Johannesburg – Africa’s growth story is increasingly shifting from potential to execution, driven by structural changes that are reshaping markets across the continent.
According to Eddie Ueckermann, CEO of Tsebo International, the real question is no longer whether opportunity exists, but whether organisations are prepared to do the difficult work required to unlock it.
“The structural drivers are real and we are observing this in our markets: supply chain diversification, rapid urbanisation, digital adoption, and regional economic alignment,” says Ueckermann.
“But without real progress on energy reliability, trade efficiency, and policy consistency, these forces will effectively limit the opportunities that present themselves.”
Across Africa, global supply chain diversification, expanding urban populations, and rising digital adoption are creating new opportunities in sectors ranging from logistics and manufacturing to outsourced services, healthcare, mining, energy, and commercial real estate.
Demand for integrated services such as security, catering, hygiene, technical maintenance, and facilities management continues to grow as economies urbanise and industrialise.
For Ueckermann, one of the continent’s most significant developments is the evolution of African unity from a political aspiration into a practical business framework.
“Businesses that structure around corridors outperform those who structure around flags on a map,” he says.
“African unity is now less political and more operational, visible in cross-border trade, regional procurement, and the private sector partnerships that are making integration real.”
Rather than focusing purely on individual country strategies, companies are increasingly building regional operating models around economic corridors that connect ports, production zones, logistics infrastructure, and urban consumer markets.
Governments, meanwhile, are beginning to support these models through public-private partnerships aimed at improving border infrastructure and streamlining trade regulations.
AfCFTA
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) remains one of the continent’s most ambitious economic integration initiatives in decades, with the potential to reshape manufacturing, logistics, agro-processing, services, and digital trade across Africa.
Ueckermann cautions that the success of AfCFTA will ultimately depend on implementation rather than ambition.
“AfCFTA is transformative in intent, but uneven in execution,” he says.
“The real test is simple: lower cost and faster movement of goods and services.
“Non-tariff barriers, infrastructure gaps, and slow alignment of standards are the obstacles that matter.
“Everything else is commentary.”
Although regional supply chains and cross-border service industries are expanding, infrastructure constraints, customs inefficiencies, energy shortages, and inconsistent regulatory standards continue to limit the pace of integration.
The Youth
Africa’s youthful population is widely viewed as one of the continent’s greatest long-term advantages.
However, Ueckermann argues that demographics alone will not guarantee growth unless they translate into employability and productivity.
“Africa’s youth is a major asset, but only where it translates into employability and productivity,” he explains.
“Education systems are lagging job-market needs, and funding is too often skewed toward tech rather than broader industrial capacity.
“The biggest unlock will come from vocational training, apprenticeships, and employer-led skills development.”
While Africa’s startup ecosystem and digital economy continue to expand, he believes sustainable growth will depend on broader industrial participation and workforce readiness across multiple sectors.
Digital Growth Cannot Replace Physical Infrastructure
Africa’s success in digital innovation, particularly in mobile banking, digital identity systems, and platform-based services, has transformed the way businesses and consumers interact across the continent.
However, Ueckermann warns against viewing technology as a substitute for foundational infrastructure investment.
“Digital tools amplify infrastructure, they do not replace it,” he says.
“Technology accelerates development, but it cannot substitute for the hard work of building reliable logistics, energy systems, and trade networks.”
The Execution Imperative
According to Ueckermann, the biggest obstacle facing many investors and businesses in Africa is not a lack of opportunity, but poor execution.
“This is where many deals fail: not because the opportunity isn’t real, but because execution assumptions don’t match reality,” he says.
“Local knowledge isn’t a nice-to-have, it is the difference between a plan and a business.
“It affects hiring, labour relations, procurement integrity, and how you navigate permits and public sector interfaces.”
He notes that businesses frequently overgeneralise African markets, underestimate operational complexity, or attempt to import models that are poorly suited to local conditions.
His recommendation is straightforward: build around an anchor sector or regional corridor, choose partners based on capability rather than connections, and establish governance, compliance, and operational standards from the outset.
“Africa’s next chapter won’t be written by optimism; it will be written by execution,” says Ueckermann.
“The winners will be those that standardise quality, localise delivery, build genuine partnerships, and treat complexity not as a deterrent but as a design requirement.”


