Yele Bademosiโs Radar AMA was held on Friday, the 25th, and it was a blast from start to finish. For an hour and thirty minutes, Yele, responding to a series of questions, shared useful insights into his market ideology, interests, and the investment philosophy of Microtraction, his newย early-stageย fund.
There was a lotย โย I mean, A LOTย โย to take away from the session, so we compiled a list of the nine most interesting things we learnt from our brief time with him:
- Microtractionโs objective hasn’t changed since launchย โย it still wants to be the the first stop for ambitious founders who are just getting started.ย Link
- Yele hopes to adopt Paystackโs open-book approachย (sharing metrics and processes with the public) someday.ย Link
- Microtraction goes after technical founders because they believe it’sย โcostlierโ to build a product and, ultimately, a company, without one.ย Link
- A team of non-technical founders that has hired a developer full time also counts in Microtractionโs books.ย Link
- There seems to be a dearth of applications from agritech startups in spite of the fact that agriculture is a big market and makes up a significant percentage of Nigeriaโs GDP.ย Link
- Yele believes thatย โsuccessful startups do not create markets but exploit existing markets early and usually address non-consumptionโ.ย Link
- Microtractionโs metric for success is its portfolio companies raising $500,000 within 18 months of investment.ย Link
- Yele also believes that companies with $100m revenues will beย โbuilt by African founders within 10 years.โย Link
- If Yele were to start another company, he would build a crypto-hedge fund or an energy company that operates in the battery space.ย Link
Bonus: Yes, you probably knew Yele is tall, but did you also knowย he’s 6 ft 6? Well, now you know.


















