- After a trip to Africa, Zachariah George quit his Wall Street job to shift to South Africa permanently
- Eventually, he started an early-stage VC fund called Launch Africa with a unique investment strategy
- Instead of waiting for world-changing unicorns, the fund flips small startups for a quick profit
- But amid a startup-funding slowdown in Africa, investors may start mulling whether the risk is worth the returns
Enter your email address to receive a daily summary of all our stories.
On a typical weekday morning, Zachariah George’s schedule is set.
In his grey BMZW Z4 convertible, he makes his way from his house in Cape Town—50 steps from the beach—to his office in
Every few minutes, company founders, startup executives, and other venture capitalists knock on the glass, hoping for a few words with George.
Everyone connected to African startups seems to know him. Harvard Business School recently
Born in Kerala and raised in Oman, George (43) studied at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras and Stanford University, then got hired by financial-services firm Lehman Brothers back when it seemed indestructible. But he soon got disillusioned, went on a trip to Africa, and before long, relocated there permanently.
His ambition is akin to India’s early VCs, Helion’s Ashish Gupta or Nexus’s Suvir Sujan, to build an ecosystem that doesn’t exist. But the surrounding circumstances vary.
India’s startup booms and busts draw awe and hand-wringing in equal parts, but its ability to draw investors is roughly on par with its economic success over the past decade. Simultaneously, the country’s VCs had US pension funds and endowments with the appetite to back them for decades without solid returns, not to mention a market that eventually sprang wealthy consumers.
India accounted for nearly 4% of both global GDP and global startup funding in 2024, according to data from the International Monetary Fund and CB Insights
Africa’s
Share this article with your network
Send the article link to friends or colleagues who might find this story interesting or insightful.
Send the article link to friends or colleagues who might find this story interesting or insightful.