This Friday, May 28th at 11 am, Tomiwa Aladekomo,
CEO, Big Cabal Media will be speaking with Adeoluwa Akomolafe – Chief Information Security Officer, Wema Bank; Daniel Osineye – Co-founder and CTO, Evolve Credit and Joseph Onyema – Group Chief Information Officer at United Capital Group; Sophina Kio-Lawson, Co-founder at SheSecures and Nick Maxwell – General Manager, Ava Security (UK, MEA & ANZ).
Adeoluwa, Daniel, Joseph, Sophina and Nick will be discussing how you can protect your organization and customers from online fraud.
Every year, there’s an increase in the number of people connected to the internet, but this means there’s also a corresponding increase in the number of people who are susceptible to cyberattacks. In some countries, these attacks come at a very high cost.
How to build high-performance teams with Chichi Offodile and Seni Sulyman
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Alexander O. Onukwue
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Fintech companies, like every other business, aspire to extend their operations beyond their first base. For example, a startup that began in Nigeria may, in a few years, desire to expand into other countries when the right opportunity opens up. Lidya, Paga and Migo are among a few recent examples.
When we examine how expansion works, a common thread comes to the forefront:
Because the realities of running fintech operations differ from one country to another, it is often impossible to set up shop in a new country without assistance. Requirements for business registration, licensing, account opening, taxation, data protection and others could make the expansion process intense and discouraging.
Olumuyiwa Olowogboyega
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On Friday, April 16, the TechCabal Live conversation had e-commerce in Africa as its focus. E-commerce is always an interesting topic but it is made doubly interesting by the Covid-19 pandemic. Lockdowns and social distancing have made shopping online more popular than before. In fact, during the lockdown, I bought groceries online for the first time ever.Â
I have always associated shopping online with big-ticket items so that was a welcome change. Away from my personal experience, there was perhaps no better person to have the e-commerce in Africa conversation with than Angela Nzioki.
Angela is the CEO of Sokowatch Kenya, a startup that enables informal retailers to order products at any time via SMS or mobile app and receive free same-day delivery to their store. Sokowatch is different from the typical e-commerce company because of its focus on informal retailers.
Edwin Madu
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On the 26th of March, TechCabal held another edition of TechCabal Live with guests Phiona Okumu, Head of Music Sub-Saharan Africa at Spotify and Nigerian hip-hop legend M.I. Abaga.
The conversation followed Spotifyâs recent entry into more markets, and more notably 38 new markets in Africa. It explored the different ways artists can grow in todayâs music culture using a variety of innovative tools available to them.
We should pay for music
When asked about what challenges or opportunities Spotify saw in the African market, Okumu first cites the issue of piracy. For years musical acts on the African continent were at the mercy of pirates who would copy their music into CDs and sell them. With a populace that earnestly listens to homegrown music, it has become important to provide African people with the means to pay for the music they enjoy.
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