
The New African Female Entrepreneur: Not Small Business, But Big Tech
In a sleek co-working space in Lagos, a woman is pitching her fintech platform to a global VC firm.
Across the continent in Nairobi, another entrepreneur is deploying a healthtech solution that could save lives in underserved communities. These women aren’t exceptions to a rule—they are rewriting the rulebook.
Yet, the world stubbornly clings to an outdated narrative: African women entrepreneurs as small-scale operators, navigating markets with grit but limited scope.
That story is not just tired—it’s wrong.
Women in Africa are not only leading tech startups but are also reshaping the continent’s digital economy. And while headlines often overlook them, their impact is impossible to ignore.
Africa has long been celebrated as the continent of entrepreneurs, with women representing 27% of the entrepreneurial population, according to the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor. But the mainstream image of these women is often confined to market stalls, craft fairs, or small family businesses—ventures important to local economies but hardly the full picture. This narrow framing does a disservice to the women building Africa’s future in tech.

Take the $289 million raised by women-led African startups in 2022, a 103% increase from the previous year. Or consider the fact that 30% of Africa’s tech workforce is now female—a proportion higher than in many Western countries. Women aren’t waiting for recognition; they’re scaling companies, solving critical issues, and delivering returns.
The problem isn’t what women are building—it’s the lens through which the world sees them. Global investors often categorise African women entrepreneurs as beneficiaries of social impact funding rather than contenders for venture capital. This bias pushes them toward grants and microfinance, stifling their potential for scaling large enterprises.
For context, women globally face a $42 billion financing gap, according to the International Finance Corporation. In Africa, this disparity is exacerbated by entrenched stereotypes that see women as riskier investments. But here’s the reality: women entrepreneurs in Africa are already outperforming these expectations. A McKinsey study estimates that advancing gender equality on the continent could unlock $316 billion in GDP by 2025. Women-led tech businesses are a cornerstone of that growth.
So, why does the world still talk about African women entrepreneurs in the language of “small scale”? Because it’s easier to romanticise resilience than to recognise power. The image of a woman juggling a family and a roadside business is easier to digest than that of a tech CEO negotiating multimillion dollar contracts. It’s also easier to fund microloans than to invest venture capital in bold, scalable ideas.
But this limited narrative isn’t just lazy—it’s harmful. It sidelines innovation and discourages younger generations from seeing tech entrepreneurship as a viable path. Worse, it blinds global stakeholders to a market bursting with potential.
Investors, policymakers, and the media have a role to play in reshaping this narrative—and the stakes are high. For investors, it means going beyond the lens of social impact and treating women-led startups as what they are: high growth opportunities. For policymakers, it means creating equitable access to funding, infrastructure, and mentorship. For the media, it means telling the stories of women entrepreneurs as they truly are—bold, ambitious, and transformative.
When we think of African women entrepreneurs, we need to stop picturing market stalls. Instead, picture them leading pitch meetings in Lagos, deploying apps in rural communities, or closing funding rounds in Nairobi. They are not just participating in Africa’s tech ecosystem—they are shaping it. And they’re not just scaling businesses; they’re rewriting the continent’s economic future.
The global economy ignores this at its peril. As Africa’s tech revolution gathers speed, women are already in the driver’s seat. The question isn’t whether they’ll succeed—it’s whether the world will catch up to them in time.
Jennifer Dumle Daniel is the founder of SASIE.org, an organisation committed to equipping women with the skills to succeed as tech entrepreneurs. With a focus on innovation, technology, and economic development, her work lies at the intersection of empowering women and driving transformative change in emerging markets.
Numeris Media is an official Media Partner to GITEX Africa – The LARGEST tech & startup show in Africa
(April 14-16, 2025 | Marrakech, Morocco)