First published 15 October 2023
This week’s Next Wave is a double-decker. First, TechCabal’s Moonshot is well on its way to defining the value that technology industry events in Africa can create, I am proud to report. And I have a question for investors getting cold feet and second thoughts about VCing.
I had initially written about tech events needing a bit of inventiveness to become relevant. But what TechCabal’s Moonshot conference taught me was that sometimes new things are overrated and that the basic pillars of truly valuable events do not really change. If you make people feel good about being in a room with others, provide opportunities for them to meet people they respect, deliver solid content and minimise boring paternal keynotes in favour of insight and fun, your event will win! Especially if the event execution is as close to perfect as you can humanly manage.
It also helps to build up to the event. It is probably no coincidence that TechCabal’s biggest and best annual event so far was organised 10 years after the first TechCabal article was published. One hundred and twenty-one months ago, Odunayo Eweniyi was writing (as a TechCabal reporter) about interesting tech events to attend in July 2014. Last week she was speaking at the biggest tech event of the week in Lagos, and Piggyvest was a key sponsor. The world goes round and is not flat.
Someone said Moonshot has the potential to become that one pan-African tech industry event that everyone looks forward to every year. That means we sowed a good seed, and we’re looking forward to the next Moonshot in October 2024!
Next up on the event trail, I’m in the Dubai World Trade Center for GITEX Global throughout this week and looking forward to “Capital Meets Innovation” at Norrsken Africa Week Kigali in early November. If you’ll be at the Dubai Harbour or DWTC, hit reply and we can find some time to talk tech events, what I’m researching about Africa’s digital market, and the more important stuff like… whether VCs still believe in venture capital (see below).
How many VCs still believe in VCing?
It’s easy to talk about how African entrepreneurs will face more challenges with raising funding because VCs dashed (a Nigerianism for a gift, typically in cash) millions of dollars to poorly thought-out venture experiments or outright fake businesses. A lot of people like to talk about this and go on and on about it. I don’t. I intensely dislike the discussion because not only is it distracting, it is fodder for bad assumptions and priors. Priors in this sense is the statistical probability of an outcome regardless of unknowns. For me, the meaning of new reports detailing bad founder behaviour is simple. Everyone needs to grow up and stop being sheep.
Speaking about being sheep, from late 2022 it began to be obvious that a bubble burst was underway. The battle cry from the global VC community switched from speed-writing cheques to calling for profitability almost overnight. Sheep can turn on command, but whaling ships cannot do snap turns no matter how loud the captain shouts at the steering wheel. More notably, the entire point of being a venture investor, if we go back to the original legends that spawned this asset class, is that VCs are specialised middlemen who connect extraordinarily promising risk with capital sourced from sombre pockets.
The moment we miss this and begin to build an asset class that behaves more or less like the human version of a hedge fund trading algorithm, the more we set up venture capital to become a perpetual cyclical machine that is 100% in sync with public market sentiment. This is the opposite of a mostly outlier-defined investment class. In September I tweeted: “How many VCs still believe in Vcing?” And here’s a tweet by Stephen that captures a big part of my worry.
I’m very worried African VC is going to entrench itself in multiple-based tunnel vision at the earliest stages.
Conservatism was needed after ’20-22 but exchanging the comfort of momentum-based investing with rigid metrics-only investing is a disservice to founders with vision.
— Stephen Deng 邓广藻 (@mrstephendeng) October 5, 2023
To put this another way. If blindly following trends brought us here, what makes metric-focused investors think that driving a hard bargain based solely on relatively arbitrary measures in Africa’s still largely untested markets will not yield the same averaged-out result of mediocrity if not failures?
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