By GRAMMYboy
In a quiet co-working space in Yaba, Lagos, a young developer writes code late into the night - not for a Silicon Valley startup, but for a mobile app that helps traders in Onitsha settle payments faster with stablecoins. Hundreds of miles away in Nairobi, a team is testing a system that lets you fund M-Pesa with stablecoins. All across Africa, a new generation of builders is rising - not just to innovate, but to solve our problems, our way.
For decades, Africa has consumed technology built outside Africa. From fintech to Socials, many of the tools we use daily were designed for very different contexts. Credit score models don’t understand ÀJỌ & ESÙSÙ. E-commerce/ Logistics solutions don’t understand that our tax system is broken. Payment gateways don’t typically work with our remittance infrastructure, I can go on and on.
The result? Misfit systems, digital exclusion, and more often than not, frustration.
No one understands the challenges of an open-air market like those who trade in it. No one grasps the struggle of moving money across borders with sky-high fees like the migrant worker trying to send money home. This is why African-led innovation matters. Most solutions we consume are carefully built to solve their problems abroad.
However, local builders have a priceless advantage: context and a large market. We know what doesn’t work because we've lived it. We see opportunity where others see dysfunction.
The emergence of decentralized technologies and blockchain has opened new frontiers for local problem-solving. Projects like
Africa has the youngest population in the world. This is not a statistic - it’s a superpower. Every young developer, designer, writer, and dreamer is a potential problem-solver. But the key is channeling this energy into creation, not just consumption.
Imagine if every university had Web3 hackathons. If every community had local dev hubs. If every student knew that they could build solutions not just for today, but for generations.
It’s not just about building for Africa. It’s about building with Africa. Solutions thrive when they are co-created with the people they serve - Yele.
Local problems, once solved, often resonate globally. M-Pesa, Moniepoint, Paystack, and Flutterwave were all built in Africa. Today, they’re studied in boardrooms from San Francisco to Seoul. The same can happen with onchain solutions built in Africa.
When we solve for ourselves, we often end up solving for the world.
No one is coming to save us. But we’ve got all the tools to save ourselves.
Let’s F**king build.