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MASHSTARTUP

MASHSTARTUP
Author: Mashudu Modau
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What does it take to build a business in South Africa’s toughest conditions? Host Mashudu Modau sits down with the country’s most innovative entrepreneurs to uncover the failures, pivots, and breakthroughs that shaped their journeys. From building independent African media platforms to creating township-born sneaker care brands, and reimagining digital education for millions of learners—these are the untold stories of turning South Africa’s challenges into opportunity. Each episode is a masterclass in resourcefulness, innovation, and building in South Africa’s uniquely complex landscape.
139 Episodes
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What does it really take to turn a pair of clippers and a dream into one of Africa’s most loved grooming brands?In this episode, we sit down with Sheldon Tatchell, the founder of Legends Barber, to trace the journey from cutting hair on a stoep in Eldorado Park at just 14 years old, to building a business with 70+ stores, 620 employees, and a footprint across the continent.Sheldon shares the real story — the wins and the setbacks. From doing house calls on a scooter after his first shop closed, to turning that same hustle into mobile barbershops that now travel across South Africa, Botswana, and Lesotho. We talk about how faith shapes his leadership, why relationships will always matter more than profit, and how the Legends Training & Development Centre is creating jobs and building entrepreneurs of the future.This isn’t just a story about business growth — it’s a blueprint for building something from nothing, staying grounded in purpose, and using what you build to serve others. Whether you’re just starting out or scaling your own venture, Sheldon’s journey is proof that passion, perseverance, and people-first thinking can take you further than you ever imagined.
When Tshegofatso Dludla started tutoring high school students in maths and science, she noticed something that stuck with her: it wasn’t just that learners were struggling—it was that they didn’t understand why these subjects mattered. For many, the learning felt abstract, boring, and disconnected from the world they lived in.That frustration became fuel. Together with her husband, Tshego created the Tshala Foundation, an NPO using coding and robotics to make learning engaging. But as she quickly discovered, passion alone wasn’t enough to sustain impact. If she wanted change to scale, she needed a business model that could fund its own growth.That’s how AfriCAN Code was born—a for-profit company that’s transforming primary education across South Africa while developing tools and experiences that make STEM subjects come alive. AfriCAN Code doesn’t just teach coding and robotics; it creates a bridge between abstract maths and science concepts and the hands-on, problem-solving skills that kids will need for the future.Today, Tshego is building a team of black female tech developers, designing proudly South African educational tools and applications, and scaling her impact from classrooms to the continent. Every project, every curriculum, and every lesson is grounded in a simple principle: learning should be fun, accessible, and relevant.This isn’t just a story about education. It’s about entrepreneurship with purpose. It’s about turning frustration into innovation, passion into a sustainable business, and education into opportunity. For founders, educators, and anyone passionate about African innovation, Tshego’s journey is proof that building something that matters starts with seeing a problem clearly—and refusing to settle for the status quo.
What if the key to transforming township economies isn’t outside investment—but collective buying power?In this episode, I sit down with Brian Makwaiba, founder of Vuleka, the multi-award-winning platform helping township spaza shops and informal businesses compete on equal footing. We unpack how Vuleka’s hybrid online-offline model makes bulk buying simple, builds credit profiles for unbanked entrepreneurs, and turns everyday shopkeepers into a powerful economic force.From navigating tech adoption in low-connectivity areas to using data to unlock new opportunities, Brian shares the grit, innovation, and community-led thinking driving Vuleka’s growth. This is a masterclass in building tech that works for the people who need it most—while keeping impact and sustainability at the core.
What does it take to turn a deeply personal struggle into a Pan-African healthtech startup that’s reimagining how we access mental healthcare?In this episode, I sit down with Onkgopotse Khumalo, founder of Amari Health, to unpack her journey from the world of finance and consulting to building one of South Africa’s most intentional healthtech startups. After losing a close friend to suicide and navigating her own search for support, she set out to create a platform that makes mental healthcare more affordable, inclusive, and culturally relevant.We dive into the lessons of building with purpose, the complexity of tackling taboo issues in African communities, and the balance between AI-driven technology and deeply human empathy. Onkgopotse opens up about the influence of her mother’s entrepreneurial journey, the realities of raising capital as a black woman founder, and the vision behind Amari: a Pan-African platform where mental wellness is accessible to all.This is a story about more than healthtech. It’s about resilience, cultural sensitivity, and the heart it takes to build solutions that carry both personal and societal weight.If you care about the future of African entrepreneurship, the role of technology in solving real problems, and the fight to make mental healthcare accessible for everyone — this is a conversation you don’t want to miss.
