Ventures Platform secures $64 million for seed funding

06 Nov 2025
Financial Nigeria

Summary

The VP Pan-African Fund II, which is targeting a final close of $75 million, aims to deepen seed investments, catalyse Series A rounds, and drive its pan-African expansion to power the continent’s next tech wave. 

Kola Aina, Founding Partner at Ventures Platform

Ventures Platform today announced the $64 million first close of its second fund, VP Pan-African Fund II. 

The fund, which is targeting a final close of $75 million, aims to deepen seed investments, catalyse Series A rounds, and drive its pan-African expansion to power the continent’s next tech wave. 

According to information provided Financial Nigeria, the close saw 70% of Limited Partner interest from the venture capital (VC)’s first institutional fund. New and returning investors include the first-of-its-kind participation from the Nigeria Investment in Digital and Creative Enterprises (iDICE) programme, an initiative managed by Bank of Industry aimed at positioning Nigeria as a global hub for digital innovation and creative excellence, alongside, International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group, Standard Bank (South Africa), British International Investment – the UK’s development finance institution and impact investor, Proparco through its EU-backed Choose Africa VC program, Micro, Small & Medium Enterprises Development Agency, and AfricaGrow.

The fund also attracted participation from some European family offices, including Alder Tree Investment, as well as a consortium of prominent global investors, including  Michael Seibel. 

Ventures Platform said its Pan-African Fund II will strategically deepen its investment scope across Africa. In addition to its foundational pre-seed and seed rounds, the fund will now lead and catalyse Series A investments, de-risking high-potential ventures and enhancing value creation. Simultaneously, it will consolidate the firm’s activities in Francophone Africa and accelerate pan-African expansion into North Africa, while doubling down on its core operations in Nigeria and broader Africa. The fund will prioritise ventures building solutions that address non-consumption and plug infrastructural gaps in fintech, healthtech, agritech, edtech, AI, amongst other sectors.

“The backing we’ve received from a diverse group of blue-chip partners is a powerful endorsement of Africa’s place as the purest, most asymmetric source for non-consensus alpha and transformative impact,” said Kola Aina, Founding Partner at Ventures Platform. “The continent’s innovation opportunity is boundless, the needs are immense, but realising its full impact demands smart contextual capital, post-investment value creation, and a commitment to de-risking groundbreaking market-creating innovations.”

The Christensen Institute defines non-consumption as the inability of a person or organisation to access, purchase, and/or use a product or service because existing solutions are too expensive, complex, inaccessible, or otherwise misaligned with their needs. The institute says market-creating innovations transform complicated and expensive products into simple and affordable ones, making them accessible to a whole new set of people called nonconsumers.

Ventures Platform said it has established a track record in discovering and funding over 90 startups, including some of the most successful on the continent, across multiple tech verticals, since its inception in 2016.


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