PLAY PODCASTS
Accessible and Affordable EdTech with Eneza Education's Wambura Kimunyu

Accessible and Affordable EdTech with Eneza Education's Wambura Kimunyu

In this episode, we talk edtech with Wambura Kimunyu, the Group CEO of Eneza Education.Throughout the series of episodes, we’re exploring the entrepreneurs in start-ups digitizing informal and fragmented industries on the continent. And for Eneza Educati

The Flip · Justin Norman, Wambura Kimunyu, Anne-Marie Chidzero

March 11, 202132m 49s

Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (op3.dev) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.

Show Notes

 In this episode, we talk edtech with Wambura Kimunyu, the Group CEO of Eneza Education.

Throughout the series of episodes, we’re exploring the entrepreneurs in start-ups digitizing informal and fragmented industries on the continent. And for Eneza Education to remain affordable and accessible, it means distributing text-based content to basic mobile phones via SMS, and acquiring customers via radio advertising. We talk to Wambura about building a product for low-income students - 70% of whom live in rural areas,  the content development and distribution process,  balancing available technologies with the needs of their customers, how to price for low-income consumers, and more.

4:59 - First question, who are the customers that Eneza Education is serving?
6:08 - A deep dive into Eneza Education's products - the SMS-based Shipavu291 and Ask-A-Teacher.
12:20 - On the content development process and launching in a new country.
14:29 - On expansion - what role do development agencies and foundations play here?
16:22 - Eneza Education's pricing strategy.
20:46 - How is the company measuring impact, and what of impact are they creating?
22:26 - How does Eneza Education build their product with restraint? Why don't they have a mobile app?

This episode is part of our conversational series sponsored by MFS Africa. MFS Africa's competition is with cash, and throughout this series, we'll feature other startups and entrepreneurs who are digitizing, better organizing, and aggregating analog and fragmented industries.

Follow The Flip on social media @theflipafrica.

Topics

kenyan startupkenyakenyan entrepreneurafrican entrepreneurmobile contenteneza educationafrican startupvalue-added serviceswambura kimunyuafricaedtechedtech startupmobile network operatorsthe flipeducation