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    Home»Update»Sango Capital’s $670m Vision: Turning African Tech into Global Products
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    Sango Capital’s $670m Vision: Turning African Tech into Global Products

    Insider EditorBy Insider EditorNo Comments2 Mins Read
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    In early 2025, a quiet but significant deal sent a strong signal about the future of African technology. RapidDeploy, an emergency response software company founded in South Africa, was acquired by Motorola after successfully expanding into the United States, where its platform now supports critical 911 infrastructure.

    The acquisition marked more than a financial win for investors. It showed that African-built software can meet the highest operational and regulatory standards globally. Behind that expansion was Sango Capital, a pan-African investment firm managing over $670 million in assets, which played a key role in helping RapidDeploy scale beyond the continent.

    Founded in 2011 by Richard Okello and Charles Mwebeiha, Sango Capital invests across private equity, venture capital, and private credit. Its portfolio cuts across infrastructure, energy, consumer products, and technology, with exposure to African unicorns such as Andela, MNT-Halan, and Optasia. The firm typically backs fast-growing companies and stays closely involved as they scale.

    RapidDeploy reflects a growing “build in Africa, scale globally” model. Rather than solving a narrow local problem, the company tackled a universal challenge and emergency response using a cloud-first approach that could compete in developed markets. After proving its model in Africa, it expanded into the U.S., where outdated legacy systems created room for innovation.

    For Sango Capital, success at this level depends on more than ambition. Global expansion requires operational rigour, strong leadership teams, and founders who understand both their strengths and limitations. Companies that combine these qualities with scalable business models are better positioned to attract global partners and acquirers.

    RapidDeploy’s journey offers a clear lesson for Africa’s startup ecosystem: world-class technology does not have to be built elsewhere. With the right capital, discipline, and execution, companies founded on the continent can compete and win on the global stage.

    #africa #business #Trending update
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