Aurora Ventures launches to back the boldest female tech founders across emerging markets, including SA
3 min read
Aurora Ventures launches with backing from inDrive – a global mobility and delivery platform scaled to unicorn status across the same emerging markets in which the programme is investing – for its 2026 pilot year.
South Africa is one of the priority markets for the project.
While the programme spans Africa, Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Latin America, it is actively surfacing women-led, early-stage businesses from Africa that are building scalable solutions in markets with similar structural funding constraints.
For South Africa, where women founders still face significant barriers to early-stage capital, the pipeline signals a potential new route to funding, visibility and cross-border investor access that has traditionally been harder to unlock through mainstream venture channels.
“Across emerging markets, we consistently see the same pattern play out where exceptional women are building strong, scalable businesses, but reaching institutional capital later and on less favourable terms than their performance justifies,” says head of Aurora Ventures, Isabella Ghassemi-Smith. “Aurora Ventures is designed to correct that imbalance by backing these founders earlier, when the upside is still being mispriced.”
Access to pre-seed and seed funding remains one of the most persistent constraints for women-led startups locally, particularly in sectors outside traditional fintech and e-commerce. Much of the early funding landscape is still highly relationship-driven, with limited appetite for risk at idea or minimum viable product (MVP) stage.
A pipeline model like Aurora Ventures introduces a different entry point. Rather than relying solely on established investor networks, it draws directly from structured talent identification through the Aurora Tech Award, effectively creating an alternative sourcing channel for investors looking for early traction in undercapitalised markets.
The pilot’s focus on investments of roughly $180 000 to $250 000 at pre-seed and seed level is also notable in a South African context, where many founders either bootstrap for longer than would be optimal, or dilute early under unfavourable terms.
The stated aim is to help companies reach their next funding rounds with stronger leverage, not just capital but credibility built into the backing.
The broader ambition for the 2026 pilot is to build a repeatable investment track record before transitioning into a formal fund structure. Alongside capital, the programme will offer portfolio companies access to operational support and investor networks, aimed at improving follow-on funding outcomes in later rounds.
In practice, this positions Aurora Ventures less as a standalone and more as a feeder system into global venture capital for women-led startups in markets like South Africa, where access to international capital often depends on breaking through an early visibility gap that many founders struggle to close.
