Growing up in Cameroon, Eunice didn’t imagine she would end up as an entrepreneur or a founder of a VC firm. But as a young teenager in Central Africa, she had an innate entrepreneurship drive, a skill set that would become vital to surviving in corporate America and her career.
Ajim, who migrated to the U.S as an International student in 2011, is not a stranger to the struggles of starting and running a tech startup and navigating the complexities of a competitive and dynamic tech scene.
After graduating in 2016, she settled in Texas, where she landed her first role as a data analyst at Apple Inc. “I was doing analytics for them, and during that time, Data Science and Machine Learning were booming,”
Despite working at one of the biggest tech companies in the world, Eunice wanted more. “I knew there was no way I would live my American or African dream of being an employee, so I wanted to get into the tech startup scene.”
“I hated it, I hated corporate America. So, I said to myself, I need to go out and build a company and solve a problem, and I would be rewarded because that excites me”.
She eventually quit her job at Apple and founded her first startup, DataGig, in 2017, an online marketplace that connects data scientists to SMBs. Within months, she grew the company’s revenue to a substantial amount per month and started fundraising.
While fundraising, she faced a lot of rejections. Some people said the idea wouldn’t work, the market wasn’t large enough, and other such remarks.
But she eventually partnered with another startup with a similar model to DataGig but for a different market. On that note, she closed DataGig and started OpenTeams, an online marketplace connecting service providers with open-source software users.
In its first year, OpenTeams raised $680,000 in pre-seed funding. By the second year, the company had hired some full-time employees and posted millions in revenue. In the third year, OpenTeams raised about $3 million in another funding round and almost doubled its revenue.
As a founder with a vision to always give back to Africa, she hired resource and technical personnel from the continent, mainly from Nigeria and Rwanda.
“My vision has always been what can I do to help the continent. As an entrepreneur in the US, I have always sought opportunities to help Africans.”
As an Angel Investor, she noticed a massive gap in early-stage financing on the continent. In September 2021, she left OpenTeams to launch a venture capital firm focused on early-stage startups in Africa.
As an investor, she understands the challenges involved in starting a tech company, building and maintaining a company, and handling rejections from investors. With that, she can liaise with founders to proffer the best plans to succeed.
Ajim Capital considers startups that would create meaningful products for Africans. Startups that provide opportunities through their products and services to Africans. Startups with a strong team are highly knowledgeable in their niches in tech.