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The
role of government in fostering an active tech startup ecosystem
Technology Zimbabwe
April 04, 2012
View this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
One issue often mentioned in discussion about mobile and the web
as platforms for technology entrepreneurship in Zimbabwe is the
issue of an environment that doesn't encourage innovation,
and one that doesn't reward on merit. It is no secret that
Zimbabwe has fallen behind other top nations in Africa in harnessing
the potential of these platforms for economic development. While
adoption of mobile phones and the internet has significantly increased,
we still just use these platforms to make calls, access emails,
Facebook and for the academics, some research.
Talk of technology entrepreneurship
is therefore focused on mobile operators, internet providers and
the traditional large software companies that do big projects for
fellow large enterprise clients and the government. This, despite
the fact that the much touted rapidly increasing mobile penetration
and the resulting African mobile phenomenon (where low cost mobile
devices are the new internet user's first and only device
of internet access) are, at the end of the day, a clear sign of
the much talked about consumerisation of technology. We therefore
miss the mark when we talk about ICTs as enablers of economic development
while largely excluding the small mobile and web startup entrepreneur
in the strategy.
Besides being at the
forefront of understanding and quickly adopting these new technologies
(and therefore not slowed down by legacy issues) these new entrepreneurs
are closer to the ground and understand more the basic use of these
technology by ordinary people. Fascinated and motivated by the successes
of other youthful entrepreneurs in Africa and globally the startup
entrepreneur is ready to try new ways and new solutions to resolve
their everyday problems. Large corporate on the other hand are slowed
down by software and infrastructure legacy issues and struggle to
not ready to discard desktop computing as the main means of interface
with users.
The young geeks realize
that, more than ever before, the same open source development tools
and applications available to developers in the US, China, South
Africa or Kenya, are now available to everyone at no cost with just
a single download.
A healthier environment
for tech startups can be cultivated and government can play a role
to make this happen. Creating an environment where tech startups
are included and encouraged will not only help the economy optimize
new technology platforms but it will attract foreign investment
as startups expand the business beyond our borders. In saying that,
I don't ignore the realities Zimbabwe faces with lack of consistency
presenting the country as a secure place to invest in.
As a country we've
already had enough talented and skilled professionals leave for
countries where their skills are valued, economies predictable,
and (speaking more generally) opportunities available on merit.
We will continue to lose more if we don't start to support
them to be successful. If they can't raise funding here because
investment is hard to get and if they can't belong to a healthy
technology startup ecosystem where innovation and merit matter more
than being connected politically, our software engineers, designers
and entrepreneurs will go to countries where they can access a more
supportive ecosystem.
The support can be anything
from helping setup tech co-working spaces, creating favourable tax
conditions for tech startups, making telecoms regulations more favourable
for entrepreneurs to succeed, identifying social or economic issues
and facilitating competitions where tech startups compete to solve
the problems and get funding and help with setting up the business.
All in all the government
needs to encourage and recognize tech startups for the role they
play creating value from ICTs.
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