Developers turn to community-first model as Africa rewrites tech rules

Enterprise
By Benard Orwongo | Dec 11, 2025

Participants and organisers of the upcoming Cardano Africa Tech Summit (CAT26) during an interactive session in Nairobi on December 10, 2025. [Benard Orwongo, Standard]

African developers are moving away from short-burst hackathons and adopting a slower, community-first approach that requires teams to consult residents before building digital tools.

Organisers of the upcoming Cardano Africa Tech Summit (CATS26) say this shift is reshaping how blockchain solutions are developed across the continent. The summit, scheduled for February 13, 2026 in Nairobi, marks the end of a months-long hackathon that asked teams from Nigeria, Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Burkina Faso to begin by listening to communities before writing code.

Organisers say this model replaces the long-criticised practice in which developers produce quick prototypes that rarely reach actual users.
“This is not the usual hackathon chasing ideas that disappear after the weekend,” said Darlington Wleh, President of the Blockchain Centre Nairobi (BCN). “We began by asking communities what needs to change and what problems they face every day, then developers built solutions that matter.”

Teams worked with residents from locations as varied as the slopes of Nyiragongo in eastern DRC and farming communities in Burkina Faso. Projects span financial access and digital identity in Nigeria and Ethiopia, public service tools in Rwanda, supply chain tracking in eastern DRC and agricultural resilience in Burkina Faso.

Organisers say the approach appeals to development partners, investors and governments that have criticised the pace and limitations of short-cycle hackathons. They argue that grounding technology in community needs creates products that can grow beyond pilot sites.

The summit will bring together developers, investors and technologists from across Africa. Accredited journalists will have access to winning teams, keynote speakers and the community groups involved in the early design phase.

CATS26 is positioned by organisers as a platform that gives African developers global visibility and access to partnerships that can help scale their work. The initiative is built on a community-first model that seeks to ensure technology responds to local realities. 

Share this story
KPA renew rivalry with Rwanda's APR in quarters
The dockers will be out to settle scores with the Rwandese army.
Moi duo ready for more victories this weekend at Manyatta polo Club in Gilgil
Gideon Moi and his son Kimoi lead their teams for another round of expected victories as they intensify their hunt for the Christmas Ndume Cup at Manyatta Polo Club in Gilgil.
Harambee Starlets up seven spots to 133 in latest FIFA rankings
The Kenya women's national football team, Harambee Starlets, have risen seven positions in the latest FIFA rankings for women. 
Bandari FC sack head coach Mohamed Borji
Bandari Football Club have parted ways with head coach Mohamed Borji and his assistant Tarik Bendamou.
KCB Bank seek to open winning account against Kenya Prisons
KVF league Kenya Pipeline launch their title defence against Kenya Army at Nyayo Stadium. Newcomers A Plus and Kenyatta University will also be in action as first leg serves off today.
.
RECOMMENDED NEWS