South African Women Entrepreneurs Get It Right

Forget the pivot-happy, VC-addicted startup circus. Forget the “we’re Uber but for dogs” mentality that’s infected entrepreneurship like a particularly virulent strain of intellectual malware. Five South African women entrepreneurs have cracked the code on something Silicon Valley seems incapable of understanding: building businesses that people actually need.

This isn’t some feel-good diversity story. This is about superior business models eating inferior ones for breakfast.

Take Nadia Moolman. While tech bros debate whether their meditation app needs blockchain, she built Nanuki from her kitchen to become South Africa’s leading allergy-friendly snack brand. Solar-powered facility. Zero refined sugar. Products that ensure no kid gets excluded at lunch. It’s almost embarrassingly practical compared to the average Y Combinator pitch deck.

Or consider the delicious irony of Lize du Preez’s Lize Mouton Collection. She took rooibos—a indigenous plant most foreigners can’t even pronounce—and turned it into a premium lifestyle product that makes Goop look amateur. No venture capital theatrics. No growth hacking. Just excellent product married to elegant branding.

This pattern repeats across all five founders. Carla Ashton’s Thandana employs 60 artisans making handcrafted leather goods that outlast whatever minimalist wallet is currently trending on Product Hunt. Gisela Harck spent years perfecting German Lebkuchen cookies at Harck & Heart before going full-time in 2016. Her philosophy? “Consistency is the only currency that matters.” Try explaining that to a startup accelerator.

The most fascinating case study is Nicole Sherwin of Eco Diva Natural. After surviving heavy metal poisoning, she channeled her recovery into creating science-backed skincare that actually works. Her grandfather co-founded Adcock Ingram, the company behind Ingram’s Camphor Cream. Three generations of understanding that effective products beat marketing gimmicks every single time.

Compare this to the typical Silicon Valley playbook: identify a market inefficiency, build a minimum viable product, iterate rapidly, scale fast, exit faster. It’s a beautiful system for generating founder wealth and investor returns. It’s a terrible system for creating lasting value.

These South African women entrepreneurs represent something different. They’ve built what the tech world desperately needs but consistently fails to deliver: sustainable businesses that solve genuine problems. No wonder research shows women are exiting South African businesses faster than they’re entering—the ones who stay are the ones building something real.

The timing matters. As global markets wobble and venture capital dries up, businesses built on authentic value propositions look increasingly prophetic. While WeWork implodes and crypto exchanges collapse, these founders are quietly proving that boring fundamentals—revenue, profit, customer satisfaction—still determine long-term success.

This isn’t anti-technology sentiment. Technology is a tool, not a business model. These entrepreneurs use technology intelligently: solar power for manufacturing, e-commerce for distribution, social media for authentic brand building. They just don’t confuse using technology with being a tech company.

The broader lesson extends beyond entrepreneurship. In a culture obsessed with disruption, these women practice something more valuable: construction. Building businesses that improve lives rather than optimise engagement metrics. Creating jobs rather than automating them away. Solving problems people knew they had rather than problems people didn’t know they had until an app told them.

Silicon Valley has spent two decades teaching us that moving fast and breaking things is the highest form of innovation. These South African women entrepreneurs suggest the opposite: moving deliberately and fixing things might be more valuable.

As we’re already in Women’s Month 2025, the contrast becomes starker. While tech conferences debate the future of work, these founders are busy creating it. While venture capitalists hunt for the next billion-dollar valuation, these women are building million-dollar businesses that employ real people making real products for real customers.

It’s almost revolutionary in its simplicity.

Maybe that’s why it works.

Read next: Empowering women in Africa’s fintech revolution

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