
The official launch of the Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) Report: State of Play in Kenya
- UK-Kenya Tech Hub and ViKtoria Ventures Launch First Corporate Venture Capital Report;
- UK-Kenya Tech Hub and ViKtoria Ventures Launch First Corporate Venture Capital Report in Kenya to Unlock Startup Funding;
Angel Leads Program, supported by the UK-Kenya Tech Hub and implemented by ViKtoria Ventures, has launched the Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) Report: State of Play in Kenya, the first comprehensive study on how Kenyan corporates can become critical investors and partners in scaling the country’s innovation economy.
The report comes at a time when startups in Kenya face a pressing financing gap. According to the African Development Bank, Africa’s early-stage businesses collectively face a $194 billion annual shortfall in funding, equivalent to about 7% of the continent’s GDP.
Despite Kenya’s position as one of Africa’s leading startup hubs, most founders still depend heavily on foreign capital, with local funding options limited.
“Startups in Kenya have immense potential, but many struggle to secure early-stage investment,” said Enos Weswa, Country Director, UK-Kenya Tech Hub.
“The UK-Kenya Tech Hub exists to bridge that gap — through training, research, and programmes like the Angel Leads Program — so more founders find capital, customers, and partners right here at home.”
Globally, corporate venture capital has become a powerful driver of startup growth. The number of corporate investors has tripled in the last decade, with CVC funding reaching $130 billion in 2024, up from $70 billion in 2017. Yet in Kenya, corporate investment remains limited to a few early initiatives such as Safaricom’s Spark Fund and Chandaria Capital.
The new report argues that Kenyan corporates, with their market access, sectoral dominance in telecoms, fintech, FMCG, and infrastructure, and rapidly digitising customer bases, are uniquely positioned to fuel startup growth.
By moving from short-term sponsorships and brand-building to patient, strategic CVC activity, corporates can unlock new products, distribution channels, and acquisition pipelines while strengthening Kenya’s economy.
“This report isn’t theory, it’s a playbook,” said Stephen Gugu, Co-founder, African Angel Academy and Director, ViKtoria Ventures, who presented the findings.
“We spoke directly with corporates and startups and studied real-world examples.Whether it’s Safaricom Spark Fund as a trailblazer, Centum exploring startup interfaces, or Chandaria Capital blending family office and CVC models — the lesson is clear: corporate capital is multiplier capital when deployed with strategy and patience.”
The Corporate Venture Capital Report introduces a Corporate Venturing Readiness Assessment, a practical checklist for boards and leadership teams to evaluate governance, financial commitments, and non-financial assets such as distribution networks, procurement, and proprietary data before launching or scaling CVC initiatives.
The report also highlights the importance of ecosystem collaboration, recommending that corporates co-invest with angel networks, VCs, and other intermediaries to align expectations and safeguard startup growth trajectories.
It issues a clear call to action, stating that CVC is about “securing tomorrow, not short-term activity.” It warns that corporations using ecosystem engagement solely for brand PR are missing a larger strategic opportunity.
Early adopters of strategic CVC will be first movers in new customer segments and technology acquisition.
Why Now?
The release of this report comes at a pivotal moment. Kenya’s venture ecosystem is experiencing slower capital inflows, with global VC activity tightening. Yet, corporates remain relatively under-engaged despite their strategic interest in innovation.
By entering CVC early, Kenyan corporates stand to capture first-mover advantages in emerging technology, customer acquisition, and new markets.
ViKtoria Ventures, through the Angel Leads Program and African Angel Academy, has already trained and mentored dozens of angel investors, strengthening Kenya’s local investment base. The organisation believes CVC can further expand this base, creating co-investment opportunities that blend corporate scale with angel agility.
“Angel Leads Program is designed to build a pipeline of investors who can fuel the next generation of Kenyan innovation while ensuring strong financial returns,” added Weswa. “CVC, alongside angel investing, is how we reduce reliance on donor funding and put Kenya’s innovation future in local hands.”