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As African startups mature, the leap from seed to growth brings a new set of challenges — longer fundraising cycles, institutional expectations, governance, and the realities of scaling across fragmented markets.
In this episode of Fund/Build/Scale, I sit down with Ngetha Waithaka, partner at Norrsken22, one of the continent’s leading growth-stage funds. We talk about how investors evaluate African startups as they approach Series A and beyond, how founders can tell whether their business is truly venture-scale, and when bootstrapping may be the smarter path.
We also dig into practical issues founders don’t always hear about early enough — institutional readiness, governance, cross-border expansion, and how currency volatility shapes long-term outcomes.
If you’re an African founder preparing for growth capital, or an operator trying to understand what serious investors are actually looking for, this episode offers a clear-eyed look at what it takes to build something durable.
(2:13) Ngetha unpacks Norrsken 22’s origin story and thesis
(5:15) Should you bootstrap, or is your idea venture-scale?
(10:30) Before talking to VCs, make sure you can demonstrate “institutional readiness”
(15:05) African founders “have to start very early on the governance journey.”
(20:17) Ngetha works with founders “from all over the map.”
(22:55) Should African founders use Silicon Valley as a success model?
(29:43) A few thoughts on currency fluctuations and international expansion
(37:41) Where is Norrsken 22 looking for opportunities?
(39:09) The difference between building for one market and building for Africa
(44:24) Ngetha’s advice to his younger self: “Success is not a linear journey.”
Ngetha Waithake
Norrsken 22
TymeBank
AutoChek
📥 Get the Fund/Build/Scale newsletter on Beehiiv: https://fundbuildscale.beehiiv.com/
📸 Follow Fund/Build/Scale on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fundbuildscale/
📺 Watch Fund/Build/Scale on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFFH4cs2B1BKatPGs8SFRJw
Thanks for listening!
– Walter
By Walter Thompson5
2525 ratings
As African startups mature, the leap from seed to growth brings a new set of challenges — longer fundraising cycles, institutional expectations, governance, and the realities of scaling across fragmented markets.
In this episode of Fund/Build/Scale, I sit down with Ngetha Waithaka, partner at Norrsken22, one of the continent’s leading growth-stage funds. We talk about how investors evaluate African startups as they approach Series A and beyond, how founders can tell whether their business is truly venture-scale, and when bootstrapping may be the smarter path.
We also dig into practical issues founders don’t always hear about early enough — institutional readiness, governance, cross-border expansion, and how currency volatility shapes long-term outcomes.
If you’re an African founder preparing for growth capital, or an operator trying to understand what serious investors are actually looking for, this episode offers a clear-eyed look at what it takes to build something durable.
(2:13) Ngetha unpacks Norrsken 22’s origin story and thesis
(5:15) Should you bootstrap, or is your idea venture-scale?
(10:30) Before talking to VCs, make sure you can demonstrate “institutional readiness”
(15:05) African founders “have to start very early on the governance journey.”
(20:17) Ngetha works with founders “from all over the map.”
(22:55) Should African founders use Silicon Valley as a success model?
(29:43) A few thoughts on currency fluctuations and international expansion
(37:41) Where is Norrsken 22 looking for opportunities?
(39:09) The difference between building for one market and building for Africa
(44:24) Ngetha’s advice to his younger self: “Success is not a linear journey.”
Ngetha Waithake
Norrsken 22
TymeBank
AutoChek
📥 Get the Fund/Build/Scale newsletter on Beehiiv: https://fundbuildscale.beehiiv.com/
📸 Follow Fund/Build/Scale on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fundbuildscale/
📺 Watch Fund/Build/Scale on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFFH4cs2B1BKatPGs8SFRJw
Thanks for listening!
– Walter

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