When Nigerian angel investor Tomi Davies backed his first company â Strika Entertainment in 2001 â he admits he wasnât aware of his future role.
âI was just helping out friends. I didnât know it was angel investing. I didnât know there was a structure to it,â he said.
Seven years later, Davies received a 20x return on his first exit and a decade after that heâs recognized as an architect of early-stage investing across Africa.
Davies is President of The African Business Angel Network and continues to fund and mentor young tech entrepreneurs in multiple countries.
On a call with TechCrunch, he shared advice for startups on fundraising, surviving COVID-19 and suggestions for global investors on entering Africa.
VC in Africa
Daviesâ ascendance in fundraising runs parallel to the boom in startup formation and VC on the continent over the last decade.
When he began In 2001, there wasnât much measurable venture or digital entrepreneurial activity in Sub-Saharan Africa, outside South Africa. In fact, there was limited data on VC investing on the continent until around five years ago.
An early Crunchbase assisted study estimated VC to African startups annually grew from $40 million in 2012 to $500 million by 2015. A recent assessment by investment firm Partech tallied $2 billion going to the continentâs digital entrepreneurs in 2019, across top markets Nigeria, South Africa and Kenya.
Image Credits: TechCrunch
There are now thousands of VC backed startup entrepreneurs across the continent descending on every conceivable use-case â from fintech to on demand electric motorcycle mobility.
Increasingly, Daviesâ home country of Nigeria has become the continentâs unofficial capital for venture investment and startup formation, given its market thesis of having Africaâs largest economy and population of 200 million people.
Even with the boom in VC to the continentâs startups â which has drawn investors such as Goldman Sachs and Steve Case â for years panels at African tech conferences have echoed the need for more early-stage funding options.
Davies has worked to meet that. He came to investing at the friends and family level after receiving an MBA at the University of Miami and an earlier career that spanned roles in management consulting, telecoms and IT.
After emerging as one of the early angels to Africaâs startups, supporting the continentâs innovation ecosystem became a mission for the Nigerian investor.
âMy raison dâetre became, and will remain until the day I die, tech in African,â Davies said on a call from Lagos.
How to pitch
In his role as President of The African Angel Business Network, or ABAN, Davies has worked with a team to build out a local investor web across the continent.
âABAN is very simply a network of networksâ¦we have 49 networks in 33 African countries,â he explained.
Those include Lagos Angel Network, which Davies co-founded, Cairo Angels and Angel Investor Ethiopia, announced in Addis Ababa in 2019.
Tomi Davies (L) judges pitches with Cellulant CEO Ken Njoroge at Startup Ethiopia 2019, Image Credits: Jake Bright
ABAN establishes certain guidelines and criteria for how member networks operate, but each chapter sets its own investment terms, according to Davies.
For example, ABAN affiliated Dakar Angel Network â founded in 2018 to support startups in French speaking Africa â offers seed investments of between $25,000 to $100,000 to early-stage ventures.
Where and how startups seek funds from ABANâs family of networks depends on where they operate. âOne thing I say to everybody, from presidents to business people to investors, is Africa is about cities,â Davies said.
âWhen you know which city your looking to invest in or seek investment in, automatically weâll be in a position to say, âhereâs your network.'â
For the Lagos Angel Network in Nigeria, the team has a pitch night the third Thursday of each month with a 30 day rule. âBefore you leave, youâll hear if weâre interested or not. If weâre interested, weâve got 30 days to make you an offer,â explained Davies.
Advice to startups
In addition to his work with ABAN, Davies continues to invest in his own portfolio of startups â now at 32 ventures â and is a regular judge on Africaâs tech competition circuit.
Heâs developed a framework to assess companies and shared parts of it with TechCrunch.
Tomi Davies (center) at Startup Battlefield Africa 2017
âWhat I say to any startup raising is the first thing any investor is listening to is how do I get my money back. Thatâs question number one, âHow do I get my exit?,'â he said.
Davies stressed three things to satisfy that question: âThe product service offering that you have, the customers who see value in that product service offering and the nature of the relationship in terms of channel and price offering,â he said.
âThatâs what youâre always tinkering with after you start with some kind of value proposition.â
Weathering recession
Davies referenced the increased significance of referrals, given the coronavirus has cancelled a number of events and limited mobility to pitch in person in Africaâs top VC markets.
âBecause of COVID-19, networks have become critically important. Because investors canât touch, canât feel, canât see [founders] people are looking now for referential integrity, âWho sent me this deck?,'â Davies said.
On how a coronavirus induced Nigerian recession may impact startups, Davies flagged the countryâs non-stop informal commercial activity â and the adaptability of Nigerian entrepreneurs â as factors that could carry ventures through.
âThereâs a significant chunk of the economy thatâs in the informal market. So even if you look back at the recessions weâve hadâ¦it hasnât been felt on the streets,â he said.
Davies is also collaborating with partners on creating working capital solutions for startups whose revenues have been impacted by slowdown.
Co-investors
Tomi Davies is direct about his desire to draw new partners from tech centers such as Silicon Valley, into early-stage investing in Africa.
âWe are always looking for co-investors and I speak on behalf of all 49 networks in ABAN,â he said. Davies highlighted the local expertise each network brings to their market as a benefit to VCs looking to invest on the continent through an African Business Angel Network affiliate.
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