50 ORGANIZATIONS THAT WILL GIVE YOU FREE MONEY TO START YOUR BUSINESS

in #steemit6 years ago (edited)

imageupport 1,000 entrepreneurs from across the continent each year over
the next 10 years.
The 10,000 start-ups and young businesses selected from across Africa will ultimately create
one million new jobs and add $10 billion in annual revenues to Africa’s economy.
The Tony Elumelu Foundation Entrepreneurship Program is open to citizens and legal residents
of all 54 African countries.
Applications can be made by any for-profit business based in Africa in existence for less than
three years, including new business ideas.
To apply, visit http://tonyelumelufoundation.org/programme/

  1. SEEDSTARS AFRICA
    Seedstars Africa is a member of Seedstars Group, a Swiss-based venture builder that is active
    and invests in 35+ countries around the world especially in emerging markets in Asia, South
    America, The Middle East and Africa. Seedstars recently invested $330,000 in SimplePay, a
    young Nigerian third-party payment processing company that has created a solution which will
    likely disrupt payment services in Nigeria and Africa.
    Visit www.seedstars.com to apply
  2. ACUMEN FUND
    Acumen is a charity organisation incorporated in 2001 with seed capital from the Rockefeller
    Foundation, Cisco Systems Foundation and three individual philanthropists. The Acumen Fund
    invests in entrepreneurs who have the capability to bring sustainable solutions to big problems.
    In May 2014, The Acumen Fund co-invested $1.5 million in Esoko Networks Limited (“Esoko”), a
    Ghanaian-built technology platform that connects African farmers to markets via mobile
    phones. In October 2014, Acumen announced a $1.4 million investment in SolarNow, a
    company that sells and finances solar home systems in Uganda.
    Acumen is always looking for entrepreneurs who have new and innovative models for tackling
    poverty and who also meet their investment criteria.
    To qualify for investment, entrepreneurs must be located in, or have significant operation or
    impact in East Africa, West Africa, India, Pakistan or Latin America.
    Contact Information
    +233 030 298 4098 (West Africa)
    +254 736 073036 (East Africa)
  3. AFRICA ENTERPRISE CHALLENGE FUND
    The Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund is a US$ 207m fund capitalized by multilateral and
    bilateral donors (the AECF donors) to stimulate private sector entrepreneurs in Africa.
    The AECF is supported by the governments of Australia, Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden and
    the United Kingdom, as well as the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD).
    The Fund awards grants and repayable grants to private sector companies to support
    innovative business ideas in agriculture, agribusiness, renewable energy, adaptation to climate
    change and access to information and financial services. The AECF makes its funding available
    through competitions. Private sector companies are invited to compete for AECF funds by
    submitting their new and innovative business ideas to a particular AECF competition. The best
    ideas are awarded up to US$1.5m in grants and interest free loans.
    Contact Information
    The Africa Enterprise Challenge Fund
    10th Floor, ABC Towers, ABC Place
    Waiyaki Way, Nairobi, Kenya
    Tel: +254 20 269 9137/8/9
    Email: [email protected]
  4. AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION
    The African Development Foundation (ADF) is an independent Federal agency of the United
    States government that was established to support African-led development that grows
    community enterprises by providing seed capital and technical support.

USADF connects community enterprises with capital and technical support. It helps
organizations and businesses in Africa to create and sustain jobs, improve income levels,
achieve greater food security, and address human development needs.
In 2014 alone, the USADF gave out 336 grants worth over $50 million and impacted over 1.3
million people in Africa.
The USADF focuses on Small holder Farmers, youths, women and girls, and recovering
communities. It provides grants of up to $250,000 directly to hard to reach and underserved
community enterprises that are ready

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Those are good services, if more people had funds to start new small businesses everyone would benefit from the top on down because those people and small business will purchase insurance and accounting and financial products from the big corporations as part of standard operation procedure. In that situation everyone makes money and everyone wins.