Episode overview:
Seyi Ebenezer didn't come to fintech from a hackathon or an accelerator. He came from KPMG's audit desks and Access Bank's corporate finance floors. These are environments where the numbers had to add up before anyone was allowed to dream out loud. That training shows in everything about how he has built Payaza Africa, from claims of launching profitably with a single gas station client to rejecting six or seven VC approaches in favour of bootstrapping a business he could defend on paper.
In conversation with Andile Masuku, Ebenezer — who co-founded Payaza in 2020 and launched in March 2022 — lays out a philosophy that cuts against the grain of Africa's startup narrative. Where the dominant playbook says raise fast, grow faster, and worry about unit economics later, Ebenezer argues that African founders face a structural reality that makes that approach uniquely dangerous: a "natural prejudice rating" on the continent that means even Aliko Dangote isn't immune to credit downgrades.
His conclusion: if the system is stacked against you, your books had better be immaculate.
The conversation covers Payaza's origins solving payment reconciliation for Nigerian fuel stations, why Ebenezer treats every product that isn't profitable within six months as a candidate for shutdown, and how securing investment-grade credit ratings from Augusto & Co, DataPro, and GCR (with a Moody's rating to boot) has transformed the company from price taker to price giver in investor conversations.
Along the way, Ebenezer draws a direct line from the 2008 financial crisis to the recent VC funding winter in African tech, and argues that the founders who built structure survived both.
But the conversation's most striking moment comes near the end with Ebenezer's call for the creation of a pan-African credit rating agency; one that uses community-based risk models suited to how African business actually works, rather than importing Western frameworks wholesale.
Key insights:
Notable moments:
1. The Petrocam origin story: Payaza's first client was Petrocam, a Nigerian fuel retailer with 57 filling stations. The problem: reconciliation chaos and shrinkage across distributed locations. Payaza built "Branches," a product that gave the group CFO a centralised, real-time view of collections across every station — eliminating accounting discrepancies, reducing theft, and cutting the finance headcount needed at each site. The product was profitable from day one. "We are solving a problem for them and then we're charging them fairly," Ebenezer recalls. That first deal set the template for everything that followed.
2. The credit rating upgrade that broke the rules: After raising commercial paper on the Nigerian capital market and making an early repayment, Payaza received a credit rating upgrade from BBB- to BBB+ in a matter of months. The norm is a 24-month cycle between upgrades. The rating agency told them they had "a very good case" — a vindication, Ebenezer argues, of prioritising fundamentals over flash.
3. The SME Tribe experiment yielding zero bad debt: When Instagram went down for several days, Payaza saw an opportunity. It built SME Tribe, a web-based marketplace that mirrored what small traders were selling on Instagram, then layered on "Payaza Boost": uncollateralised working capital advances of 25 per cent of a merchant's three-month average collections. The result: zero non-performing loans. Ebenezer uses this as evidence that African credit risk models need to account for community-based accountability, not Western-style board structures.
4. The pan-African credit rating pitch: In the episode's most charged exchange, Ebenezer pivots from discussing his own business to issuing a direct challenge: Africa needs its own credit rating infrastructure, potentially housed under Afrexim Bank or the African Union's APRM framework. He argues that the global rating oligopoly (agencies built "200 or 400 years ago" that keep acquiring regional competitors) cannot adequately assess African risk because Africa is "community-based." His proposed model would incorporate social accountability mechanisms alongside financial metrics. And then, live on the podcast, he nominates Andile Masuku to lead the convening.
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