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    Innovation Village | Technology, Product Reviews, Business
    You are at:Home»Business»Microsoft offers $15,000 reward for software to help African tech hubs

    Microsoft offers $15,000 reward for software to help African tech hubs

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    By Tony Niameh on September 25, 2014 Business, Events, News

    Microsoft has invited tech hubs and innovation centres across the African continent to participate in a $15,000 competition to develop tools and processes for collaboration and knowledge sharing. Developers are being encouraged to find ways which will help smaller and struggling tech centres emulate successful organisations such as iHub in Nairobi, which has launched 152 successful startups to date. AfriLabs presently runs the Collaboration challenge launched at DEMO Africa this week and presently boasts 35 of the 90 or so tech hubs on the continent as its members.

    Tayo Akinyemi, director of AfriLabs said that the idea was to promote collaboration between hubs adding that many hubs struggle to survive beyond their initial funding period. While there’s no shortage of innovative ideas, monetising them and making them sustainable presents significant difficulties in many economies.

    “Challenges like finding the right partners, determining the correct strategy and sustainability model, having the right team and skills in the hub, and the involvement of government can be difficult to navigate,” Akinyemi says.

    Microsoft’s Innovation Hubs manager Annie Njenga says that successful tech clusters around the world depend on close links between industry, academia and business, and its those kinds of relationships that she’s keen to foster throughout the AfriLabs network.

    Collaboration encourages people to learn from each other and build on better and bigger ideas,” Njenga says. “Innovation hubs creates a collaborative space for developers where organisations can assist them with the technical and business skills needed to get their businesses off the ground. Different people are brought who otherwise would never have met, and create successful companies that strengthen local economies.”

    The $15,000 prize will come from Microsoft’s 4Afrika fund, and the firm will also provide training and support for the winning concept. Developers can submit ideas and vote on other people’s using the social network Hylo before 24th October. Only members of an AfriLabs tech hub will be allowed to enter.

    Related

    4Afrika AfriLabs Microsoft software
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    Tony Niameh
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    Technology freak and social media specialist. An entrepreneur with experience in banking and wristwatch merchandising

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