Some brands are born to be more than just businesses—they become cultural icons. The Wing Republic, founded by Tlhompho Mokoena, has spent over a decade proving exactly that.What started in 2014 as a single pop-up stand has grown into one of Gauteng’s most recognized food brands. From the early hustle at festivals and food markets to a brick-and-mortar home in the heart of Braamfontein, The Wing Republic has carved its place as South Africa’s original wing specialist. Along the way, it has brought people together at events like Black Coffee’s Block Party, Delicious Festival, and Sneakers Exchange—becoming as much about culture and community as it is about food.In this episode, Tlhompho shares the real story behind that journey. He speaks openly about the patience required to build a business that lasts, the resilience it takes to weather rising costs and industry challenges, and why brand is the strongest currency any entrepreneur can invest in.At its core, The Wing Republic is about more than wings. It’s about creating experiences—bold flavors, a neighborhood atmosphere, and a sense of belonging that keeps people coming back. With a vision to expand beyond Gauteng through both pop-ups and permanent spaces, Tlhompho is building not just a restaurant, but a movement around excellence, culture, and possibility.🎧 Tune in to hear how The Wing Republic went from gazebo to icon, and what every South African entrepreneur can learn about staying the course, scaling with purpose, and building a brand that truly matters.
What does it take to build real power for Black founders in South Africa’s tech ecosystem — and create a future where professionals of colour have equitable access to knowledge, networks, and funding?In this episode, I sit down with Ntsako Mgiba, founder of Darkies in Tech — the country’s largest vetted community of Black founders, investors, and ecosystem builders — to unpack the journey from a single WhatsApp group to a thriving platform reshaping the future of African innovation.We dive into the launch of the new Darkies in Tech platform, the game-changing partnership with Gijima, and why their mission goes beyond representation — to building a diverse, inclusive tech ecosystem that truly reflects South Africa’s rich demographic diversity.Ntsako shares the hard lessons of building with purpose, the values guiding his leadership — from giving value before you take it, to engaging authentically and learning together — and what the next generation needs to do to not just survive, but own the future of African tech.If you care about the future of African innovation and the role of community as infrastructure, this is a conversation you can’t afford to miss.
In South Africa and across the continent, millions of women still face healthcare that is expensive, fragmented, and impersonal. For far too long, care has been treated as a service, not a relationship. And when the system fails, it’s community — not institutions — that women turn to for support.Zoie Health was born in that gap.Built from lived experience and guided by community insight, Zoie is a digital health platform on a mission to redesign access to care. It’s not just about virtual consultations or medication delivery — it’s about building a system rooted in trust, dignity, and humanity.At the centre of this vision is Thato Schermer — a founder who isn’t just chasing growth, she’s solving for care at scale. She’s proving that you can lead with empathy, build with purpose, and still move with urgency.In this episode, we unpack how Thato and her team are turning pain into product, story into structure, and community into infrastructure — one decision at a time.Because real innovation isn’t just about technology.It’s about who you're building for — and who you're building with.
