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The Anzisha Entrepreneurship Education in Africa (EEA) Summit, held on 6 August 2025 at the African Leadership Academy campus, concluded with a call to action for business and community leaders to support the continent’s very young entrepreneurs.

The event brought together policy architects, educators, investors, and business leaders to explore best practices in entrepreneurship education and celebrate the innovative strategies driving youth-led growth.

In delivering the day’s closing speech, Anzisha Prize Managing Editor Didi Onwu said, “Youth entrepreneurship isn’t the backup plan, it’s the blueprint. For too long we have treated entrepreneurship as plan B, the path we take when “the real” systems fail you. But today has reminded us that youth-led enterprise isn’t what happens when things go wrong, its what happens when young people take control of their futures.”

In addition to a keynote address and awards ceremony, the day’s events included a dynamic panel discussion titled Rewriting the Rules of Work. The conversation reflected on critical themes for young entrepreneurs in Africa: the collapsing pipeline between education and jobs, informality as innovation rather than failure, and why investors remain hesitant to back very young founders. The panel featured young entrepreneurs who are actively rewriting the rules of business in Africa.

Breakout sessions were also held on the day where industry-focused solutions were put in focus with session partners. From innovative financing discussions to tech toolkits that enable businesses to manage their teams, enriching insights were shared with young entrepreneurs.

The summit culminated in the prestigious Anzisha Prize Awards Gala, which recognised the outstanding achievements of four young African innovators. Each prize winner received a $10,000 prize to further the impactful work they are already delivering in their communities. The awards highlighted the diverse and impactful work being done across the continent.

1. Bunmi Esther Olalude from Nigeria was honoured with the Job Creation Award for creating the most jobs, particularly for women and youth. Elated at her victory, Olalude reflected on the significance of the award, “If I keep on doing what I am doing, I know I can go anywhere and reach my biggest dreams.”

2. South African award winner, Cebolenkosi Gcabashe, earned the Revenue Growth Award for his business which showed the greatest increase in profitability. “As a person from a rural area, this award means the world to me and the community I come from.” He added that young business leaders should “start where you are with what you have and the rest will come along with your journey.”

3. Tafadzwa Manyanye received the Systems of Delivery Award for building strong operational systems to scale efficiently. “I am really proud of the work we have done, representing the farmers of Zimbabwe!” His advice for other aspiring entrepreneurs is that they should, “just start, whatever you are doing, starting today means you are gearing up for a successful tomorrow.”

4. Nigerian Christianah Madu was awarded the Storytelling Award for her powerful communication and ability to increase visibility for her venture. Onwu reflected that “We’ve heard from our entrepreneurs who are running digital schools, inventing organic farming alternatives, designing global fashion brands, solving health challenges and more – all before the age of 25. They’re not asking if they’re too young. They’re building anyway.”

As Onwu stated, “We believe in the power of very young entrepreneurs to transform communities, providing the support they need to build sustainable businesses and create lasting impact.”
For those interested in learning more about the journeys of Africa’s young innovators, Anzisha’s YouTube series, The Journey, provides a documentary series dedicated to showcasing their stories.

Anzisha is a multi-year fellowship for very young African entrepreneurs (ages 15–22). Since 2011, Anzisha has been dedicated to transforming African economies by creating youth-led, job-generating businesses. The organisation’s vision is to make entrepreneurship a first-choice career path for Africa’s youth.