to its ongoing struggle for profitability amid fierce competition and market challenges. We explore the key turning points, controversial decisions, and what the future might hold for Africa’s pioneering e-commerce platform.Main Topics:The post-IPO challenges and the impact of short sellers like Andrew Left.How transparency issues and revenue manipulation strategies affected investor confidence.The shift in strategic focus under new leadership and the implications for profitability.Competition from Chinese giants Temu, Shein, and Alibaba, and the role of AI in e-commerce turnarounds.Chapters:00:00 - Introduction and overview of Jumia’s journey post-IPO02:05 - Early expectations and initial valuation of Jumia in the African market05:00 - Andrew Left’s report and the allegations of fraud—impact and fallout09:05 - Key issues with order cancellations, GMV discrepancies, and incentives23:47 - The financials of 2019 and the story of losses and strategic shifts30:47 - Growth attempts through marketplace diversification and expansion into food delivery40:30 - Impact of COVID-19 on Jumia’s performance and investor responses50:20 - The infusion of cash from second and third capital raises—spending and waste58:55 - Leadership changes under CEO Francis Dufay and operational reforms68:00 - Competition from Chinese giants and how Jumia is responding with speed and logistics advantages74:42 - The long-term outlook: profitability targets, operational efficiency, and strategic focus77:28 - Challenges of customer experience, seller engagement, and market penetration81:37 - Critical reflection: Could different decisions have changed Jumia’s destiny?83:55 - Summing up: The lessons from Jumia’s tumultuous trajectory and the road ahead.Resources Mentioned in this episode:Andrew Left’s Citron Research on JumiaJumia IPO Filing and Financial ReportsTech Cabal article by Feyi FawehinmiWhy is Konga worth "only" $35m and Jumia $1 billion? by Bastien MoreauThe Big Short (film)Dumb Money (film)Jumia discontinues food delivery across seven markets, shifts focus to expanding physical goods business.Note: The analysis here is based on publicly available data, market reports, and expert commentary. This content is for entertainment and educational purposes only and should not be taken as financial or legal advice
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The Amazon of Africa - Jumia Part I 06.07.2026 57minWelcome to the first episode of Africa BuiltIn this two-part series, this episode explores the fascinating history of Jumia, Africa's first unicorn, from its inception, funding, fierce competition, to its IPO journey. We uncover how strategic decisions, market dynamics, and industry behaviours shaped the rise and challenges of this pioneering e-commerce platform.Chapters00:00 Introduction and Episode Overview01:46 The Origin of Jumia and Rocket Internet's Role02:25 Zinox Group Foreshadowing04:30 Nigeria in 2012: Market Conditions and Opportunities06:56 Rocket Internet's Cloning Strategy and Market Entry09:16 The Launch of Kasuwa and Sabunta: The Amazon of Africa14:15 The Merger and Early Challenges of Jumia17:54 Customer Acquisition and Market Education20:19 Funding Milestones and Capital Infusions24:05 Konga vs. Jumia: Competition and Industry Dynamics30:56 Jumia's Corporate Structure and International Presence33:29 Market Competition, Black Friday, and Price Wars38:47 Konga's Decline and Acquisition44:58 Jumia's IPO and Market Reception52:08 Reflections on Jumia's Impact and Industry Lessons55:11 Concluding Thoughts and Future OutlookResourcesRocket Internet - [Official Website](https://www.rocket-internet.com)Sim Shagaya at Founder's Connect - (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=llYc3hbaCO4)Is Jumia using Jazz - Jason Njoku - https://medium.com/@jasonnjoku/is-jumia-using-jazz-21511d1a854fJumia vs Konga - a response maybe even a rant - Ngozi Dozie - https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/jumia-vs-konga-response-maybe-even-rant-ngozi-dozie/Oliver Samwer my African Hero - https://medium.com/@docolumide/oliver-samwer-my-african-hero-23cf0f2fc615The Samwer Brothers: The Billion-Dollar “Clone Factory” That Built an Empire by Copying - https://thebigcollapse.medium.com/the-samwer-brothers-the-billion-dollar-clone-factory-that-built-an-empire-by-copying-03f3c767d0e715 startups built by Jumia’s first 50 employees - https://group.jumia.com/news/15-startups-built-by-jumias-first-50-employeesJUMIA (NYSE: JMIA) CELEBRATES THEIR IPO - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJQqLGFbcCwIs Jumia an African Tech Company - https://businessday.ng/technology/article/is-jumia-an-african-tech-company/
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Introducing Africa Built (Trailer) 05.07.2026Hello and welcome to Africa BuiltA podcast on the stories and history behind some of Africa's most important mature companies. Brought to you by Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega, writer of the Notadeepdive newsletter, and Nnanna Ijezie, writer of the Fintech is Easy newsletter.Why does this existMost successful companies have a story they tell about themselves: the smooth, flattering version. Over time, that becomes corporate folklore, leaving out the parts that don't fit the narrative.Africa's tech industry has produced billion-dollar companies, landmark IPOs, and bitter rivalries, but very few extensive, honest accounts of how any of it actually happened are in the public domain. These stories exist, scattered across old interviews, conference panels, news archives, and newsletters, waiting to be pieced together into one place.Over the years, we've collaborated on multiple media projects and reports in various forms, and in the process identified the need to tell larger, more detailed stories of some of Africa's most successful companies. This is our attempt to finally step into the arena and plug a gap we have identified in African corporate storytelling.By going deep on the companies that built Africa's tech and business landscape, from founding to IPO and beyond, we're telling a researched story of how these companies actually got built: the strategies, pivots, competition, successes, and failures along the way.Occasionally, we'll have friends, guests, and insiders join us to add more detail to these stories.African startups of today are standing on the shoulders of giants before them. It's time to tell their story.We hope you enjoy this.Cheers,Muyiwa and NnannaAfricabuilt.xyz
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