This episode is a deep dive into what it really takes to build ventures that last — and why starting with the human being behind the idea is the most powerful form of entrepreneurship. Ian Calvert, co-founder of FURTHER and former Global Project Leader at Red Bull Amaphiko, joins us to explore why personal growth, resilience, and purpose should come before traction, funding, or scale.For nearly a decade, Ian and the FURTHER team have been reshaping how we support entrepreneurs in South Africa. Rather than treating founders like pitch decks with legs, they invest in the person — helping them develop the mindset, networks, and inner capacity needed to create sustainable businesses that make real impact.We unpack:Why building humans first leads to stronger businesses and stronger communitiesHow FURTHER’s unique approach blends storytelling, wellbeing, and performance coachingThe launch of THE GREENHOUSE, a bold partnership with the Nedbank Foundation to grow South Africa’s next generation of green economy innovatorsWhat social enterprises like Kusini Water teach us about scaling impact sustainablyWhy the future of entrepreneurship requires more focus on purpose, less on hype💡 This episode is a call to rethink how we nurture South Africa’s next generation of builders — and a reminder that if we want lasting impact, we have to start with the people creating it.
What if the real power in Africa’s startup ecosystem isn’t capital — but control of the narrative?This episode is a reckoning with how stories are told, who gets to tell them, and what gets left out. Andile Masuku, co-founder of African Tech Roundup, joins us to unpack the tension between media, community, and innovation — and why reclaiming the narrative is essential if we’re serious about building an ecosystem that serves people, not just platforms.Andile has spent nearly a decade documenting the evolution of the continent’s tech space. But he’s also challenged it — asking hard questions about who gets visibility, whose voices are missing, and whether we’re building systems that truly serve people.We unpack:Why African Tech Roundup chose depth over scale — and what that reveals about community buildingThe media’s role in either amplifying hype or holding power to accountHow "community" has become a buzzword — and how to reclaim its real meaningThe tension between storytelling, influence, and impactWhy building with integrity means being willing to disrupt your own comfort💡 This episode is a call to rethink what we celebrate in African innovation — and a reminder that storytelling isn’t just a reflection of the ecosystem, it’s a force that can shape its future.
In this powerful episode of the Mashstartup Podcast, we sit down with one of South Africa’s most formidable media entrepreneurs — Thabile Ngwato. As the founder and CEO of Rapid Innovation Group, the force behind Newzroom Afrika, Ray Content Hub, Bluestream Technologies and Emerge, Thabile is not just telling the story — she’s rewriting the rules of who gets to tell it.From her start in radio and television to launching Newzroom Afrika, Thabile has carved out a bold path in the African media and tech landscape. She opens up about the transition from being a broadcaster to building sustainable businesses, and what it truly takes to lead in an industry that’s constantly evolving. We talk about:Her early career in radio and TV, and how it shaped her entrepreneurial mindsetThe fast-paced journey of launching Newzroom Afrika in just five monthsWhy purpose, people, and innovation are central to how she buildsHer long-term vision for media and tech in AfricaWhat legacy means — and why she’s making space for the next generation of Black women leadersIf you’re building something meaningful, navigating change, or just want to learn from someone shaping the future of African media — this one is for you.WATCH & SUBSCRIBE for more real stories from South Africa’s opportunity creators and builders.
Meet Tshepo Mohlala, founder of TSHEPO—the premium denim brand worn by presidents, royalty, and everyday believers in quality and identity.But this isn’t just a story about jeans.It’s about a young man from Tsakane who dared to dream bigger than the limitations placed on him. It’s about betting on yourself—even when the odds are stacked. And most importantly, it’s about building something that lasts.In this episode, we dive into:• The fabric store gamble that started it all and how Tshepo turned a small purchase into a globally recognized African brand• The pivot that saved his business and why he had to choose between being a designer and being a CEO• Manufacturing in Africa vs. overseas—the real costs, quality trade-offs, and why local production became his competitive advantage• The “president moment”—how one high-profile client changed his brand’s trajectory and what it taught him about premium positioning• Building for legacy, not just profit—his framework for making decisions that compound over decades, not quartersWhether you’re scaling a creative business, navigating manufacturing challenges, or trying to build something that outlasts you—Tshepo’s journey offers hard-won insights you won’t find in business school.This is a conversation about the unglamorous work behind the glamorous brand.🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Ayanda Dladla is the co-founder of Mowash – a mobile car wash platform turning everyday inconvenience into innovation. What started as long Saturday waits at local car washes became the spark for a tech-enabled service that connects customers to car washers on demand.In this episode, Ayanda shares how his background in engineering shaped the foundation of Mowash, why he believes township businesses are Africa’s real startup frontier, and how he built a platform with zero funding, using Twitter and hustle.We explore lessons in bootstrapping, customer engagement, and what it takes to turn a side hustle into a formal business that creates jobs and dignity.This is a masterclass in purpose-led building — and why the future of African innovation lives in everyday problems.#Entrepreneurship #TownshipTech #SouthAfricanStartups #Mashstartup
