As global capital continues to search for the next frontier of growth, the Africa Tech Festival Awards 2025 offered a sharp reminder on Wednesday that Africa is no longer emerging it is accelerating.
Held on 12 November in Cape Town, the annual awards gathered entrepreneurs, technologists, investors and policymakers from across the continent to recognise the individuals and organisations transforming Africa’s digital economy. The event, now a fixture on the innovation calendar, cast a deliberate light on the people building commercially viable solutions that are also reshaping societies.
The winners were selected through a rigorous three-stage process, combining public voting with final deliberations by a panel of judges drawn from influential corners of business, finance, telecommunications and technology. Their choices reflect a continent where digital adoption is rising faster than in most regions and where innovation is driven as much by necessity as by ambition.
A sector in motion
This year’s honours cut across connectivity, financial inclusion, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity and startup growth, sectors widely viewed as bellwethers for Africa’s near-term economic potential.
Orange walked away with two top recognitions: Connectivity for All and AI Leader of the Year, the latter awarded to Jean-Francois Arnod, the company’s Chief Marketing Officer. Vodacom, a dominant force in several markets, secured Telco of the Year, CXO of the Year through CTO Dejan Kastelic and Fintech Innovation of the Year, underscoring the group’s steady investment in both infrastructure and digital services.
Mastercard’s Community Pass initiative won Innovation for Impact, reflecting a growing shift towards technology that improves access for underserved communities a trend attracting global investor attention as Africa’s unbanked population becomes a key battleground for fintech expansion.
The Changing Lives Award went to SES and the Whitaker Peace & Development Initiative (WPDI), highlighting the merging of satellite technology and peacebuilding efforts an example of how cross-sector partnerships are becoming central to Africa’s development strategy.
Female talent was firmly in the spotlight as Ms. Ennaifer Asma, Senior VP CSR for Orange Middle East & Africa, took home Female Innovator of the Year. Her leadership reinforces the rising influence of women shaping Africa’s corporate and startup landscape, where gender-diverse teams are increasingly linked to stronger performance and resilience.
Startups and security at the centre of growth
One of the most closely watched categories, Startup of the Year, was awarded to Booi Industries (Pty) Ltd, a young company whose rapid growth mirrors the broader uptick in tech entrepreneurship across the continent.
Africa’s startup ecosystem has seen record investment flows in recent years, particularly in mobility, logistics, green energy and AI-enabled services. Booi Industries’ recognition signals the market’s appetite for homegrown solutions grounded in local context and scalable across borders.
Cybersecurity, now a boardroom priority as digital transactions surge saw Tim Theuri, CISO of M-Pesa Africa, named Cybersecurity Leader of the Year. With Africa’s digital payments market on track to surpass global averages in transaction growth, securing digital infrastructure has become a fundamental requirement for sustaining economic expansion.
A judging panel reflecting Africa’s business pulse
The awards were adjudicated by high-level leaders including:
- Vukosi Sambo, Group CIO, PHA STM Healthcare & Marara Group
- John Bosco Arends, Group Head: Information and Network Technology Operations, City of Johannesburg
- Sithembile Songo, Group Head: Information Security, Eskom Holdings
- Nina Triantis, Global Head of Telecoms, Media and Technology, Standard Bank CIB
- Bas Wijne, CEO, APO Group
- Bunmi Adeleye, Chief Strategy Officer, Retail Supermarkets Nigeria (Shoprite Nigeria)
- Robert Aouad, CEO, ISOCEL Telecom
Their presence added a notable layer of credibility, positioning the awards as a strategic pulse check for investors tracking Africa’s most dynamic industries.
Africa is building, not waiting
Beyond the trophies, the Africa Tech Festival Awards 2025 delivered a clear message: Africa’s digital economy is entering a decisive phase where innovation is not theoretical it is operational, investable and scaling.
Across the continent, entrepreneurs are leveraging mobile-first markets, youthful talent pools and the rising demand for digital infrastructure. Investors, meanwhile, are seeking exposure to sectors with rapid adoption curves such as AI-powered services, fintech rails, e-commerce integration, agritech platforms and satellite-enabled connectivity.
As African startups stretch their ambitions beyond national borders, corporate players are doubling down on digital transformation. The awards serve not only as recognition but also as a barometer of where the next wave of continental growth may come from.
For entrepreneurs, the night offered an understated but powerful cue, Africa’s innovation story is no longer waiting for validation, it is setting its own pace.