Kenya’s Angani Closes Undisclosed Seed Round to take your business to the cloud

0
1135
Share this

Cloud computingAfb is just about to fully acquire a local Kenyan startup for $2m but that’s a story for another day.

Today, Kenya’s Angani, an automated public cloud infrastructure founded in 2013 by brilliant Phares Kariuki and Riyaz Bachani, Brian Mutia and Ripduman Sohan has announced it has raised a seed round led by Invested Development with participation from Africa’s Talking, Savannah Fund, and Africa Angels Network to get East African SME’s into the cloud.

Phares Kariuki, CEO of Angani told TechMoran, “The figures are undisclosed but we will use the funds to build our infrastructure and recruit to satitsfy the demand.”

Angani, a pay as you go cloud service is steadily gaining traction in a market where hosting has been left to international players due to capacity. Angani means “The Sky” in Swahili and aims to be  a huge business enabler just as IT, electricity and telephony are as business are increasingly spending a larger share of their revenues on IT which Angani wants to solve by buying infrastructure in bulk, virtualizing it and lease it out for a reduced rate.

This raise will mean more firms

Share this
Previous articleSafaricom customers in Nairobi experience outage
Next articleNew Facebook Groups feature to Improve the Way People Buy and Sell
Sam Wakoba
Based in Nairobi, Kenya, Sam Wakoba is a pan-African technology journalist, author, entrepreneur, technology business mentor, judge, educationalist, and a sought-after speaker and panelist across Africa’s innovation ecosystem. He is the convenor of the popular monthly #TechNight evening event and the #StartupEast Awards and Conference, platforms that bring together startup founders, developers, entrepreneurs, investors, content creators, and tech professionals from across the continent. For more than 16 years, Sam has reported on and analysed Africa’s technology landscape, covering some of the continent’s most impactful, and at times controversial policies, programs, investors, co-founders, startups, and corporations. His work is known for its independence, depth, and fairness, with a singular goal of helping build and strengthen Africa’s nascent technology ecosystem. Beyond journalism, Sam is a business analyst and consultant, working with brands, universities, corporates, SMEs, and startups across East Africa, as well as international companies entering the East African market or scaling across Africa. In his free time, he volunteers as a consulting editor and fintech analyst at Business Tech Kenya, a business, technology, and data firm that publishes reports, reviews, and insights on business and technology trends in Kenya. Follow him on X: @SamWakoba