What does it take to build something that lasts — not just in profit, but in purpose?Lethabo Mokoena, the founder of Walk Fresh, unpacks the lessons, phases, and grit behind building a township-born business that’s stood the test of 10 years.What began in a backyard in Daveyton is now a movement, a trusted brand, and a symbol of what’s possible when vision meets relentless execution. Lethabo reflects on how Walk Fresh grew from a local sneaker-cleaning hustle into a nationally respected company with commercial products, collaborative campaigns, and cultural relevance — all while staying rooted in community.This is more than a business story. It’s a story of impact.In this conversation, we explore:The unseen work and mindset it takes to build over a decadeHow township businesses can scale without losing their soulThe culture and economy of sneaker care in South AfricaWalk Fresh’s expansion, product innovation, and ecosystem thinkingThe power of building infrastructure in overlooked spacesLethabo’s tone is honest, grounded, and clear: greatness doesn’t come from hype — it comes from discipline, community, and staying true to your 'why'. His story is a blueprint for entrepreneurs looking to build something real, relevant, and rooted.If you're serious about business as a tool for transformation, this is the episode to tune into.This is how you build something that lasts.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
What does it really take to walk away from stability and build a life on your own terms?In this episode, I sit down with Kay Matjila — a Mechanical Engineer turned Social Media Strategist and Entrepreneur — to unpack the bold pivot that reshaped her career and purpose. After leaving behind a comfortable corporate job, Kay bet on herself and built a platform that educates and empowers young South Africans on money, job hunting, income generation, and digital growth.We talk about:The identity shift and emotional weight of starting overHow failure, trial and error, and side hustles shaped her journeyWhat it takes to build a personal brand that creates real valueAnd why freedom, impact, and authenticity matter more than fancy titlesThis isn’t just a story about social media — it’s about choosing courage over comfort, redefining success, and carving out your own lane in the digital economy.🎙️ Listen now for practical insight, mindset shifts, and real talk from one of South Africa’s most relatable builders.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
What does it really take to build a solution that changes lives?Murendeni Mafumo, founder of Kusini Water, a groundbreaking South African social enterprise using macadamia nut shells and nanotech to purify water for communities across the country. From developing his first prototype to scaling an innovation that now produces millions of litres of clean water every month, Murendeni shares the real story behind building a purpose-driven business.We talk about:The messy middle of prototyping and product developmentThe role of grants and pitch funding in getting ideas off the groundWhat it means to be a social entrepreneur in South AfricaAnd why taking care of the whole person—mental health, personal purpose, and inner resilience—is vital for any entrepreneur building something that mattersThis isn’t just a story about water. It’s about vision, grit, and building from the ground up to solve some of the continent’s most pressing challenges.Listen now and learn from one of South Africa’s most innovative builders.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Fezile Dhlamini is the founder and CEO of Green Scooter, the company behind Africa’s first electric motor-tricycle — the Zbee.In this episode, Fezile shares how he built a locally assembled electric vehicle business from the ground up, with no external funding, and why he believes the future of mobility lies in practical, affordable, and sustainable solutions.We explore his early challenges breaking into the transport sector, how a lack of access to funding led him to bootstrap through other ventures, and the growing demand for last-mile delivery and commuter EVs in South Africa.Fezile also unpacks the importance of quality and local manufacturing, the lessons learned from working with global technical partners, and what it takes to create an electric mobility ecosystem designed for African cities.