The recently concluded SAVCA-GIBS Foundation Programme 2025 highlights Africa’s growing momentum in private capital and entrepreneurship, addressing the need for innovative financing and entrepreneurial solutions.
Hosted by the Southern African Venture Capital and Private Equity Association (SAVCA) in partnership with the Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS), this two-day whirlwind immersion welcomed over 130 budding private equity enthusiasts from across the continent bringing together the bright sparks poised to transform Africa’s investment landscape.
Beyond the Books: Building Real Investment Muscle
From funding models to exits, ESG investing to private credit, the programme offered participants a full-spectrum tour of private markets. But this wasn’t just another lecture circuit.
Delegates were placed into high-pressure, high-collaboration teams to develop real-time investment cases, perform simulated due diligence, and pitch their ideas to a panel. The result? Raw entrepreneurial energy channelled into strategic thinking is precisely the muscle Africa needs as it builds an ecosystem of resilient businesses and bold investors.
Private Equity as a Driver of African Entrepreneurship
What makes this programme more than a box-ticking exercise is its core commitment to African entrepreneurship. With traditional finance often out of reach for SMEs and startups, private equity and venture capital are emerging as crucial engines of inclusive growth. Delegates left not just with technical skills, but with a deeper appreciation of the transformational role of capital in Africa’s entrepreneurial story.
This year’s participants explored how private capital can:
- Accelerate youth-owned startups
- Support women-led ventures
- Fuel green innovations and social enterprises
- Scale African-born tech and agribusinesses
And it’s not just about returns. A strong emphasis on ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) and impact investing pointed to a deeper ethos: investing in Africa must also mean investing in African lives, communities, and futures.
As Africa’s entrepreneurship ecosystem matures, initiatives like the SAVCA-GIBS Foundation Programme are nurturing the future capital allocators, advisors, and innovators who will shape what inclusive and strategic growth looks like on the continent.
The class of 2025 came in as learners; they left as bold thinkers, with a new network, renewed clarity, and the confidence to lead.
Of course, it wasn’t all spreadsheets and pitch decks. A vibrant networking evening reminded everyone that in private equity, relationships matter as much as returns.
As the sun sets on this edition, one thing is clear: Africa’s future dealmakers are here and they’re ready. In a continent brimming with potential, their role will be to channel capital where it counts: into businesses that create jobs, spark innovation, and solve African problems with African solutions.