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Tsitsi Primrose Marote, co-founder of Guardian Health — a platform reimagining maternal healthcare in South Africa through AI, data, and community-driven innovation.From academic research to award-winning innovation, Tsitsi’s journey is rooted in a deep desire to solve real challenges faced by women in public healthcare systems. In this episode, she shares how Guardian Health is transforming how clinics, hospitals, and community health workers collaborate to deliver better care—especially for pregnant women at risk.We unpack her path from software engineer to healthtech founder, the power of building with purpose in resource-constrained environments, and the practical process of turning complex problems into scalable solutions.Tsitsi also shares candid insights on the realities of being a young innovator in the health space, what it takes to drive adoption in the public sector, and how data can shift outcomes for millions—if built right.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Matric Live is a mobile-first learning platform that has supported over 600,000 high school learners — the majority from under-resourced communities — with free, accessible, and engaging tools to prepare for matric. Built by co-founders Kagisho Masae and Lesego Finger, the platform is reshaping how South African students experience education, and was recently crowned FNB App of the Year 2024 for its innovative and inclusive approach.In this episode, Kagisho shares the journey from his beginnings in finance to co-creating a solution that would democratize education in a country where inequality still defines access. He reflects on how Matric Live started as a passion project to keep Lesego learning and out of trouble, and how their collaboration evolved into a nationally recognized platform.We explore the thinking behind features like interactive video lessons, gamified learning journeys, mock exam simulations, and AI-powered tutoring, as well as the company’s bold move to expand into tools for teachers. Kagisho unpacks what it means to prioritize impact over profit, the responsibility of building for underserved schools, and the belief that tech built by township kids can change lives.This is a story about innovation with purpose — a reminder that solving real problems at scale starts with empathy, community, and relentless execution.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Simon Hartley — the entrepreneur behind Wumdrop, a last-mile delivery startup that grew from humble beginnings into a game-changing logistics platform, eventually acquired by Makro. Wumdrop started with a simple idea: deliver nappies on subscription. But when Simon and co-founder Roy Borole handed scheduling power to customers, they uncovered a much bigger opportunity — on-demand, tech-enabled logistics that put convenience and control first.Simon shares how early mistakes, like outsourcing deliveries, nearly cost them customers — and how rebuilding around owned operations and customer experience became their edge. That shift led to partnerships with major brands like Builders Warehouse, Standard Bank, and Zando.The breakthrough moment? Winning the Business App of the Year in 2015. The recognition gave Wumdrop credibility, opened doors with enterprise clients, and proved the platform’s potential at scale.In 2017, Makro acquired a majority stake, using Wumdrop's tech to power three-hour delivery — a defining milestone for both Simon and South Africa’s tech startup ecosystem.We unpack the lessons behind building something scalable and acquirable: product-market fit, defensibility, and staying customer-obsessed.If you’re building with the long game in mind — or aiming to scale toward acquisition — this one’s for you.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Tshepo Moloi — founder and CEO of StokFella, a fintech platform reimagining South Africa’s stokvel culture through innovation, technology, and community-driven design.Inspired by his own experience in a traditional stokvel, Tshepo saw the inefficiencies firsthand — from manual records to limited investment potential — and set out to build something better. StokFella is now a fast-growing platform helping stokvels manage money transparently, automate savings, and invest collectively, unlocking new pathways to ownership and generational wealth.With over R50 billion circulating annually through stokvels, Tshepo’s mission is simple: modernize how communities save and build wealth, without losing the trust, culture, and collaboration that make stokvels powerful in the first place.We unpack his journey from mining engineer to fintech founder, the challenges of digitizing trust, and how he’s positioning StokFella to transform South Africa’s informal financial system from the ground up.________________________________________________Learn from South Africa's entrepreneurs, solution builders, and opportunity creators.Each episode dives into real stories, hard-won lessons, and the unfiltered realities of building in South Africa. From tough calls to turning points, this is for builders who are serious about the work.We’re not just telling stories—we’re building a home for South Africa’s next generation of entrepreneurs.Explore tools, mentorship, and opportunities at www.mashstartup.co.za.New episodes weekly. Subscribe. Share. Leave a review.And if it connects—send it to someone building something that matters.#SouthAfricanEntrepreneurs #StartupSouthAfrica #Mashstartup #SmallBusiness #Podcast
Is it just me or does this podcast go quiet around 24:56?